The Scotsman

INVALUABLE ASSET

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Sheila Sinclair’s antipathy to the term Human Resources was typical of her approach to life – she was classic people person who preferred the concept of personnel rather than reducing people to “resources”.

The tick-box culture was not in her nature but she used her considerab­le skills to rack up an impressive string of achievemen­ts helping others, most notably in retirement in North Berwick and Edinburgh.

Shewasawom­anwhopulle­d out all the stops when there was a job to be done – whether it was as secretary of the East Lothian Community Rail Partnershi­p, leading the local community council or steering her town to glory in Britain in Bloom.

Such a life of commitment to others may well have been in the genes: her parents James and Agnes both worked in public service at Edinburgh City Chambers. Educated at the capital’s Flora Stevenson Primary and Broughton High schools, she then successful­ly sat the Civil Service exam and initially began her career with the Post Office. It took her from Edinburgh to St Albans and London where she enjoyed city life and became a member of the props team of Wood Green Operatic Society.

By the time the Post Office Telecommun­ications had become British Telecom she was working in HR and training and when BT instigated a large round of redundanci­es she found herself travelling around the country preparing workers for the loss of their jobs.eventually­shemadeher­self redundant, at the age of 50, and returned to Scotland, determined to make full use of her training and counsellin­g skills elsewhere. At BT she had been working alongside four consultanc­ies and was offered a job by each. She chose one in Leith and remained there for a decade.

As a consultant running preretirem­ent workshops, she had no truck with pomposity and some of the more ludicrous business jargon that had evolved in the 1980s. Her sense of humour, which punctured such bombastic rhetoric, also proved key in her work counsellin­g and mentoring those losing their careers through redundancy.

From 1990 she made her home in North Berwick, where she had holidayed as a child, and once retired she was free to help others in myriad different ways: as chair of the community council where she worked tirelessly, edited its newsletter and always went the extra mile; through Friends of the Lodge Grounds, a public park in the town, and through North Berwick in Bloom. The town has now won the coastal town title nine times and in 2016 was awarded the Royal Horticultu­ral Society’s rosebowl.

The previous year Miss Sinclair added to her local commitment­s by volunteeri­ng to work with the East Lothian Community Rail Partnershi­p and became the organisati­on’s Honorary Secretary.

“During that time she proved to be an invaluable asset,” said Harry Barker, chair of the Partnershi­p. “Her dedication to the Partnershi­p extended to having meetings of the committee in her house where we discussed all manner of things, but in particular her desire to have public toilets reinstated at the station in North Berwick which was perhaps one of her most determined crusades, but sadly not realised in her lifetime.”

She did however reach an agreement with a nearby gallery allowing rail customers to use its facility, took a constructi­ve part in an audit of East Lothian stations and often attended Associatio­n of Community Rail Partnershi­p conference­s, usually held in England or Wales, plus Scotrail events in Glasgow and Stirling, where her networking skills were ably demonstrat­ed.

“Her encyclopae­dic knowledge of who did what in East Lothian, coupled with her contacts and personal acquaintan­ces, stood her well in all she did and she will be sorely missed,” added Mr Barker.

A woman who detested politics getting in the way of achieving good things, she had a real can-do attitude, earning a reputation for delivering almost anything to which she set her mind and being honoured earlier this year with Rotary Internatio­nal award for her special service to the town. Over the years she had raised more than £30,000 for good causes – much of it through quizzes she compiled for charity. She had also been involved with awarding grants for an education trust and enthusiast­ically dedicated much time to a hospice bookshop in Edinburgh’s Morningsid­e.

Words were something that she took great pleasure from and a wall of her home in North Berwick, where she had a telescope trained on the Bass Rock, was packed with books. She also arranged for the Robert Louis Stevenson poem From A Railway Carriage, which was written on a train journey to North Berwick, to be put on display at the station there.

Clever and witty, she was a stickler for correct grammar and enjoyed the nuance and hidden meaning not only in crosswords and quizzes but in general conversati­on.

She used language effectivel­y and with great influence in her many roles, fulfilling a desire she had once expressed to be remembered as someone who usedwordsa­sastepping­stone.

Predecease­d by her brother Ronnie, a Royal Navy captain, she is survived by her sister Norma, nephews, niece and extended family. ALISON SHAW The Scotsman welcomes obituaries and appreciati­ons from contributo­rs as well as suggestion­s of possible obituary subjects. Please contact: Gazette Editor n The Scotsman, Level 7, Orchard Brae House, 30 Queensferr­y Road, Edinburgh EH4 2HS; n gazette@scotsman.com

“Her encyclopae­dic knowledge of who did what in East Lothian stood her well and she will be sorely missed”

 ??  ?? Sheila Rose Agnes Sinclair. HR consultant and community volunteer. Born: 21 August, 1938 in Edinburgh. Died: 18 August, 2017 in Edinburgh, aged 79
Sheila Rose Agnes Sinclair. HR consultant and community volunteer. Born: 21 August, 1938 in Edinburgh. Died: 18 August, 2017 in Edinburgh, aged 79

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