Category Archives: Village Hall

Activities in the Village Hall

WING WI: MAKING BOOKS TALK


Thursday 9 February, 2.30 pm in the Village Hall.  
MAKING BOOKS TALK.  
audio-books-300x210
Bob Rollett will talk about his work in recording audio books for blind people.  Some of you will have heard Bob before when he has entertained in the Church and we are looking forward to hearing of his experiences when recording.
Visitors from Wing or elsewhere are always welcome.
For more information about the meeting or about the WI please get in touch with the secretary, Jane Gilmore:  01572 737324

100 Club Winners Jan 2017


1st                                 26                      Anne Willis

2nd                               44                      Robina Curley

3rd                                30                      Adrian Cox

The full list is Here

MEETINGS Reschedule


As we have been uncertain about timing for the floor work in the Village Hall, the decision was taken last week to postpone tonight’s Committee and GNS meetings.
Whilst I understand the floor is now complete to avoid further confusion the meetings remain cancelled and are rescheduled as follows;
Good Neighbours Scheme               6 Feb from 6.30 pm
Village Hall Committee meeting: 6 Feb from 7.30 pm.

 

WING VILLAGE HALL MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE MEETING

Circulation   SC KB PB RT PO AT  JO MR JB BS NK

 

AGENDA Action

By

 

There will be a short briefing about the Prepared Citizens Initiative before the meeting.

 

Welcome to Alison.

 

1 Apologies

 

2 Meeting Minutes

Confirmed and Signed as a true record

 

3 Matters Arising (Not covered by the agenda)

 

4. 100 Club

 

5 Health and Safety

 

5. Building Maintenance

 

6. Good Neighbour Scheme

 

7. Future Events

 

8. Treasurers  Report

Update on bank accounts

 

9. Hall Managers Report

 

10. AOB

 

11.Date of Next Meeting

 

 

Village halls face bleak future as ageing volunteers dwindle


 Elsted Village Hall in West Sussex (stock) 
 Elsted Village Hall in West Sussex (stock)  CREDIT: JEFF GILBERT

Village halls are facing a bleak future because a new generation of young volunteers are failing to step forward to help run them.

Once the cornerstone of local communities, Britain’s 10,000 halls are under threat as an ageing group of 80,000 volunteers continues to dwindle.

Action with Communities in Rural England (ACRE) said halls have struggled to recruit the next generation to keep the community spaces going and are calling for drastic action.

The annual show at Weburn Village Hall, Welburn, North Yorkshire
The annual show at Weburn Village Hall, Welburn, North Yorkshire CREDIT: CRAIG STENNETT

ACRE Village Halls Manager Deborah Clarke said: “Village halls are vital for the survival of rural communities. People want to use them but they don’t want to commit to running them.

“It’s understandable – there are a raft of duties to deal with, from licensing legislation to health and safety – but communities are in danger of taking their volunteers for granted.

“Younger people are especially hard to attract as they often work long hours away from village in order to live in them – while the newly retired often don’t want to commit.”

My mantra is you can’t complain about local facilities if you don’t get involved. People take these spaces for granted but if you put time and effort in, there’s no end of wonderful things to gain Alastair McPherson

Alan West, 69, vice chairman of the now disbanded National Village Halls Forum, said: “The crunch has finally come. We need young people to step forward and get involved in the future of village halls.

“The traditional village hall is the hub of a community. It means people can meet face to face.

“Younger generations sit in front of their screens and communicate via social media these days but in the hall they can actually talk and interact.

“In our village hall – Ringmer Hall in East Sussex – we run a food bank, carers can meet other carers, the Guides and Brownies do their activities – every day things are happening.”

Alan recognises younger generations are busy and lead “hectic” lives.

But he added: “Perhaps it reflects the culture we have got into – being at the desk all hours – and that goes back into private life. Younger people are at work all day and there’s not a lot of room left for helping the community.”

England’s 10,000 village halls rely on more than 12 million hours of volunteering each year, according to a national survey by ACRE.

But more than half of the halls who responded to the survey said they were struggling to find new recruits to help manage the buildings – with people saying they were too busy, too old or simply not interested.

Louise Beeton, 60, has worked as a freelance village hall advisor and consultant for over 30 years and says she has seen a “huge change” over the period.

She said: “It makes me sad to see the difficulty that trustees are now facing. Village halls need to adapt to the future and modern day requirements but they they can only do that if there is support, advice, funding and not too much of a tax burden.

“Occasionally a hall is lucky enough to get younger volunteers but most of them are relying on older trustees who are now in their 70s and 80s.”

Alastair McPherson, 43, has adopted a different approach to encourage young people to get involved with his local community centre The Woodside, near Hayward’s Heath.

He said: “One of the issues with the traditional village hall is that people my age and down see them as drafty old buildings run by older people. But ours is amazing – it’s a really modern building with big windows and lots of light.

“It’s a hub of activity. We held a beer festival, which attracted younger people and we have a Facebook page and we are working on more social media strategies.”

Alastair added: “My mantra is you can’t complain about local facilities if you don’t get involved. People take these spaces for granted but if you put time and effort in, there’s no end of wonderful things to gain.”

Meanwhile, supporters of village halls are doing everything they can to keep the community spaces alive.

The recently launched National Village Hall & Community Network now has 300 hall committees signed up, contributing to discussions and advising on how to move forward. And innovative projects like the first Passivhaus village hall – an energy efficient building – have received Lottery funding.