Sign up for North Edinburgh community conference

SAVE THE DATE: Saturday 13 February 9.30 – 3pm 

NORTH EDINBURGH COMMUNITY CONFERENCE

Organised by Community Action North and Granton Improvement Society

Community Conference

 WHAT NEXT FOR OUR COMMUNITY?

Challenges and opportunities facing North Edinburgh

North Edinburgh is facing tough times. Services are being cut, jobs are hard to come by and some of our projects are struggling to survive. 

But maybe it’s not all doom and gloom. Our community has some great resources, and chief among these is our people: the activists and the volunteers, young and old. 

This important conference will discuss what our community needs  –  and work out how, together, we can  get where we want to be.

We believe the people who know best are the people who live here. North Edinburgh needs your ideas – come along and help us to map out a positive future for our community. 

Lunch provided

Free crèche available (MUST be booked in advance)

Contact: 0131 315 6405 or email communityactionnorth@gmail.com | grantonimprovementsociety.wordpress.com

SOS – Save Our Services!

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Members of the Power to the People group are calling on local groups and individuals from North Edinburgh to  join them at a lobby of the full council meeting on Thursday 21 January to protest against what Unison describe as the “worst cuts in living memory”.   Continue reading SOS – Save Our Services!

Pilton Retreat: a final call for your support

Forty-five years. Tens of thousands of North Edinburgh children and families, Pilton Retreat has given our community so much. Now, at their hour of need, they desperately need the community’s support: it’s time to give something back …

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Pilton Retreat 1970

The late Victor Lindsay while on his rounds working with the Water Board discovered the unused, semi – derelict scout hall on the edge of Ratho.

In 1970, he along with other community activists from play schemes, youth projects, churches and staff from schools agreed to work together to establish a countryside resource for the children and young people of the Greater Pilton area.

Successful negotiation with the farmer and scouts, a payment of either £10.00 or £20.00 was enough to secure the building for Pilton use.

The thrift shop was opened to sell donated goods to raise funds; a wider appeal for funding and loads of voluntary effort meant that the first groups of children and young people from Pilton started staying at the Retreat in the summer of 1971.

Tens of thousands have visited since.

Initially, it was only the building, by mid 70’s some extra land was rented, and ever since improvements to the facility and grounds have been achieved.

What exists today is as a result of the efforts of many people over these 45 years.

Now these achievements and the resource are under real threat.

Council funding may end, solely on the assessment of three unknown council officials’ and a report to Councillors recommending no continued funding.

We ask that our four Forth councillors seek to persuade the Education Children and Families Committee on 11th February that this would be a detrimental decision.

More than 1,600 people so far have signed our e-petition, asking the Councillors to think again.

45 years of continuously improving service and facilities surely must count?

1,500+ children and young people using the facilities every year surely must matter?

If funding ends on 31/3/16, the Board of Pilton Retreat will spend its own reserves to keep the Retreat open till the end of June 2016.

During these three months many children you may know will visit the Retreat.

School residential camps will involve Pirniehall P 4’s, Craigroyston and Forthview P 5’s, St Davids P6’s and Rowanfield P7’s. School day visits include Craigroyston and St Davids nursery classes and Pirniehall P3’s. Two other Edinburgh primary schools for pupils with additional learning needs will hold residential visits. A further 10 Edinburgh school nursery classes will visit for the day.

It seems ironic, even perverse, that the Council might decide to close down these opportunities for the pupils that they should be providing for. Many other community groups, locally and from elsewhere in Edinburgh will also visit in these three short months. They would also lose out in the future.

Please do all you can to help save these services / opportunities for the children, young people and families in Greater Pilton in the future.

Please sign and share our petition. Click on the link below:

https://www.change.org/p/councillor-andrew-burns-city-of-edinburgh-council-save-pilton-retreat-from-closure?recruiter=false&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink

Pilton Retreat Ratho

 

Roberta Blaikie funeral: transport available

Call Royston Wardieburn if you need transport to Warriston

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Regular readers will know that local activist Roberta Blaikie’s funeral is on Tuesday at 1pm at Warriston Crematorium.

Transport will be available for members of the local community – call Royston Wardieburn Community Centre on 552 5700 to let them know your requirements.

Roberta Blaikie: a remarkable woman

Roberta Blaikie 1945 – 2015

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I’m very sad to to convey the news that Roberta Blaikie passed away at St Columba’s Hospice yesterday.

Roberta was an incredibly dedicated activist who spent decades campaigning for her community and fighting for the causes she held dear to her heart.

Roberta was at the heart of community activities and a hugely influential figure in Greater Pilton and North Edinburgh. To highlight just a few achievements, Roberta was a founding figure of Pilton’s ground-breaking Health Hut (now the much-respected Pilton Community Health Project) and a mainstay and driving force of Royston Wardieburn Community Centre from the outset.

Many local activists benefitted from Roberta’s experience and wisdom and in recent years she has dedicated her drive and enthusiasm to North Edinburgh Fights Back, North Edinburgh Social History Group and Women’s International Groups based at Royston Wardieburn. She also loved the arts and was a member of arts and culture groups including Mama Rag.

But this is only scratching the surface: there is so much more to say, so many stories to be told – Roberta was a warm, funny, thoughtful and caring person who gave so much to her community. She enriched community life. She made a difference – and those of us who were lucky enough to have known Roberta and have worked alongside her on campaigns will know that she is simply irreplaceable. They just don’t make many people like Roberta any more and communities are all the poorer for it.

Roberta sat at the top table during a recent event staged by the Women’s International Group. The event was organised to celebrate the achievements of women in our community – and Roberta, who was by then suffering from the illness that ultimately took her life, was presented with a bouquet of flowers as a special recognition of her tremendous contribution over many years. The warmth in the room as the flowers were presented – the appreciation, the respect, the love – was almost tangible and is something I will never forget. I hope will be of at least some comfort to Donna and her family in the difficult days ahead.

Others will say more about this remarkable woman in the days to come. For now I will simply say: Roberta, I feel privileged to have shared some time with you and I wish it had been more. I will miss you – and your community will miss you even more.

We will share details of the funeral arrangements when we have them