Timetable for Change, New Start, 25 May 2001
Time banks are surprising local authorities in providing support networks
and cost-effect solutions to public service problems, reports
David Boyle
Officials at North Yorkshire County Council are among those who have taken
the risk of actually asking their social service clients what they want.
Its not such a radical idea in itself - though radical enough compared with
the great tradition of local authority social services in days gone by.
And as so often happens on such occasions, the result was a bit of a
surprise.
Generally speaking, clients didn't really want the traditional panoply of
services, from residential homes to lunch clubs. What they wanted was support
networks in the community, just as there were - or so we imagine - in
generations gone by.
The result: North Yorkshire is among the local authorities looking to
invest resources into developing community time banks, the social
capital-building tool where people swap their time by helping out in their
local neighbourhood.
Time banks have only been in the UK for just over two years, though mere
are many more in the USA, Japan and China. They started as a method of
accessing community support to keep older people safe and healthy in their own
homes for longer.
But now that the umbrella organisation Time Banks UK is one year old,
thanks to funding from the Home Offices active community unit, the idea seems
to be taking off - in an unexpected number of directions.
There are about 20 time banks up and running, with a similar number about
to launch. The government has also discounted 'time credits' - the electronic
currency that measures and rewards people’s efforts - for tax and benefit
purposes, and has promised to help make sure there are at least 125 schemes in
place by 2003.
Employment minister Tessa Jowell has also proposed that time banks could be
a key part of the government’s strategy to help people upgrade skills and ease
their way into employment.
What is fascinating is how time banks are being adopted in very different
sectors, and to achieve very different things. It isn't just about the elderly
any more.
The Rushey Green time bank, based in a doctor's surgery in Lewisham, is
being used to broaden neighbourhood development so that it keeps people
healthy, and is now into its second year thanks to support from the Kings
Fund.
Doctors are increasingly referring patients to the time bank - often with
long-term depression - because they find that plugging them into community
networks of mutual support improves their condition.
The South London and Maudsley NHS Trust covers the same area specialising
in mental health, and has watched this process at work. It now plans to roll
out time banks across its institutions too.
In a twist to the idea, the Lloyds-TSB Foundation is funding an
experimental DIY scheme at Rushey Green, so that participants can get small
and vital home repairs done by other participants paid for in time credits,
and organised through the surgery.
Then there's community development, starting with the network of rime banks
across rural Gloucestershire run by Fair Shares - which opened the first time
bank in the UK in Stonehouse in December 1999.
The Gorbals Initiative has also launched the first rime bank in Glasgow as
an innovative method of community regeneration, using a time currency they
call 'liptons' after one of the area's most famous natives, teabag pioneer Sir
Thomas Lipton.
Single regeneration budget projects in
Elephant & Castle, south London, Sheffield's Norfolk Community Park and the
Rhondda Valley are also turning to time banks as a way of making sure the
community develops rather than being driven underground by the weight of new
concrete.
Then there's education. Skill Swap projects are being set up in Leicester
and Rutland with the help of the New Economics Foundation, this time swapping
skills and know-how rather than time.
Three schools in Tower Hamlets, east London, plan to set up time banks,
funded by the new educational trust Shine. They will pay pupils in time
credits for their efforts as peer tutors, and let them cash them in for a
recycled computer.
There are time banks run by local authorities emerging in Watford and
Derby, run by community groups in Newcastle and Dumfries, and even run by the
chamber of commerce in St Helens. It's a rapidly broadening church.
'The point is that time banks are not just rebuilding community, local
trust and the sense of self-worth among those taking part,' says Sarah Burns
of Time Banks UK- 'They are also revitalising their host institutions - be
they schools or health centres - by involving clients as equal partners in the
business of regeneration.'
David Boyle is an associate of the New Economics Foundation.
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