Candy Beery
/ Ann Cotter
Management Committee
Kensington & Chelsea Volunteer Bureau
9th May 1994
This letter is a formal complaint about the quality
of service provided by the Director of the Kensington
& Chelsea Volunteer Bureau, Mr Christopher Brooks.
At the beginning of this year, I approached Mr John
Moore, the editor of the Kensington & Chelsea Times,
with an idea that I had to raise the profile of the
elderly in this borough.
All of the details of this are enclosed.
Because of the nature of the project, it was heavily
dependent on volunteer workers. Consequently, after
speaking with Mr Moore, the next port of call was the
Director of the Volunteer Bureau, Mr Christopher Brooks.
It should be noted that this was at the end of January
this year, Mr Brooks was approached well in advance
of the project being launched. He agreed to provide
the volunteers, has ample time for preparation and was
given continuous up-dates on each development as it
occured. In fact, he even once remarked that I may have
been disturbing him more often than was needed.
Although Mr Brooks agreed to provide the volunteers,
no firm head count was ever established or agreed upon.
We played with a number of estimates, and certainly
agreed that it would take meny more than Mr Brooks actually
provided, which was none!
At the beginning of April, I received a message from
Mr Brooks via Geraldine Timlin of 60+ "Sixty Plus",
that he may not be able to provide the volunteers that
I needed. This was presented to me in such a way as
to sound like, "no volunteers at all". Ms
Timlin also started to talk in terms of "lunch
money" for any volunteers that I may have been
able to recruit on my own. Hence my mail shot to over
50 councillors in the Town Hall, I also started putting
posters up all over the place - copies of these are
enclosed.
After speaking with Mr Brooks again, it turned out
that what he had meant to convey via Ms Timlin, was
that he may not be able to provide "all" of
the required volunteers and that I should also try to
recruit some myself. This I did, with very limited success.
But then again, the recruitment and allocation of volunteer
workers is not my chosen, full-time paid occupation.
Nor do I have any previous experience, resources, or
a network of contacts, both individuals and groups.
Mr brooks on the other hand, is a very different matter.
Mr Brooks knew well in advance the approximate and
exact date for the envelope stuffing and distribution,
which was 18th April 1994. When this date arrived, Mr
Brooks had provided no one, absolutely no one.
On 19th April 1994, at about noon, a telephone call
came for me at the "Tabernacle", it was from
the volunteer bureau, and they were offering me two
people. They were two volunteers from 60+ "Sixty
Plus" - as you may know, the Volunteer Bureau and
60+ "Sixty Plus" have a close working relationship.
They were two people with very serious "learning
problems", they were Mr John Shoy and Mr Jean Marie,
two very well known "old hands" on the volunteer
circuit, but completely inappropriate to the task that
was in hand. That said, the two Johns are known, willing
workers, and as far as I know will attempt anything
asked of them. I gather that Mr Shoy, being very strong,
did a huge amount of work for 60+ "Sixty Plus"
when they moved offices recently. Mr Shoy also has a
gentle, sensitive nature and would "feel"
it if he was underachieving in relation to the people
around him. In view of this and other considerations,
I declined the offer of the two Johns from the Volunteer
Bureau.
I do not know the name of the woman at the Volunteer
Bureau who offered me Mr Shoy and Mr Marie, I gather
she is new to her job on a paid basis. But I do know,
that prior to her gaining her paid position, she had
been a volunteer worker with the Bureau for a long time.
By no stretch of the imagination were the aptitudes
of John Shoy and John Marie unknown to her.
Because of the shoddy quality of service provided by
the Volunteer Bureau, I have been in great danger of
not being able to keep to my part of the bargain with
Mr Moore of the Kensington & Chelsea Times. As it
is, I have just managed to complete the task by the
skin of my teeth. That said, because of the shortage
of volunteers, the distribution has not been as widespread
as I had agreed with Mr Moore.
Yours sincerely
SEAN BRYSON
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