Can you help?
Can you help to find a lost WI in New Zealand which was sent this beautiful banner by Shalford WI?
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Can you help to find a lost WI in New Zealand which was sent this beautiful banner by Shalford WI?
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Why so many different types of bees? Michelle Ernoult explains the need for bee diversity in her latest article about the fascinating world of bees.
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Who are the crafty ladies? Discover more about this band of members who meet regularly at our HQ to practice their craft, share tips and where possible enjoy visits to places of interest.
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HAVE you said this? Have you thought this? Were you on the committee and say “Never again”!
The Advisers are really interested to understand members’ thoughts and feelings about being on WI committees. We are in touch with those who do serve on committees but now we really want to hear from those that are completely uninterested in helping to shape and run their WI.
Please help us to understand what the barriers are generally or in your particular WI.
What discourages you from volunteering? What could we change to make you want to volunteer? Why don’t you want to make decisions in your own WI? We will not pass information back to specific WIs, though your answers to the questions and your thoughts may shape our future committee training and workshops.
Please don’t underestimate how important your voice is if you are not on the committee of your WI.
Please email: aleach@surreyfedwi.org.uk or write to me via the Federation office if you wish to remain anonymous.
In time I would like a Zoom chat with some of you to understand fully all points of view and opinions. It is after all ‘our WI and Federation’ and without understanding the members we can’t move forward.
Angie Leach
Advisor and Membership Chairman
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THANK you for making your selection from the resolution proposals published in WI Life. When the numbers across the country have been collated, NFWI will let us know the ones that have had enough support to be considered more fully at the AGM in Liverpool in June.
Resolutions always start with you, or members just like you, who have a passionate desire to make real changes to our world.
Just consider our Plastic Soup campaign and how that has really influenced governmental policy and also washing machine manufacture. The manufacturers were adamant that filters could not be built into their machines but pressure from all sides has now forced redesign (see article, Page 16).
If you are thinking you would like to change the world, talk to either Frances Harryman or myself as we are your resolution advisors for SFWI. Please, please do this when you are at the thinking stage and before you start to write anything. We can be contacted at Resolution1@surreyfedwi.org.uk
The earlier you start the better so do it now, in February — don’t wait until June.
Hilary Brooks
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February’s Surrey WI News is now available for you to read online.
This month’s edition includes Lady Denman Cup results, Preparing Your Budget, Cookery Courses, Earth Saving Ideas plus lots more!
Please click on the following link to view on your phone, tablet or computer via Flipsnack the February’s edition of Surrey WI News.
If you would like some help accessing the digital version of SWIN, there is now a user guide on how to access the online version, download it and print it. The user guide can be read here.
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EVERY year each WI should prepare a budget. This must be approved by the committee and should be agreed by the members. It does not matter how much or how little money you are holding in your bank, a budget should be prepared.
If you are not requesting the full annual subscription of £44 from your members in April 2022 you MUST prepare a budget to show that you have thought about the implications of reducing the subscription from the maximum.
You need to consider if you have enough money in hand to last until the following April when the subs come in again. There are budget sheets within the annual accounts spreadsheet on the Federation’s website to help you work out your income and costs for the next year. You don’t have to use these if you have a different format that works for you.
Start with the funds you hold now, add the expected income and deduct the anticipated expenses, and that will show you what you will have at the end of the period.
You can prepare a budget at any time in the year and it can be for period longer than a year. It’s to help your WI establish if you if you have the money available to invite more expensive speakers and craft activities or, at the other end of the spectrum, you might need to fund raise or find a cheaper venue to continue to exist.
Do not be too optimistic when preparing a budget; it’s better to be pessimistic. If you are too optimistic you might run out of money. For example:
If you are low on funds a budget can show your members why you need to fund raise and that it’s not just a committee problem. It affects them all if lack of funds means the WI may have to suspend.
After I presented a fairly depressing budget to my committee, two members came up with a Covid-safe format for making money from a drive sale, including a raffle and selling plants, books and cakes. After two events we had £750 extra in our bank account (see Page 13 of the September 2021 edition of SWIN).
If your WI is struggling with low member numbers and lack of funds, the Federation’s Friendship Fund might be able to provide assistance to help with advertising and speaker costs for a planned membership drive. Please contact your Adviser for more details.
Sheena Landgraf
Federation Treasurer
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Why did you join the WI? As we approach the renewal of our membership, will you be asking yourself that question? I think that the most popular answer would be to make friends, followed by to learn new skills and to make a difference.
Whatever the reason, to fully benefit from your WI membership we all need to contribute something of ourselves. After all, we ‘reap what we sow’, but how?
Have you voted on the 2021-22 resolutions? There is still time if you have not already done so. Which one caught your eye? It was quite a diverse selection I thought and all pertinent. But which one(s) will be chosen? How will you and your WI engage? Don’t forget to plan your resolution meeting, perhaps invite a local speaker to elaborate on the subject for you. Whichever you choose, make it your resolution to get your WI involved.
One of the most significant events of 2021 was COP26. But what did it achieve, what implications does it have for our everyday lives and what can we do as WI members to make a difference? Four introductory sound bites stood out for me. They highlighted the seriousness of the situation:
* “COP 26 is for future generations, not just for everyone alive today”, HM Queen Elizabeth II;
* “One minute to midnight”, UK PM Boris Johnson;
* “The world is following a path of greed and selfishness that would lead to destruction”, Mia Mottley, Barbados;
* “We are digging our own graves by failing to act on Climate Change”, UN Chief Antonio Guterres.
But what was the outcome of COP26? Fundamentally decisions reached and pledges made ensured that the door was kept open to keep the 1.5°C limit on global temperature increase alive. Based only on vague pledges however, a 1.8°C rise may be more realistic by the end of the century, but only if these pledges are implemented. However, there is a huge gap between ambition and implementation!
Based on current evidence there will be a temperature rise of 1.5°C in around a decade and in excess of 2°C by the end of the century. Even the smallest rise in global temperature is detrimental. On the basis of the current pledges a 2.4°C rise is the most likely outcome. This would have a huge impact.
What is necessary is much greater ambition. Pledges made need to be constantly reviewed, ratchetted up and implemented in each and every country. What is critical is what we do now. It would be good to believe that once climate impact is visible it will be difficult to ignore, but this is a ‘pie in the sky’ idea, an unrealistic expectation, for every continent in the world has, last year alone, experienced extensive weather events. Climate impact is visible now, and yet insufficient responses are being made.
Sir Patrick Valance, the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser, gave this stark warning as COP 26 began: “Climate change is greater and far more dangerous than Covid-19.” He continued by explaining that Covid will be a two-to-four-year problem, whereas climate change will be a 50-to-100-year challenge that could be lost.
Winning the battle with Covid will therefore be due to scientific endeavour and technical know-how, but also to the way people have changed their behaviour and restricted their lives. Climate change will be a much greater challenge to the way we live. Unless the GREEN choice is made much easier, there will be even bigger changes to the way we live, and many lives will be lost. Price, convenience and understanding will be key.
As the conference closed Antonio Guterres, reminded us that 1.5° was not completely out of reach but COP 26 had left the target “on life support”!
So, in this GREEN month of February, the month in which we ‘Show the Love’ for our planet, what can we do as WI members? We need to change our behaviour long term and to inspire and lead similar change in others.
An initial step of eating less meat, and flying and driving less would be a significant first step. A series of small changes from us all could make a real impression, but it has to happen now!
So let us Show the Love this month. Join the climate coalition, become an NFWI Climate Ambassador, raise your voice, email your MP to keep us within 1.5° C of warming, make and wear a green heart, initiate a climate change conversation, raise awareness, make a climate change scarf, write a green heart resolution for yourself and your WI, hold a Show the Love meeting or do a display of hearts in your village.
Finally, be an advocate for the climate in your own community. Let us work together for a cleaner future, anything is possible when we pool our resources and work together. I exhort you to raise your voice alongside mine.*
And remember, in the words of Amanda Gorman, America’s Junior Poet Laureate: “The Time is Now, Now, Now”. — Carol A. Gartrell, Federation Chairman
*If you need ideas to act on turn to Page 18 for Carol’s “28 Ways for 28 Days”. Why not use this month’s cover as an eye catching poster to display on a notice board.
Carol A. Gartrell
Federation Chairman
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“IN THIS country we have around 250 solitary bees or, the so-called wild bees. Whilst they are the largest group of bees they are the least known and least studied.” – Find out more about the solitary bees in Michelle Ernoult’s latest article.
Navigate to Page 11 on January’s edition of Surrey WI News.
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One clever WI’s way to spread the message about ovarian cancer.
Navigate to Page 12 on January’s edition of Surrey WI News.
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