The Scotsman

Time to rethink funding of Leisure Trusts

- By GRAHAM LINDSAY graham.lindsay@jpimedia.co.uk

The lockdowns caused by the covid pandemic have provided an opportunit­y to re-shape the way community sport is provided in Scotland, the chair of the body which oversees Scotland’s Leisure Trusts has said.

Robin Strang, chair of Community Leisure Scotland, said the lock down had given under threat Leisure Trusts a chance to re-assess the work they do and said that the county now had “an open door” to make changes for the future. And he urged the next scottish government to back the campaign by the scots man and the observator­y for sport ins cot land(oss) to support a National Conversati­on on Sport to look at more sustainabl­e ways of funding services which have such a vital part to play in so many people’s lives.

“The pandemic has been dreadful and we all agree that we wish it never happened, but can something positive come out of it? Definitely,” said Mr Strang. “The break provides a great opportunit­y for community sport and leisure to have a rethink and to be taken more seriously as part of the health solutions in Scotland. We need community activity where people can access it, that is affordable,and that is inclusive to all .”

Community Leisure Scotland represents 26 member trusts, who between them are responsibl­e for over 1200 facilities, over 18,000 staff and over 12,000 volunteers. Over the last year they have repeatedly highlighte­dthe bleak financial landscape facing members.

A report in April last year revealed that, on average, trusts managing sport and cultural venues were incurring costs of around £900,000 a month, while reporting lost revenue of around £1m per month. The long-term viability of around 70 per cent of venues was said to be in jeopardy - and this was before the second lockdown over winter.

The problems faced by Scotland’s leisure trusts are, sadly, not new - and while the pandemic may have made the financial situation worse, many trusts were already warning of looming cuts in the years and months before most people had even heard of Wuhan.

For Mr Strang, however, the pandemic lockdowns are being seen as a blessing - a break on the never-ending “treadmill” of revenue demand, and time that has allowed them to reassess what their purpose is, and how they can better serve their communitie­s. “There has been a shift in thinking across the charitable leisure and culture trust landscape over the past year,” he said. “The pandemic has caused chief executives and staff to pause and think about the services we’re delivering, and rethink our purpose as community-focused organisati­ons.

“Over the last 10-15 years, many local authoritie­s have tasked outsourced providers to simply generate much-needed income through leisure faciliin ties, while at the same time cutting the investment to them through management fees.

“This has challenged leisure trusts to become more commercial­ly minded, and try to attract more, higher paying members, people who can pay £40 plus gym membership­s, for example, or to raise prices across the board, or cut opening hours or other costs. And that is the treadmill we’ ve been on in Scotland.”

That drive to create income has meant that facilities created to be used by everyone were increasing­ly excluding those without the funds to pay for access - something which caused concern among those charge of the trusts. “I know bec au seiwa sat rust chief executivef­or that time and it did not sit comfortabl­y with me or my colleagues - it was completely alien to those of us from public sector background­s,” said Mr Strang. “But neither did my company going bust and staff being made redundant sit comfortabl­y. So, essentiall­y you do what is required to remain viable .” st rang believes that scotland as a nation, from national to local government, and the wider health, education and community sectors, have been handed a fresh opportunit­y by the pandemic to get off the treadmill, stop the rot of community facility closures and participat­ion drop-out, and strengthen its approach to improving health.

He said: “What the pandemic has done has forced us all to stop and pause, rethink and ask ourselves what we are here for. What is the purpose of the public sport and leisure sector? And that is improving the physical and mental health and well-being of the communitie­s we serve, and supporting those most in need to access our facilities and services.

“We have trusts, along with fantastic people in local authoritie­s, sport organisati­ons, community groups and charities, doing amazing work. There are wonderful stories of lives being changed, families and communitie­s being brought together, serious health problems being improved, by hugely dedicated people, and much of that goes on behind the scenes without much attention. As a result, many people don’ t realise how hard it is to keep that going against a backdrop of reducing investment. For some reason, as a nation, we don’t value highly enough what simple sport activity in local facilities can do to improve our quality of life, as individual­s, as families and as a country.”

Quite how the model changes is what the national conversati­on is all about, but there are good examples already of how shifting away from a trust model and putting facilities back in the hands of the community could be the way forward. In Glasgow, FARE Scotland have worked with the Glasgow Life trust to take on community ownership of the Stepford Football Centre, allowing it to remain in use for the local community. Just this week Street Soccer Scotland took over the Lynch Centre, one of Dundee’s oldest sport venues, saving it from an uncertain future. As well as a base for sport, the charity plans to open the premises to partners working to support people facing disadvanta­ge, including providing a base for expert advisers to support those struggling with moneyissue­s, welfare or housing.

The lessons learned there could, in future, be rolled out to similar centres in other cities, and they are working with the OSS to gather data on the impact of the venture on the lives of the community.

Mr Strang said: ““The government’s emergency Covid funding together with valuable council support has kept all trusts in business into the new financial year, but does it matter to the government and councils what is happening with that money, what the outcomes are?

"Do they want us to go back to that commercial­isation of public sport and leisure services, and more people to be lost to activity? I would urge them to take up our invitation of a‘ national conversati­on’ and actually demand change. He urged those in charge after the election not to push the issue aside. “We currently have an open door to change with more effective partnershi­p at a national and local level, but it won’ t be open for long because people will fall back into old ways,” warned Mr Strang.

"We know that funding is a challenge, and that’s why we have to change to broaden the funding model - not with more money, but with more security in funding. That’s where a brighter future lies.

“We need all parts of the sector to come together and be part of this‘ national conversati­on ’. we need the new scottish Government to provide leadership and em power all parts of society to be part of this, if we are to create a bright er, healthier future .”

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 ??  ?? 0 The swimming pool at the new Lasswade Centre in Midlothian
0 The swimming pool at the new Lasswade Centre in Midlothian

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