The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Changing lives

Michael Alexander speaks to some of the volunteer youth workers giving up their time to help youngsters in Tayside and Fife

-

The sound of boisterous laughter echoes around the drill hall as a group of boys takes on the fun yet educationa­l challenge of trying to build mathematic­al structures using marshmallo­ws and spaghetti.

It’s a change of pace from the drill practice, chanter lessons, outdoor activities and Bible classes that the boys – and the generation­s before them over the last 100-plus years – have experience­d as members of the 1st St Andrews Boys’ Brigade.

For the captain of the St Andrews BB company, Stephen Donaldson, and the other volunteers who generously devote so much of their spare time to making these activities possible, it’s incredibly rewarding to help the youngsters develop skills, build confidence and take responsibi­lity – all in keeping with the original ethos of the Boys’ Brigade, which is that by combining discipline and reverence, boys will develop “true Christian manliness”.

Yet according to Mr Donaldson,

60, a lifelong member who works as a mechanic at a local garage, the organisati­on locally now faces a crisis with the current 21 boys the lowest roll in the company’s history and an ongoing struggle to recruit adult volunteers.

Many of the challenges, he says, apply across the country. They include competitio­n from other structured youth activities; tighter – yet vital – background checks putting off some parents from helping out and a more secular society lessening the appeal of a youth organisati­on that holds Christian values at its heart.

But, Mr Donaldson says, there are specific pressures in St Andrews that also put the long-term future of the local company in doubt. The main issue there, he says, is a relative lack of affordable housing, which has pushed out many low-to-average-income families who would have once been the life-blood of the organisati­on.

“I do worry for the future of this company,” says Mr Donaldson, a bornand-bred St Andrean whose wife, Irene, also helps out and who is a passionate upholder of the history surroundin­g the unique, category B-listed St Andrews BB Hall, built by public subscripti­on in 1899.

“However, I still believe that we offer so much for the youngsters who do attend and I think, in this day and age, what we offer is more relevant than ever.”

With the BB engaging 17,000 children and young people and with 3,500 adult volunteers in 400 communitie­s across every local authority area in Scotland, John Sharp, director of The Boys’ Brigade in Scotland, says the role of the BB – currently celebratin­g the 100th anniversar­y of its Junior Section – is “as important now as it has ever been.”

“It is vital that The Boys’ Brigade ensures that it continues to meet the needs of children and young people,” says Mr Sharp.

“Our focus is ensuring that there is a wide, but also a balanced, range of programmes and activities, which include exploring digital skills, learning about health and wellbeing, physical activity and much more.

“We want to make sure that young people can have fun, while also learning and developing new skills.”

Kirkcaldy SNP MSP David Torrance, 56, says the key to a successful youth organisati­on is providing activities that young people enjoy, that are relevant to life and that engage with the community. Born and bred in Kirkcaldy, the former engineer and Fife councillor – who has represente­d his home town

We want to make sure that young people can have fun, while also learning and developing new skills

at Holyrood since 2011 – has been attached to the 5th Fife Scout Group in Kirkcaldy for 48 years, first as a cub, scout and venture scout and, latterly, as a volunteer scout leader.

Encouraged to join by his father, the organisati­on gave him opportunit­ies to try activities like skiing, canoeing and camping as well as the chance to learn skills transferab­le to wider life that he says were nigh on impossible for most children growing up in Kirkcaldy in his youth – and the “real life” opportunit­ies still exist today.

He says: “Scouts went through a bit of an image problem in the 1970s but today we have Bear Grylls as chief scout, which helps – such a great figurehead to have.”

Mr Torrance said scouting is in its 11th year of growth with around 80 boys and girls in the 5th Fife Scout Group alone – a catchment that includes some of the most deprived parts of Kirkcaldy. One of the attraction­s, he says, is that it remains relatively cheap.

“Kirkcaldy district has 11 scout groups – we are all surviving and doing really well,” he says, adding that the Scout Associatio­n was “years ahead” with its child protection regulation­s and anti-bullying initiative­s. If you are joining, you get these amazing opportunit­ies. They develop your skills, you develop your communicat­ions and you get real, life-changing opportunit­ies within the scout associatio­n.

“It also brings great things for volunteers. If someone is volunteeri­ng within the scouts section and turning up every week and giving their time, to their employer that shows commitment.”

By day, Newtyle woman Christine Milne is general manager at the West Park Conference Centre in Dundee. By night and at weekends, however, she is Flight Lieutenant Christine Milne RAFVR(T), Commanding Officer of 1232 (City of Dundee) Squadron of the Air Cadets. She has been a volunteer for eight years, starting as a civilian instructor and spending the past seven years in uniform.

She is now responsibl­e for just over 30 cadets ranging in age from 12 to 20, with a 50:50 split between boys and girls. “My husband was involved and when my son was old enough he joined, too,” she explains. “I got to know the cadets and saw the change in their confidence levels and developmen­t of skills. I have been involved in other youth organisati­ons in the past but when I saw what the Air Cadets could offer, I just had to be a part of it.”

The Air Cadets, which has squadrons across Tayside, Fife and beyond, offers activities to teenagers ranging from flying, gliding, shooting and adventure training to completing Duke of Edinburgh Awards and learning about engineerin­g.

Yet Fl Lt Milne says recruitmen­t can be a challenge as there are a lot more activities available for young people these days.

The “real challenge”, she says, is getting adult volunteers involved. She adds: “People’s lives are much more complex than in the past with more and more responsibi­lities. It can be quite a commitment for most to give up time in the evening or weekend to supervise a group of young people.”

However, she said being involved opens up many rewarding opportunit­ies for adult volunteers, too – helping young people achieve their potential.

Volunteeri­ng is also at the heart of Showcase the Street, which is based in a former jute mill at Manhattan Works in Maryfield, Dundee, and which provides outreach work for youngsters in Angus and Perthshire.

Its roots date back to 2003 when a group of girls went to current chairman Fergus Storrier, 52, a former Tayside police officer, looking to develop a dance studio in Arbroath.

Since then it has grown into a much wider charity operating from Stonehaven to Inchture and offering community dance classes to young people aged three to 18, mainly in areas of deprivatio­n and rural communitie­s. And interestin­gly, its largest base of volunteers is young people themselves.

“I guess one of the things that always frustrated me, as a police officer, was young people always getting a bad reputation,” says Mr Storrier. “There are loads of young people out there who are doing extremely positive things.

“One of the things that we do in our five dance shows every year is present certificat­es to all of our volunteers. We’ve got examples of volunteers who have done 1,000 hours of volunteeri­ng.

“We are keen to recognise the positive impact that these young people make to their communitie­s.”

Mr Storrier welcomed the dawn of tighter child protection laws. However, he concedes this can make it more difficult for some organisati­ons to recruit volunteers, especially after recent negative press around child protection issues involving some youth organisati­ons. He adds: “Certainly my experience of the PVG system now is that it’s a lot tighter, it’s a lot stricter, it’s a lot easier to identify issues and there’s a lot more agencies working together to identify those issues before they happen. That can only be a good thing.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Claopctkio­w n isi e n fhroe m reb..e. low: the St Andrews 1st BB; Christine Milne and her squadron; Stephen Donaldson; 5th (Fife) Scout Group; youngsters at the Stevie Campbell Football Academy, one of the activities at Showcase The Street in Dundee....
Claopctkio­w n isi e n fhroe m reb..e. low: the St Andrews 1st BB; Christine Milne and her squadron; Stephen Donaldson; 5th (Fife) Scout Group; youngsters at the Stevie Campbell Football Academy, one of the activities at Showcase The Street in Dundee....
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom