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Tenant scrutiny: involving young people. Caroline Field November 2011. Tenant scrutiny?. Tenant scrutiny is intended to give tenants influence over the priorities and performance of their landlord and give tenants the power to effect change We had to question:
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Tenant scrutiny: involving young people Caroline Field November 2011
Tenant scrutiny? Tenant scrutiny is intended to give tenants influence over theprioritiesand performance of their landlord and give tenants the power to effect change We had to question: • Do we do this in Riverside already? • Do we do enough of it? • Is it working right everywhere in Riverside? • How do we change what we are doing?
Riverside • A national housing association with over 50,000 properties • Founded 1928, and grown by improvement and development, stock transfer and merger • Turnover £249million • We provide care and support services to over 6000 people • We work in 169 local authorities • We are a Co-Regulatory Champion
Co-Regulation events Four events at which tenants explain their co-regulatory working, looking at - • Local regeneration programme – Lee Valley • Young people - Cambridge • Older people - Anfield • Supported services in general needs housing - Bromley
Scrutiny in Riverside: taking a national perspective to involve all • We have a busy tenant structure, which creates opportunities for people to be engaged in the way they chose • Not just meetings • Not just older people • We can’t just run it from Liverpool when we have homes in 160 Local Authorities • We have to operate at scheme level where we have specialist schemes
Scrutiny in Riverside 2011 Divisional Services Scrutiny Groups 10 members Maintenance Scrutiny Group 1 member Area Scrutiny Panels or Neighbourhood Forums Customer Service Scrutiny Group 1 member Tenant Inspectors 1 member Equality and Diversity Scrutiny Group 1 member TASQ team 1 member Service Improvement Review Groups 3 members
Federation Riverside Group Board Scrutiny in Riverside 2011 Governance Scrutiny Tenants National Tenant Scrutiny Panel Housing Services Committee BusinessGroups Divisional Services Scrutiny Groups(10) Divisional Boards Maintenance Scrutiny Group IssuesGroups Divisional Tenants & Residents Groups Area Scrutiny Panels or Neighbourhood Groups Tenant Inspectors Group Customer Service Scrutiny Group Equality and Diversity Scrutiny Group TASQ group Local TARAS Service Improvement Review Groups (3 per year)
Making sure young people are heard • Working locally • Working on projects • Giving something in return • Finding their voice
Some younger people’s projects in Riverside • Pennine Junior Wardens • Peppercorn Lodge • Foyers: Liverpool and Cambridge • Visions of Life – dvd
Pennine Junior Wardens • Working with local Community Wardens • Supported by local school • Older Junior Wardens now mentors
Peppercorn Lodge, IpswichHelping Young Parents through Empowerment • Peppercorn Lodge provides support for eleven young homeless families • developed a partnership of empowered young parents, supportive housing staff and local agencies • our team worked with the young parents to produce a video about the issues they face, • it helps agencies understand the obstacles young mums and dads face and educates their approach to them
Foyers As well as providing supported accommodation, our Foyers aim to enable disadvantaged 16-25 year-old young people to achieve self-reliance and independence • A Foyer is not just a place to live, it is a place that helps young people to achieve the goals they have in life. • This could range from looking at education, training andemployment options to how they are going to live independently in the future. • Our Foyers have a panel of young people who meet with the scheme managers to discuss services
Visions of Life • Getting young people and older people to together • Multi media training for young and old • Improving community cohesion • Improving digital inclusion
Managing locally, learning centrally Scrutiny must be owned locally • Riverside may receive expert and structured constructive criticism directly from tenants who will have their own evidence on which to base their views • Local boards may receive a direct challenge from the tenants if they think it necessary: We need to share the learning points
Tenant scrutiny in support of change We need to better understand from tenants what it is they want to see change about our services Tenant scrutiny should give us much more of this