Charities, Unregulated and unaccountable

It is really unfortunate that the current scandal regarding top up salaries for executives has tarred all charities with the same brush. It must be very difficult for the hundreds of thousands of people who give their time free of charge to see their efforts on behalf of the less well off crumbling before their eyes through no fault of their own.

Having said that, the “Charity Industry”, and an industry it has become, must take the blame, they have operated a policy of secrecy and resisted any type of proper regulation for years.  It is this environment that has allowed unscrupulous people to hide behind “Charity Status” while paying themselves handsomely. The public can hardly be blamed for their reaction when the veil of secrecy begins to slip.

Some of these charities also operate like full blown businesses, with significant career paths for the management while competing unfairly with legitimate businesses, which are subject to stringent regulation.

Proper regulation and a willingness of people working for charities to completely transparent systems of accounting will fix the problem.

The legislation has been on the Minister’s desk for signing since 2009, he just has to sign it. It’s one of those “Do it now” things

I have already written on this subject last April in my Recycling and Business NEWS blog
http://www.electronic-recycling.ie/blog/index.php/2013/04/charities-unregulated-and-unaccountable/

A City Boy on Farming

What would a city boy know about farming?

When my proposal to write a number of blogs on the subject was accepted by the Irish Executives Linkedin group, I thought that applying some MBA type observations on the business of farming might produce some interesting ideas and in order not to be too offensive or look completely stupid, the blogs would have a certain amount of tongue in cheek attitude. That was until I sat in front of an empty page with suddenly frozen fingers poised expectantly over an unforgiving keyboard.

Then I thought, there are two issues here; can I prove I am a city boy and what do I know about farming?

On the city boy issue, I can say that, other than a two week trip to Auchengillan in Scotland with the Scouts when I was eleven, a Sunday trip in the family car to Newry sometime in the early sixties, (that trip is an interesting story all of its own) and a one week soccer tournament trip to White Hart Lane, London circa 1967, I was never outside County Dublin until I was eighteen years of age and we had no country cousins to visit us either.

I was born in The Rotunda hospital, brought home to number 12 Rutland place at the end of the North Circular Road facing O’Connell’s School, a school I attended until I was twelve. My mother was born in Mountjoy Square as was my Grandmother, and Great Grandmother. My maternal Grandfather was born in Skerries and spent his working life as a baker in Kennedy’s bakery on the North Circular Road. My father arrived in Dublin from Toronto Canada when he was seven and lived in various places around the city, finally ending up in Grantham Street off Camden Street. Most of my paternal granduncles were Dublin Metropolitan Policemen. We moved to Santry in 1955 where I lived until I moved to Walkinstown in 1977 and from there wound my way to my current abode in Rathfarham Village.

I have one sister who now lives in Killenard in Co Laoise, other than that and some distant cousins we discovered while building the family tree,  we still have no direct family connections outside of Dublin

So, I’m a City boy, what do I know about farming? From a commercial farming point of view very little, I certainly would not be capable of taking over a farm and running it without some serious help.  (a subject for a future blog) Then I thought, wait a minute, I may not have been on a farm but I certainly had some interaction with animals and food as I grew up in the city.

Like most streets in inner city Dublin in the fifties, there was a piggery. In our case it was four doors from my grandmother’s house in Rutland Place and as kids we used to bring the buckets of kitchen waste to this house at the end of the day.  If the owner was in a good mood we got a penny if not we got a Marietta biscuit. (this may be something that was controlled by adults without us knowing) There was no food waste in Rutland place in those days, if the humans didn’t eat it, the pigs got it.   I don’t have any memories of what happened to the pigs when they were fattened. It was not in our mindset to make the connection with the pork butcher around the corner on Summerhill.

My next interaction with the food chain was when travelling to O’Connell’s School from Santry. This meant getting off the number 16 bus in Dorset Street and walking (running) down the “Norrier” to O’Connell’s. On some Wednesdays and Fridays the North Circular Road became a cattle drive as the cattle that had been sold in the Stonybatter cattle market were run along it to Dublin port for export to England.  We were on a “western” cattle drive, waving our school rulers like six guns and whopping it up like the cowboys we saw in Drumcondra Grand picture house.  Sometimes a stray cow would panic and run up one of the side streets, followed by a number of its pals and all hell would break loose. The condition of people’s front doors was not pleasant to look at or smell. (no front gardens in inner city houses) There was many a drover’s ash plant swung or thrown at a running schoolboy

I got my first chance at animal husbandry (well chickens anyway) when one of our neighbours in Santry, who were from Scotland, went home on holidays.  Our neighbour was a wonderful confectioner (she still is) and kept a chicken coop for the production of fresh eggs. ( I think twenty five or so) I got to look after them for two weeks each year while they were away. I had to measure out the food,  I can still smell it while I write this, clean and fill the water bowls, they were forever stepping in them with not very clean feet and knocking them over, clean out the hen house and make certain they were all inside at night.   I got paid Ten Shillings a week and all the eggs as payment, a not inconsiderable amount  for a Twelve year old. This was also my first introduction to commerce as I sold any of the eggs my mother didn’t use.  See, there is a business story to this.

I had an introduction to market gardening and retailing in Skerries, where we spent a lot of time during our Summer holidays (If we didn’t go to Bray). There was a farm food shop in the Main Street on the corner of Balbriggan Street, facing the cottage into which my grandfather had been born. The shop was owned by a cousin of my Grandaunt , who still lived in my grandfathers cottage.  We got to help out behind the counter, measuring out sugar and floor, weighting out loose potatoes, watching her cut and package the butter and counting out the change for the customers. This memory may be silver lined with a child’s view of the world as I can’t imagine Miss Moles letting kids mess around with that kind of thing.  I also got to watch her brother Mike, house and manage the dray horse and cart he used to transport vegetables to the Dublin Markets.  He farmed a number of acres at the top end of Skerries, growing potatoes, cabbage, turnips etc.

My next interaction with the food chain was coming up to Christmastime at the house of one of my friends. The family was from Mayo and the woman of the house kept Turkeys each year. These were bought as poults to order from a farm in Mayo, fattened and killed in their back garden. This was a task that my friend and his brother took great pleasure in carrying out, especially the bit where they ran around with no heads.  Another City boy and I stood by and watched, refusing to get involved in the killing but helping out with the plucking and learning that you can’t do this when they are warm.  I wasn’t squeamish about this, I just wasn’t certain I could do it right and didn’t want to make a bigger mess than there already was. In fact, when younger, I used to take great pleasure chasing my sisters around the house with the Turkey’s head and feet, and the innards, if my mother would let me have them.

The interaction with the food chain that best demonstrated my City Boy status happened in Murrisk in Co. Mayo when I was eighteen and “down the country” for the first time.  My friend whose family was from Mayo had suggested that we should travel there for our holidays that year, so three of us put haversacks on our backs and hit the N4/N5 on the thumb.  We got to stay in the farmhouse of one of my friends granduncles and of course the norm was for milk to be produced at the table directly from the cow, which was milked in the field beside the house. The strong taste of it reminded me of the small bottle of milk we were given in primary school during lunchtime in the late fifties. Sometimes the crates of milk would have been left out in the school yard in the sun and God knows how old they were before being delivered to the school. Suffice to say that warm milk was not my favourite beverage.  I of course had never seen milk poured from anything except a glass bottle that had been delivered to our door by the milkman.

One of the days we made the six mile trip to Westport and I decided that I would buy myself some milk for taking back to the farm house.  On entering the shop I asked the girl behind the counter if she had any milk and could I have real milk from a bottle please, not cow’s milk. I knew what I meant but of course there was loud laughter all around and I was royally slagged for months afterwards.

A more controversial interaction with a farm happened during the eighties. A work colleague of my wife had married a medium sized farmer from the midlands and we were invited to spend the weekend with our three children on the farm.  I was in business development mode with our transport company so six days were the norm and I didn’t get to the farm until late Saturday evening. The days had had been spent turning the hay in a field, in preparation for stacking in haystacks for final drying before been taken in for the winter. That’s my understanding of the process.  When I got there, the farmer, his brother and a couple of labourers , who had been turning the hay, were discussing the weather. It appeared that a major rain storm was predicted for the next few days and if that happened, the hay would basically be ruined. This was about nine O’clock and the guys said it was too late to start stacking because it would get dark before they finished.  I suggested that we bring all the cars and tractors to the field and use the headlights to provide visibility, build the haystacks, even if it took all night and then adjourn for beers etc.  This was met shrugging of shoulders, raised eyebrows and a “what would you know about it” attitude.

We all adjourned to the pub, it rained all the next day, and the next. The hay was lost and it was blamed on the weather.  I subsequently discovered that the farmer wasn’t that pushed because he knew he would be entitled to compensation from the EEC (EU).  We then heard over the next few months that a huge number of farmers, but not all farmers, received compensation for ruined hayfields because of the weather. I remember wondering “If they had tried harder, would they have been able to save the hay”  and how come other farmers managed to save theirs?  This is definitely one of those “City Boy” views of that situation as, in my business, we would never have given up that easily.

When thinking about subjects for my blog posts the above thoughts were running through my head so I decided to use them as the first article and a lead into a more serious look at the relationship between the city consumers and the farmers that produce our food.  I want to trace the milk, meat and vegetables that are currently residing in my fridge on their journey from their place of origin.  I plan to look at the use of our farm land, I see a lot of empty fields as I travel around the country, the difference between vocational and commercial farming, if there is any, and look to see if there is anything useful a city business attitude can bring to the farming table

I believe farming presents Ireland with one of the biggest opportunities to address the issue of the current lack of indigenous business growth. The trick is to marry the production of fresh food with the marketing and distribution industries by sharing ideas across the different disciplines.

 

On being a Leader

Although written in 1909 “if”  is still  very relevant today and anyone who has lived through the vicissitudes of running a business will recognise the words.
For those starting out or wanting to be a leader “if” is a good roadmap

‘if’ by rudyard kipling
If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you,
If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too;
If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
Or being lied about, don’t deal in lies,
Or being hated, don’t give way to hating,
And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise:

 If you can dream – and not make dreams your master,
If you can think – and not make thoughts your aim;
If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
And treat those two impostors just the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
And stoop and build ’em up with worn-out tools:

 If you can make one heap of all your winnings
And risk it all on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
And lose, and start again at your beginnings
And never breathe a word about your loss;
If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
To serve your turn long after they are gone,
And so hold on when there is nothing in you
Except the Will which says to them: “Hold on!”

 If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with kings – nor lose the common touch,
If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
If all men count with you, but none too much;
If you can fill the unforgiving minute
With sixty seconds’ worth of distance run,
Yours is the Earth and everything that’s in it,
And – what’s more – you’ll be a successful one
 

The real end is “And – which is more – you’ll be a Man, my son!”

Rudyard Kipling (1865-1936)

Irish Planning Laws and Objectors

I attended the Dublin Chamber of Commerce’s Green Economy Forum in Byrne Wallace Solicitors this morning at which there was two excellent presentations from Gabriel D’Arcy of Bord Na Mona and John Power from Engineers Ireland.

In both presentations there were examples of local vested interests objecting to infrastructure developments that would be of benefit to the whole country, 

From Gabriel,  “Draining the Shannon and sending the captured water to Dublin”. Two Birds with one stone; alleviate of the annual flooding along the Shannon and help solve the water shortage in the greater Dublin area.

From John,  “The North East Pylon Pressure (NEPP) group” demanding that High Powered Electric Cables be put underground, even though this is both technical and financial lunacy (my words not John’s)  

In answering my question as to how we could prevent minority pressure groups and other cranks holding up important infrastructure developments, just because they can, John also explained that the Shell Gas project in the west of Ireland will have a total delivery time of 18 years from start to finish, the norm anywhere else in the world would be 6 years. Why are the oil companies not queuing up to invest in Ireland??

There needs to be some change here, of course people need to be allowed voice their legitimate concerns and have them listened to and addressed but, if companies or organisations are operating within the rules set down in our planning laws, individuals or small groups of individuals should not be allowed to object and hold up the development, just because they can.

Gabriel D’Arcy made the very valid point that companies or organisations also need to be more professional when planning projects, identifying potential issues or areas of conflict and dealing with them in a sensible manner, before they become a problem. 

If we are to dig ourselves out of the hole we are currently in, we need to speed up the delivery of good infrastructure projects and our planning laws urgently need to be changed to allow this to happen.

We need solid guidelines that take account of local and national needs and once a project is planned and executed within those guidelines, individuals or minority groups should not be allowed object. 

There should certainly be financial consequences for any individual or group that holds up a project for spurious reasons.

 

Brendan Palmer, Problem solver.
Developer of successful business strategies for projects in Ireland and across borders and cultures

 

The long term impact of losing low skilled manufacturing jobs in Ireland

The intangible value of low to medium skilled employment and the long term impact on all employment when supposedly low skilled manufacturing goes elsewhere is very well illustrated in this article by Andy Grove, CEO if Intel from 1987 to 2005.

The article is written about the American market but almost everything in it applies to Ireland and the current “Mantra” regarding high skilled jobs in the Knowledge Economy.

Full article in Bloomberg HERE