Weekend Herald

Politician’s warning to the RSA: Get with the times or get out

Clubs must become more relevant to younger people, hard-hitting report finds

- David Fisher

There is very little evidence in decor, music, atmosphere that would encourage young men and women of the day to walk through those doors. Defence Minister Ron Mark, pictured

The nation’s 180 RSA clubs will not survive unless they find a way to be relevant to younger people, says an internal report carried out for the organisati­on.

Defence Minister Ron Mark has endorsed the urgent need for the organisati­on to change and says it has made good moves towards doing so.

Yet Mark and the RSA concede more needs to be done to ensure the organisati­on is meeting the needs for which it was created — support and welfare for those who serve New Zealand.

The Royal New Zealand Returned and Services Associatio­n was set up in 1916 by soldiers returning from the illfated Gallipoli campaign.

It now claims 182 local RSAs with around 100,000 members, having relaxed membership rules in recent decades to allow those who have never served in uniform to join.

The internal report by Christophe­r Hodson, QC, was intended to probe structural issues within the organisati­on. Instead, the report shows Hodson found members were concerned whether the organisati­on could actually continue to exist.

He said even though the concerns weren’t part of his remit, he was compelled to report the comments because of “universal concern about the effect of the ageing process on the organisati­on, coupled with the need to increase younger membership”.

Hodson wrote: “The key word here is relevance. To survive at all the organisati­on needs to demonstrat­e relevance to the community and to recognise and meet the needs of those whom its existence is designed to support.

“These issues present as uppermost in very many if not all minds.”

The RSA’s founding purpose was to provide support and welfare for current and former service personnel.

It has struggled to maintain the function with contempora­ry veterans while keeping its traditiona­l bricksand-mortar clubrooms afloat.

Hodson said a project needed to be developed to resolve the issues and to include Mark, as Minister of Defence, and the Chief of Defence Force.

He said “the primary aim is to ensure the survival of the organisati­on”.

The RSA’s greatest difficulty is considered to be engaging with the 20,000-plus contempora­ry veterans, who have served in Bosnia, Timor, the Solomon Islands, the Middle East and Afghanista­n.

It isn’t alone — Veterans’ Affairs NZ has also stepped up efforts to connect with a group of service personnel whose coalition contempora­ries are struggling with high levels of servicerel­ated emotional and mental injury.

Mark said he had made it clear to the RSA it needed to do more to serve the needs of contempora­ry veterans.

“The situation was not good. It was dire. All the indicators of failure were blinking like neon lights in Las Vegas. Everyone could see them.”

Mark, who committed $1 million in taxpayer funding to the RSA since becoming minister, said he believed the organisati­on had “turned a corner” and was heading in the right direction.

Innovation­s like the “Burnham hub”, which put an RSA presence inside Burnham military camp, had proved an effective way of connecting with serving personnel, he said.

It was being repeated at Linton camp near Palmerston North, and others where appropriat­e.

He said more change was needed, even in simple aspects such as decor in clubs reflecting the Great War and World War II.

“There is very little evidence in decor, music, atmosphere that would encourage young men and women of the day to walk through those doors.”

RSA president Barry Clark said the issue was recognised and pressing.

“We need to look at changing our offering. We ourselves have acknowledg­ed this some time ago and have been working very hard with our RSAs over the need to change.”

Clark said the physical clubs would be a part of the organisati­on’s future as it strengthen­ed its support for those who had served.

“We need to acknowledg­e those who have served after Vietnam. Let us never forget we came from Gallipoli but let us also acknowledg­e those who are serving today.”

A number of RSAs have financiall­y collapsed in recent years and most districts’ annual reports record struggles to maintain patronage.

The Kerikeri RSA’s recent annual report recorded the resignatio­n of its president who did not want to “die in the saddle” as others on the executive had, and the drop in membership from 900 to around 660 people. “What is the future of the RSA,” its vice-presidents asked in the report. “Do we continue trying to get us back to where we were three years ago or do we have to relook at what we are doing?” They said “we just cannot entice our members to use the club” despite lowering costs, setting up a darts club and running euchre evenings.

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