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Hope Under Neoliberal Austerity


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an increasingly skewed demography. Nearly 26 per cent of people in Glendale in 2011 were aged 65 and over. The inflow of people from especially Southern England has put pressure on house prices in an area where, for many, incomes remain low and precarious.

      The result is a transforming local economy, an increasingly skewed demographic and an accelerating crisis of housing availability and affordability. Despite a widespread appreciation of a strong feeling of ‘community’ in the area, there are also potential social tensions – between locals and incomers, the professionally skilled and those with less formal education, and those in Wooler town and in the outlying small villages and hamlets. Therefore, as in many rural areas across Europe, Glendale is experiencing not just significant economic and social change, but an existential challenge to find a sustainable future.

      The scale of this challenge has been exacerbated by a decade of austerity. With a combination of low incomes and an ageing population, there is an increasing need for affordable and appropriate housing. Budget cuts have amplified the difficulties of sustaining services, from health and social care to adequate local shops, in an area where people are geographically scattered. In this situation, the GGT’s implicit development strategy has focused on limiting the continuing outflow of younger people and the decline of the services that support them, while accepting the energy and investment of retiring incomers and providing for the needs of increasing numbers of older people. This demands continual recognition of the complex interrelations that make for place quality – work, housing, transport, health, education, training, social care, leisure and sport, and community vitality. It also requires an appreciation of a geography in which physical distance still really matters.

      Meanwhile, formal government has become increasingly distant. Up to the mid-20th century, many services were provided in the different farming communities or through the churches, often on a parish basis. Until 1973, the lower-tier local authority was the Glendale Rural District Council (GRDC), based in Wooler, which covered the area to which the GGT now relates. The GRDC was merged into Berwick Borough Council, which, in turn, was merged into the higher-tier authority, Northumberland County Council, in 2008. This became a unitary authority covering a large and varied area. Grasping and responding to this changing context, while managing the merger of several districts into a single organisation and, at the same time, dealing with continual severe funding cuts, has been a fraught challenge for county politicians and staff. Yet, the county has been keen to promote community initiatives and social enterprises, and, in the past decade, has become much more interested in working with civil society actors such as the GGT.

      Along with many other small trusts and charities in Northumberland that had grown up in the 2000s providing local services, the GGT was catapulted into a much harsher funding environment. Yet, during the 2010s, the challenges for a rural area such as Glendale increased: the farming economy has contracted and is even more mechanised, along with forestry, and farming activity may contract further as a result of Brexit; the retail sector has been transformed by Internet trading, with shops closing in Wooler High Street, along with banks; public services have been further cut and centralised, being subject to funding regimes that have little recognition of the challenges of dispersed populations in rural areas; and the uncertain economic climate generated by Brexit has held back investment in potential projects. This has increased people’s sense of being abandoned, both economically and politically, which, in turn, increases the potential for angry hostilities to break out, threatening the sense of a cohesive community.

      Yet, there are opportunities to be grasped too: the Internet enables people to live in Wooler but work across the world; firms can similarly develop trading links in a wide geography; the beautiful landscape and the feeling of community attracts not only older people from further afield, but also those seeking to raise families in such an environment; and tourism continues to expand, offering attractive options for those interested in encountering the natural environment through walking and cycling. It is in this shifting context of the past 20 years or so that the GGT has evolved into a significant local development organisation.

      The GGT was formed in 1996, following discussions about how to improve Wooler’s future facilitated by the then Rural Community Council. These had identified the need for a better community centre, which could combine meeting places for community groups, business spaces for start-ups and a base for key local services, as well as improved services for young people. It is run by a small employed staff and trustees from the locality. A drop-in facility for young people was created in a vacant building on the high street, while the neglected former offices of the Glendale Rural District Council, formerly a workhouse, provided an opportunity to create a community centre, now the Cheviot Centre. The building was transferred to the GGT by the then owner, Berwick Borough Council. The case study focuses on how the Cheviot Centre was transformed into a joint community–small business hub that not only helped save and enhance local services, but also, in time, came to be financially sustainable, largely by clustering services together. In parallel, while created to manage the development and operation of the community centre, the GGT grew into a multifaceted community development organisation with an entrepreneurial and proactive culture. In its early days, the GGT’s activities were backed by funding from the Rural Community Council (now Community Action Northumberland) and the Northumberland Strategic Partnership.

      For the first few years of its existence (1996–2000), the primary focus of the GGT’s work was on converting the building. The challenge involved taking on ownership of the building, raising funds and organising the conversion process. To guide this work, as well as the creation of the drop-in centre, the GGT was created as a charitable trust, with a board combining local people and representatives of local government. This time is remembered as a risky, nail-biting experience as trustees embarked on ambitious projects, taking on grants and loans against uncertain achievement. However, this was the era of relatively accessible grants from government and other institutions.