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Showing posts with label Mike Rodd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mike Rodd. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 06, 2012

Canal Trust seeks professional caterers

Commercial caterers are needed to run a cafe in the historic former bonded warehouse on Devizes Wharf that is home to the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust.
The former bonded warehouse on Devizes Wharf, headquarters of the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust: Picture by Bob Naylor©

The canal trust had previously run a café in the upstairs meeting room in the building in 2007 but in common with the Trust's tea rooms and cafes at Bradford on Avon, Aldermaston and Newbury it was not profitable even with minimal staff costs using unpaid volunteers and part-time managers. 

The Devizes café was closed and these other cafés have since been put into the hands of what the Trust describe as 'commercial partners' who run them as private businesses with no involvement at all from the Trust.

Local newspaper, the Wiltshire Gazette & Herald,  says that that the Trust Chairman, Mike Rodd Devizes Wharf claims the café used to do a 'roaring trade' during the summer months and the paper goes on to quote him as saying: "The trust wishes to extend the range and availability of the services provided at its Wharfside cafe through a partnership arrangement with professional caterers who will share the trust’s passion and interests in the canal."

Anyone interested in this opportunity should ring the canal trust administrator Jean Cook on 01380 721279 or email: katrustadministrator@btconnect.com

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Canal Trust boss who 'fired himself' joins University Hall of Fame

The University of the Witwaterstrand in Johannesburg, South Africa is to include Mike Rodd, the former General Manager, and now Chairman of the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust in its School of Electrical and Information Engineering Hall of Fame.

K&A Canal Trust Chairman, Dr Mike Rodd: 
Picture by Bob Naylor © 2009 HNA Media 
The citation document outlines Professor Mike Rodd's history of founding internationally recognised journals, writing and editing books and his many other achievements — along with the award of a senior doctorate from the University of Wales.  

It follows his career to Swansea, then on to the Institution of Electrical Engineers and to the British Computer Society and then finally to the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust as its paid General Manager… and when the Trust's finances became so desperate that he could no longer afford to pay himself he became its voluntary Chairman.

The University citation concludes with: "In 2009, Mike decided to give full rein to his passion for the UK’s amazing canal system by becoming more involved in actively working to support it.  He became CEO of the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust, one of the UK’s most successful canal charities.  With over 4,000 members, the Trust has an amazing record of leading the restoration of the 100-mile waterway running from Bristol to London, having obtained the largest-ever government lottery grant (£25million) to fund the work.  Mike recently fired himself from this salaried position to become the (volunteer!) Chairman of the Trust’s Council, as the Trust seeks to determine how to fulfil its role in the twenty-first century."

Thursday, May 05, 2011

Trust does little for canal admits K&A Canal Trust Chairman

Trust Chairman: Mike Rodd
Picture by Bob Naylor©
"What does the Trust do?" asked Mike Rodd at a recent meeting, and the reply he gave to his own question was: "Actually at the moment it doesn't do much but sustain itself."

He then went on to explain that the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust and its trading arm, K&A Canal Trust Enterprise Ltd have a turnover of more than £460,000 but, he said: "The truth is, not much of it goes on the canal." 

Volunteers saved the K&A from closure and worked tirelessly to restore it. Now, with ‘Cruiseway’ status finally granted to the canal is the work of the Canal's Trust over? 

The Kennet & Avon Canal was reclassified by the government as a ‘Cruiseway’ waterway on 18 April 2011 and the future of the canal as a navigation is legally assured — does this mean the admirable work of the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust is over and the charity in its present form should be wound up? Some members of the K&A Canal Trust think that it should.


The Trust is 'Skint'

Former Trustee, Adrian Softley
Picture by Bob Naylor©
Speaking at a recent Canal Users' Forum in the very canalside building on Devizes Wharf that the Trust is soon to vacate because of lack of funds Adrian Softley, the Former Managing Director of K&A Canal Trust Enterprise Ltd, who was also previously a member the Trust's governing board and Chairman of the Devizes Branch of the Trust said: "The Trust is skint, its job is done and we all might as well volunteer for the new BW Charity"   

A similar note was struck by Mike Rodd who was the K&A Canal Trust's paid General Manager until the end of December 2010 when Trust Council described Trust fundraising as 'a total washout'  and terminated his position because as was said at the time 'we have no accessible cash'.  But in a bizarre twist, Trust Council then co-opted him onto Trust Council and then immediately elected him Chairman. 


Dr Rodd, who actually keeps his own boat on the Mon & Brec Canal was a speaker at a NABO Roadshow in Pewsey in March this year where he reported that he had been asked by Waterway Manager, Mark Stephens: "What did you do with the £25,000 that the Rose of Hungerford trip boat raised last year? How did it benefit the canal?" ... A question to which he offered no answer.

Mike Rodd continued by commenting on the bankside work being done at Bradford on Avon by a small group of volunteers and asked: "Shouldn't that be done in future by the new Waterways Trust and not through the K&A Canal Trust?" And he concluded by further asking: "Do we get out of what we are doing at the moment and become part of the new waterways charity?  Or do we have to sit down and say we're going to become more of a lobbying organisation?

Trust's proud history of defiance
The defiance, civil disobedience, campaigning, fundraising and hands-on restoration by the countless supporters of the Kennet & Avon Canal from the time that the government tried to shut the canal down completely has left a legacy that will benefit future generations.

In 1956 the whole of the UK’s canal system was in a sorry state. The Kennet & Avon Canal, which crosses the country from Bristol to Reading, for example, was hardly navigable and the British Transport Commission wanted to close it. In a Bill put before Parliament they planned to classify it as ‘Abandoned’ — never to be used again except perhaps to be filled in and used as a convenient bypass for some of the towns along its length.

The Kennet & Avon Canal Association was formed in 1956 to fight to save the canal from abandonment. And those early campaigners really had a fight on their hands. A fight that the navigation authority did not want them to win. Locks gates were padlocked closed, but Association members cut them off. 

Protests and petitions

A petition to the Queen is carried by canoe for part
of its journey in along the K&A to London
Protest meetings were held and names of supporters were collected on a petition that was sent to the Queen.

After a lengthy, hard fought, campaign the early pioneers finally succeeded in 1962 in having the canal re-classified by the Government as ‘Remainder’. 

The goal then was to restore the canal to full navigation and have it re-classified as ‘Cruiseway’, to ensure the future of the waterway and put a legal responsibility on the navigation authority to keep the canal maintained and open for navigation and give long-term security to the businesses trading on the Kennet & Avon Canal.

Trust 'heritage' status
In 1962 the Kennet and Avon Canal Association applied for ‘heritage’ charitable status and the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust was formed.

The railway built by Brian 'Grumpy' House from 'borrowed'
parts to speed up work on Caen Hill
Men, women and children got dug in, quite literally, and weekend after weekend volunteers cut down trees, dug out the channel or worked to re-claim locks. 


Others helped to raise money by running boat trips, shops, cafés or other fundraising events such as car boot sales, Crafty Craft races or wharfside fetes. 

Members of the Trust pulled together and made it work. There was energy, determination and a goal. 


They were inventive, imaginative and creative. They called in favours, borrowed, scrounged and, it has been said, stole the tools and the materials that they needed to do the work. 

They found labour where they could. Local schools became involved and a thriving ‘Youth Division’ was formed. Links were forged with the Criminal Justice System and local prisoners were sometimes to be found working on the eastern end of the canal. 


And all of this work was carried out with the ultimate goal to see full navigation of the canal and to get the elusive ‘Cruiseway’ status.

BWB put a stop to K&A volunteering
In 1977 volunteers were stopped by BWB from working at Widmead and Monkey Marsh locks, allegedly for safety reasons — and eventually BWB put a stop to all volunteering on the canal. 
It may have been a matter of Health & Safety, certainly early volunteers talk of a definite gung-ho approach that would put fear in the hearts of anyone with responsibility for the safety of volunteers today. It has also been claimed that the unions were to blame because they believed that volunteers were taking away staff jobs.

Whatever the truth of the matter, Trust volunteer labour was no longer welcome, or allowed, on the Kennet & Avon Canal and so the effort of its members was put into raising funds.

The canal was finally opened for through navigation from Bristol to Reading when the Queen came to officially reopen the canal on 8 August 1990. 

But this was far from the end of the story. There was still much more to do to get the K&A up to standard and in 1994 a Partnership of BW, the K&A Canal Trust and riparian local authorities was set up to apply for a grant from the Heritage Lottery Fund. 

They succeeded in raising £29m, the largest grant awarded by HLF at that time — but not all the cash actually came from the HLF. £21m came from the grant, the rest – as a condition of the grant – had to come from matched funding from the riparian authorities and the K&A Canal Trust whose liability for matched funding was £50K a year. The K&A Canal Trust certainly knew how to raise funds in those days.

K&A Canal Trust 'financially weak' 
The Trust’s finances are now described as ‘weak’. The sad fact is that It actually has no cash reserves and only an unexpected legacy and a donation saved it from having to try to re-finance in March this year. 

The Trust was also on the brink of having to re-finance in the Spring of 2010 but managed to weather that storm. 


However in 2011 but for an unexpected legacy and donation the Trust would have definitely had to re-finance. So the financial position this year must have been even worse than in previous years. 


Charity Commission submission ... 'empty promises'
No lessons were learned from 2009 and no strong financial controls were put in place although in the Trust’s report to the Charity Commission in 2009 it said: “... the trustees decided that they should go into 2010 with a balanced budget. To achieve this, difficult decisions have to be made. These included reducing HQ staffing, reducing the cost of producing the Trust Magazine, The Butty, outsourcing most of our cafes and tea rooms through partnership arrangements with professional caterers, refreshing the admissions Gift-Aid proposition, and planning a fundraising push for 2010.”  

The report went on to say, “The result of the changes is a balanced budget for 2010. Looking ahead, the Trustees plan to increase the income-generating activities on the canal, with more boat operations and enhanced offerings at visitor attractions, thereby also promoting the public experience of the unique waterway.” 

As a mother might say when a child says they will tidy up their room tomorrow — "empty promises".

The 2009 accounts have this to say about financial reserves, “It is the policy of the Charity that unrestricted funds which have not been designated for a specific use should be maintained at a level equivalent to between three and six month’s expenditure. 


The trustees considers (sic) that reserves at this level will ensure that in the event of a significant drop in funding, they will be able to continue the Charity’s current activities while consideration is given to ways in which additional funds may be raised. This level of reserves has been maintained throughout the year”.

The 2009 report to the Charity Commission says: “The trustees have assessed the major risks to which the Charity is exposed, and are satisfied that systems are in place to mitigate exposure to the major risks".

Long term financial failings
So what went wrong? In 2006 the accounts show that the Trust lost £56,528, In 2007 it lost £35,770, in 2008 it lost £43,258. None of these figures include the results for the trading arm, which was accounted for separately until 2009.

In 2009, when the deficit was £26,328 the trustees realised that something had to be done and so they applied to Kennet District Council for £75,000 to support the salary of a general manager for three years. The GM's job was to sort out the finances and to make the role self-financing before the end of the three years of the grant funding — through the fundraising activities of the person appointed. 

Lack of scrutiny by funders
Because the grant was awarded in the final days of the District Council's existence the full £75,000 was paid in one lump sum and the normal scrutiny that Local Authority funded organisations would expect before receiving year 2 and year 3 of the grant has not occurred. 

The fact that the K&A Canal Trust publicly stated earlier this year that they actually have no cash now adds confusion because of course there should be £25,000 that was banked in 2009 for the third year of Local Authority funding of the GM post. Has this already been spent?

The practice of a well run organisation would be to 'ring fence' that money and, of course, it is possible that it is sitting there in the bank following the decision to end the General Manager's post because the Trust did not have any money to pay his wages. 


The former General Manager, Dr Mike Rodd, who is now the latest Chairman of the K&A Canal Trust is now refusing to answer questions about the finances of the Trust.

Trust GM refuses to take responsibility for poor financial performance
At the end of 2009 Dr Rodd had been in post for nine months, although he had been volunteering in his role for the previous three months before taking up the post. The end of year accounts showed a deficit of £26,328 — by any standards a catastrophic performance against the budget set for that year by the trustees.

Dr Rodd refused to take responsibility for that performance, saying, “It wasn’t my budget”. 

As one commentator has asked, "Is it not the job of a charity’s General Manager to monitor financial performance against the budget and make recommendations to the board of trustees during the year, rather than wait until the final figures are disclosed?"

Trust Treasurer — 'financial performance monitoring is not my role'
Former Trust
Treasurer,
Neil Lethby
by Bob Naylor©
The Treasurer until the end of 2010 was Neil Lethby who felt that monitoring financial performance wasn't the role of the treasurer either. He said in 2009,  "We don’t do financial forecasts throughout the year". 


Every set of year end figures in recent years has come as a surprise — but proper financial planning should have been in place so that they were not. 


Yet in 2010 — when Dr Rodd, who is a Visiting Professor at Cranfield University School of Management, was there to set the budget, the financial performance of the Trust has demonstrably worsened.

Have Trust funds benefited the canal?
Aside from the issues of the actual financial performance of the Trust another question being asked by observers is: "How has the canal benefited from what income the Trust does raise through the membership subscriptions, entrance fees to its attractions and from running trip boats, shops and cafes?"

Income from these activities has definitely not been spent on the historic building on Devizes Wharf that has been the Trust’s HQ for the past 30 years since the building was converted from the local authority dustcart garage by a Manpower Services project in 1980 and the interior finished off by Trust volunteers. 

This building belonged to Wiltshire County Council who leased it to Kennet District Council on a peppercorn rent who then sub-let it to the K&A Canal Trust, who in turn leased rooms to three local organisations, the Lions, Devizes Canoe Club and Devizes and District Anglers. 

The lease was for 25 years and when it expired in 2007 it was costing the Trust £2,000 a year with the rent  from the three other organisations, believed to be £1,000, contributing to the rent. The Trust had the building for £1,000 a year and no Council Tax to pay.

Negotiations for a new lease floundered when KDC demanded a full commercial rent for the building of £20,000 a year, which the Trust refused to pay, and the Trust has remained in the building since then, continuing to pay £2,000 a year.

Half a million pound turnover
It is doubtful that there is another charity in Devizes with a turnover of £500,000 a year that is not paying a commercial rent for their premises. So it is reasonable to ask why the K&A Canal Trust should be any different.

The reason certainly isn’t because the Trust is protecting and enhancing the building that it has occupied for 30 years  because since the Devizes Branch of the Trust took over the building when Manpower Services finished their re-building work in 1980 and volunteers spent the next year fitting the building out, re-wiring, plumbing and turning it into offices, shop, storage rooms, museum and meeting room, very little routine maintenance has been carried out.

The external back single story wall has been allowed to deteriorate through neglect, the guttering is missing in sections and there are no downpipes so that water runs down the stonework keeping it constantly damp and prone to frost damage. There has been no re-pointing or replacement of the stonework. There is much work to be done on the building and much of that work could have been done by volunteers — but unfortunately there seems to be no inclination among the leadership of the Trust to harness the enthusiasm that still exists within its membership — or to encourage more.

For the leadership of an organisation with charitable status under the 'heritage' tag to have allowed this stone wall to deteriorate so badly has been described as 'an absolute disgrace'.  If the Trust is either unable or not inclined to maintain an important historical property that it has occupied for 30 years should it actually be a heritage charity?


Failure to maintain roof causes internal problems
The rotten flooring in the Gents' toilet


Problems with the roof have not been addressed and it is this lack of essential routine preventative maintenance that resulted in costly essential repairs in 2009 when rainwater channelling through a partition wall rotted the flooring and caused part of the second floor of the building to collapse under one of the Gents' toilets on 4 March 2009.


Ceiling damage caused by
lack of roof maintenance
Whilst Trust management deliberated about the toilet problems they took one of the Gents' cubicles and an adjacent Womens' cubicle out of use. But over the Easter weekend in 2009 a remaining toilet sprung a leak which wasn’t discovered until Saturday April 11th — during the Devizes to Westminster canoe race.  The toilet had been emptying into a store room below and not into the sewer.

'Bizarre' central heating 'failures'
More plumbing problems were soon discovered. The 30-year old central heating system had been temperamental on occasions in recent years, but during Dr Rodd’s first year in the building the radiators started to deteriorate in a most bizarre way.

One by one, at weekly intervals over a three or four week period, the radiators developed leaks. 


Sabotage was blamed after neatly drilled holes were found in a radiator and metal drill swarf was found on the floor below it. 


The police were brought in and the mysterious 'failures' suddenly stopped — prompting the Devizes Police Station Manager to comment to a journalist: "There is clearly disharmony in that building."

More recently the radiators are said to have simply failed through old age and new radiators have now replaced the old, but now the boiler itself is claimed to have 'failed'.  After 30 years of constant use that might not be thought unexpected and prudent financial management would have ensured that funds were in place to replace it.

Water continues to flow from the central heating overflow and is running down the back of the building with, seemingly, no attempt being made to address the problem whilst the Bath stone wall continues to deteriorate.

Building care
Trust members are now asking the question, "Why have none of these maintenance jobs been completed?" 

Most agree that there is not the same degree of 'play value' in maintaining a historic building that is home to the Trust office, a meeting room and the canal museum as there is in running internationally important historic steam and water driven pumping engines — or crewing a trip boat — but the Wharf building is part of the heritage of the K&A Canal and deserves proper attention from a heritage organisation that has inhabited it for more than 30 years on a full repairing lease.

Perhaps it’s because no-one running the Trust has identified a need to recruit and manage volunteers to do the work. Or perhaps it’s because no-one running the Trust has ever considered it important to maintain the building that they pay so little rent for.

One thing is certain, the leadership of the K&A Canal Trust has not called for volunteers to help to maintain this important and iconic canalside building. Instead its leadership complains about how much it would cost to GET it repaired.  That is a far cry from the 'can do' attitude that drove volunteers to save the canal against all the odds.

No financial planning for the wharf building
The iconic wharf building beside the Canal in Devizes that the K&A Canal Trust is to vacate. Picture by Bob Naylor©
There is no mention of planned maintenance costs for the building in the 2009 or 2010 budgets. In fact close examination of the budget for 2010 reveals that £0.00 was allocated for maintenance of the building although £1,000 was set aside for repairs.

Remember — this is a 200-year-old building occupied by a heritage charity. And that charity should care enough about it to plan for its maintenance. But it hasn’t — for year after year — with results that are clear for all to see.

The building is owned by the local authority and in common with all other local authorities it is making staff redundant and cutting services to save money. Local tax payers have a right to expect their local authority to take proper care of the property that it holds in trust for them.

There are worthwhile organisations that deserve support through heavily subsidised rents — but where the tenant is responsible for the repair and maintenance of a building the Council has a duty to ensure that the tenants actually carry out the necessary maintenance. 


In the case of the Wharfside building in Devizes it is hard to see how they can have discharged that duty — and the current state of the building is the result. 

Trust neglect causes problems for neighbour
The Trust's neighbours at the Wharf Theatre had negotiated a lease and it was on the verge of being signed — but we are informed by sources within Wiltshire Council and the Wharf Theatre that this is now on hold as a direct result of the condition that the K&A Canal Trust has allowed its building to get into. Quite rightly, Wiltshire Council are determined that they will not allow any other tenant to allow a building to fall into such a poor state in the future.

Wharf building departure
Trust members were recently told that the Trust Council has decided to vacate the Devizes wharfside building in September because the maintenance costs are too high. The Trust, as yet has nowhere to go and Trustees are talking about mothballing the museum and archive.

Following the restoration work and the re-opening of the canal the late Peter Lindey-Jones said in his definitive book on the restoration of the canal, “There is a role for the Canal Trust, if only in a limited capacity to administer the pumping stations and to look after the education facilities, museum and archive”. It seems even these limited responsibilities are now too much for the current management.

A charity set up to care, amongst other things, for the heritage of the Kennet & Avon Canal has surely lost its way if the state of their HQ and the state of their finances over the past few years is anything to go by. 


This charity is time expired. Now that the K&A Canal has achieved “Cruiseway status” it is surely time for the future of the charity to be considered and for what assets that do remain intact to be handed over to some other body that can run its affairs prudently and efficiently for the future.

Job done — will the last one out turn off the lights
Has the time come for the K&A Canal Trust to say, "Our job is done, the K&A has achieved Cruiseway status, will the last one out please turn off the lights?" ... Before they go out because the bill hasn’t been paid.


Copyright Bob Naylor 2011 ©

Monday, February 28, 2011

NABO Roadshow — K&A Canal question time

The NABO road show is coming to Pewsey with a panel of experts to answer your questions about our waterways.
This free event on Sunday 27th March is being hosted by Pewsey Wharf Boat Club in the Bouverie Hall, Pewsey from 2pm to 4pm.
The meeting will be chaired by Richard Carpenter, General Secretary of NABO and on the panel will be:
  • NABO Chairman, David Fletcher
  • Waterways World Editor, Richard Fairhurst 
  • BW, K&A Waterway manager, Mark Stephens 
  • A representative of the K&A Canal Trust 
For more information contact: 
Kay Wardle on 07973 718129 or email: info@pwbc.co.uk
PWBC website: www.pwbc.co.uk

Friday, January 14, 2011

Canal Trust's 'financial nightmare' year

2010 was a 'financial nightmare' for the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust according to an email they have sent to members.  
by Bob Naylor


The Trust now has no immediately accessible cash although on paper it has reserves of nearly £500,000 in the value of property and its trip boats.

The email goes on to explain: "Submissions to award-making Trusts and businesses have been an absolute washout in 2010. Each few weeks has seen yet more rejections to applications for support for projects." And continues, "All this has occurred as warnings about potential cash-flow problems, made five years ago, have come home to roost… The situation had been predicted, but it was not until this year that the impact became evident in terms of a need to dip ever more deeply into a bank overdraft to get the Trust through the difficult low income-generating months of January to April."

The email explains that crisis meetings of the Trust Council and the Enterprise Board in November and December recognised that the Trust needed to take action to try to handle the financial position and examine the role of the Trustees. 

'Strong Leadership' calls for Trustee resignations
A closed meeting of the board of K&A Canal Trust Enterprise Ltd (the trading arm of the Trust) was followed by an extra-ordinary Trust Council meeting on 4th December 2010 which was described by a Trustee as: "A very stage managed event, preceded by discussions behind the scenes."

The email describes 'strong leadership', from Enterprise Board members, Alan Whitewick,  Mike Rodd, David Inight and Neil Lethby, who asked that most of the K&A Canal Trust Board of Trustees resign — with the threat of the board being reported to the Charity Commission if they did not.

New Trustees
A Trust Council member has said: "The Board was basically given no choice about the election of three new board members without going through the normal and accepted procedures. We were told that we could not even wait for six days to be given full information on the candidates."

Of the three new Trustees voted in at that meeting, Pauline King who is an active member of both Pewsey Wharf Boat Club and the Kennavon Venture trip boat team and Suzanne Gaia who is the new treasurer have now joined the board. The third person put forward and voted on to the Board of Trustees is said to be Amy Whitewick, the Trust Webmaster, who with her father Alan Whitewick is the joint Editor of the Trust magazine. She has since decided not to take a place on the board. 

Kennet & Avon Canal Trust Enterprise Ltd
Trust Enterprise Ltd is wholly owned by the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust membership through its Board of Trustees who are elected by the membership. It was created with a loan from the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust with the sole purpose of raising money to enable the Trust to fulfil its aims of protecting, enhancing & promoting the canal.  

Currently the Enterprise Board has only one member elected by the membership of the Trust. Neil Lethby was until very recently in charge of the Trust finances as its Treasurer and the 'stand in' Chairman of the Trust following the departure of David Rees. The other members of The Enterprise Board of Directors are:  Mike Rodd who because of the Trust's financial crisis ceased to be its paid General Manager at the end of the year; Alan Whitewick, the joint Hon Editor of the Trust newsletter 'The Butty' who is the Managing Director of the board of Enterprise; Tim Jones who is the voluntary Human Resources advisor to the Trust; and new Directors, David Inight who is the Director of Boats and Acting Chairman of the Trust and Suzanne Gaia who both joined the board in December 2010.
Latest Trustee resignations include former Treasurer/Chairman
With many comings and goings from the Trust Council since the AGM and the secretive nature of the organisation it is difficult to be sure of the make-up of the Board of Trustees now but it has emerged that Tim Coleman who was brought in as Director of Marketing and Membership for the Trust left very shortly after joining the Board and long-time Board member John McIver has stood down. 

The Charity Commission website currently lists the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust Board of Trustees as David Copley, Bill Fisher, Terry Kemp, Terry Mundy, Pauline King, David Inight and Suzanne Gaia — Neil Lethby is no longer on the list so he has also resigned.
Peter Dunn resigns from Trust Council
Peter Dunn, the highly respected chairman of Claverton Branch, has very recently resigned. It is understood that he will continue as Chairman of the Bath Branch and Chairman of the group at Claverton who operate the Pumping Station.  

Pete Dunn has been the most publicly active member of the Canal Trust Council and there are few events on the K&A Canal that he has not attended as an effective ambassador for the Trust.  

Behind the scenes Peter was the Trustee responsible for health and safety for the Trust — a vital role for an organisation that invites the public into its working industrial heritage sites as well as onto its trip boats.

Current Chairman who replaced the 'stand-in' Chairman is only temporary
Alan Whitewick said in a seperate email to members that following the end of the General Manager post and the ending of Mike Rodd's paid employment he will be co-opted onto the Board of Trustees as soon as possible.

Trust insiders believe that at the next meeting of Trust Council on the 25th January,  David Inight, who has been chairman since 1st January 2011, will stand down and Mike Rodd will be elected Chairman of the Board of Trustees. 

General Manager
Mike Rodd was Director of Learned Society & External Relations for the British Computer Society until he was employed by the Kennet & Avon Canal Trust in March 2009 to turn its fortunes around.

His employment by the Trust at a new executive tier above the day to day administration was made possible by a grant of £75,000 from a local district council who agreed to 'part fund' the post for three years on the basis of an application that said that the post would be self financing within three years through the fundraising activities of the new General Manager.  

Because of the escalating financial crisis in the Trust he was put on part-time working in November and the post was finally terminated on December 31st 2010 when it was realised that the Trust finances were in an even worse state than had been previously thought.

With one year left of the grant funding and the post now gone Wiltshire Council is likely to ask for the £25,000 of charge payers money that has not been used from the grant to be paid back because it was granted specifically to part fund a new executive post of General Manager and not as a donation to the overall funding of the Trust.   

Fund raising 'absolute washout'
The Trust's fundraising under General Manager Mike Rodd is described in the email as 'an absolute washout'. Under his management the Trust embarked on a programme of 'outsourcing' its cafés and shops that had been previously staffed by volunteers with paid part time managers. Bradford on Avon, Newbury Wharf and Aldermaston Wharf cafés were all put in the hands of 'commercial partners'.  And the Trust says 'the outsourced cafés are all starting to generate income for the Trust, instead of continuing to haemorrhage funds out.' 

Another initiative under Mike Rodd's management was to lease an already operating commercial trip boat at Devizes Wharf. This is now run completely by volunteers with no wage costs — and the Trust says it has 'broken even in its very first year'.

But not only has the Trust failed to raise funds from its usual sources but the Trust's  'Membership Plus' scheme initiated to raise £100,000 by increasing membership of the Trust and general fundraising folded having raised no money. It was replaced in September 2010 by a scheme announced by Alan Whitewick who pledged to raise £1000 a month through increased branch fundraising activities and other initiatives with the help of a team made up of two members from each of the Trust's seven Branches.  

It appears that the committee has not been formed yet but fundraising activities so far have included the auction of two signed paperback books and a drawing workshop — with another drawing workshop planned for later this month.
Three new paid staff members sought for Crofton
Despite the Trust's perilous financial position recruitment still continues for the paid posts of 'live-in' warden and two part-time café managers for the Crofton Pumping Station

Tough times
The New Year message ends, "2011 will be a really tough time and many changes will still be required to ensure we are fit for purpose in a completely new environment. Following the staff restructuring described above, however, no further staff reductions are anticipated. This is the time for everyone — staff and members — to join the Trustees and Branch Chairs to ensure we are able to meet our prime reason for existing — to look after our unique and precious waterway."