Why hours in the time bank can be time well spent
The Observer, 8 July 2001
Andrew Bibby on a community scheme paying dividends
For people living in the Gorbals, time can, quite literally, be money. This
inner-city area on the south bank of the Clyde in Glasgow is one of the latest
places in Britain to launch its own time bank, an ingenious scheme that
converts the hours which people spend within their community voluntarily
helping each other into a new type of tradable currency.
Since its launch at me start of the year, the Gorbals time bank has
attracted about 60 members, who between them have 'earned' and 'spent' about a
hundred hours of time.
'It's been very successful. For example, one older lady who had been
waiting four years for her kitchen to be decorated joined the time bank and
got it done within a month,' says Colin McGowan, the scheme's co-ordinator.
'In exchange, she sits in with a disabled person living close to her,
befriending her - that's what she puts back in.'
As with traditional bank accounts, the Gorbals time bank records each
member's credit or debit balance of 'hours', with each new transaction
carefully recorded on computer. Colin McGowan, who works for the area's
regeneration organisation Gorbals Initiative, puts members in touch with each
other, and sees the time bank as one way of helping to rebuild the old
community spirit that the area lost in the extensive urban redevelopment of
the 1960s.
'A lot of people have been living in high-rise places where they never knew
their neighbours. My job is to bring people together again,' he says.
The idea of trading in time came to Britain about four years ago from the
US, where the community activist Edgar Cahn has developed a network of similar
community-based schemes trading 'time dollars'.
Joy Rogers of Gloucester-based Fair Shares, a local charity that launched
the first British time bank in October 1998, says that the scheme can help
people who have been marginalised by the traditional economy. 'It enables
people who feel that they have nothing to give to recognise that they have
something to offer. But unlike traditional volunteering, this is reciprocal.
Reciprocity is very important'
Fair Shares, together with the New Economics Foundation, recently launched
an umbrella organisation -Time Banks UK (www.timebanks.co.uk) which, with
government funding, is trying to develop the idea.
According to NEF's Sarah Burns there are 18 active schemes operating in
Britain, with a further 20 or so being planned or in development, often with
help from community development agencies and local authorities.
Support sometimes comes from unexpected places: in Catford, south London a
local GP was instrumental in establishing the local time bank, convinced that
healthy community networking could also have a direct effect on individual
health.
Timekeeper, the software necessary to administer time banks, which was
originally devised by Edgar Cahn, is available at low cost from Time Banks UK,
which also provides advice for any would-be 'time broker' prepared to
coordinate a new scheme.
But is all this infrastructure really necessary to achieve the sort of good
neighbourliness that surely used to be taken for granted?
According to Joy Rogers, time banks are one response to recent changes in
society. Twenty or 30 years ago people often lived in the same towns as their
parents and grandparents. Nowadays, people move around much more.
Time broking is really a mechanism for creating a stronger sense of
community, helping people who feel isolated, she says.
'Time broking is really a mechanism for creating a sense of community' she
says
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