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What’s New from HQ (March 2020)

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No mailing is anticipated for WIs at the end of February. There will be a delegate’s pack to be collected at the Annual Council Meeting and information will be available on our website; some will be for your representative but the rest will be for your WI.

Please tell the office of any changes to your venue, President, Secretary or Treasurer details as we use the information from MCS and your Annual Forms for all correspondence.

MCS reps should take members off the database if they have not renewed by March. To do this go into to the person’s individual details and change their status from Active to Inactive. A box will pop up: select a reason from the drop down menu and then press the confirm change button. Let me know if a member is taken off the database because she is late in renewing as I can reinstate her details without you having to re-enter them.

If a member who has paid her full subscription to your WI moves away, she should remain on your membership list with her address updated as she is still entitled to receive WI Life and should not be removed from your list until 2021. And don’t forget that you can find non-data sensitive documents on our website.

— Diane Sanderson, Federation Secretary

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Message from our Federation Chairman (March 2020)

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Five minutes that really can save lives

Do you remember the launch of the TV programme Big Brother in the year 2000? An exciting prospect I thought, a fly-on-the- wall documentary in the genre of Castaway that was aired earlier the same year. Secretly, I had wished that I could have been part of the Castaway project. What a disappointment Big Brother turned out to be. It was not at all what I had expected, although it became a very popular format.

One thing inadvertently achieved by Big Brother, however, was to highlight the threat of cervical cancer. The up-front Jade Goody, mother of two, of the 2002 series was diagnosed tragically with cervical cancer and subsequently lost her battle, fought in the public eye, in 2008 at the age of only 27.

The publicity around her death led to a 12% increase in women, between the ages of 25 and 64 coming forward for cervical screening. Jade’s death spoke particularly to women in their 20s, including my daughter and perhaps you, who believed that they were invincible? This was a generation of women who took heed of the message and undertook cervical screening, just as my mother’s generation had been prompted to by the untimely death of Alma Cogan, the biggest earning female performing artist of her generation, who had a similarly publicised death from cervical cancer back in the ‘60s. Are you one who listened and acted?

However, this message seems only to have engaged with certain generations. Currently, several groups of women are not hearing the call.They are those aged 25 to 29, the over 50s, ethnic minority groups, women with disabilities and lesbian and bisexual women. Do they know that cervical cancer is the most common cause of cancer in women under 35? Cervical screening is designed to prevent cancer by detecting early changes.The earlier the diagnosis, the better the prognosis.

The WI has led health-focussed initiatives many times. After all, ‘to advance health for public benefit’ is one of the WI’s key objects. It is therefore shocking that we are returning to an issue that was first proposed in 1964 when Whitchurch-on-Thames WI’s resolution was adopted: That the [NFWI] urges Her Majesty’s Government … to treat as a matter of urgency the provision of comprehensive facilities for routine smear tests for cervical cancer.

The current, critical fall in the take up of this screening is why the WI is revisiting this initiative 60 years on. You may have heard a young WI member address the audience at the 2019 Annual Council Meeting. During the debate, she explained that she had just been diagnosed with cervical cancer and beseeched those present to support the resolution. So, what can we do?

One of my first impressions of social media platforms and the way they appeared to reveal the intimacies of life was a negative, Big Brother moment. But as the medium has matured it has become ever clearer that social media can be harnessed as a campaigning tool. It enables communication that is quick, easy and free. Social media is going to be utilised, alongside the printed word, to engage members in all our campaign initiatives, to inform and prompt, to encourage and share. Will you engage?

This month the Federation is putting the ‘5 Minutes’ campaign at the top of its agenda. So, what can you do? Talk to and inform relatives and friends. Run an information event in your local community, make calming lavender sachets and leave them in your library or doctors’ surgery with a message encouraging participation in the screening programme. There are many other ideas in the campaign action pack (available online and in hard copy from NFWI). Individual acts, however small, can make a huge difference and can save lives!

Carol A. Gartrell, Federation Chairman

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Campaign Corner: #SFWI

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Welcome to the world of the #

THE hashtag world of SFWI awaits you at this year’s Annual Council Meeting, with the Public Affairs team exploring ways to help members take part in our Plastic Free July.

Hashtags can tell us how we can make small choices that together have a big impact on our environment, with tips and ideas as well as facts and consequences in a stand against single use.

    • #SFWI is our generic hashtag which will be used on social media.The lower case letters refer to specific campaigns we are running.
    • #SFWIsayno will be part of the campaign where we suggest things that people can say “no” to and the alternatives that are available.
    • #SFWIswaps is where we encourage straight swaps, such as using cloth bags for shopping, reusable cups, taking containers for meat and buying soap instead of shower gel.

We hope to encourage social media use, introduce members to the hashtag world and build on their expertise with the swaps hash- tag so that all can get involved.

You might think some of what is suggested is simply common sense and doing what wise WI members have always done. But, as Angie Leach, who chairs the team points out: “If everyone was still doing it then we wouldn’t be in the mess we are.”

Book a ticket to the Annual Council Meeting.

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Discover Orpheus at our Annual Meeting: Cancelled

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SUNDAY 15 March 4.30P.M.

MEETING CANCELLED FOR EVERYONE’S SAFETY.

If you see this and know of anyone else who may have planned to attend, please let them know

 

A group from the Surrey-based Orpheus Centre will entertain members at our Annual Council Meeting at Dorking Halls on Monday, 16 March.

Orpheus is an independent specialist college that believes every young disabled person should have the same opportunities as their non-disabled peers and offers a personalised study programme focusing on building independence, communication and social interaction skills through the arts, supported housing and a personal care service.

Music weeks for disabled people piloted by Sir Richard Stilgoe and neurologist Dr Michael Swallow in the late 1980s were so effective that Sir Richard decided to found a place where disabled people and students could work together for longer than a week, creating new music and performing in public. The Orpheus Centre opened in 1998 at Sir Richard’s former family home in Godstone. Today it caters for 25 full time and 25 day students.

Its students have performed in venues all over the country, and appeared in the hit TV show Call The Midwife. Ann Lovelace, a volunteer with the centre, will tell stories of Orpheus and introduce alumni who will perform their chosen songs.

Book a ticket for the Annual Council Meeting.

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Calling all our talented flower arrangers

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COULD you represent Surrey Federation at the NFWI’s annual flower arranging competition: The Huxley Cup?

The 2020 competition will be hosted by Devon Federation at the Devon County Showground, near Exeter, on Wednesday, 20 May (staging day). Only one entrant per Federation is allowed, unless space is available.

It is an imposed exhibit: all materials, sundries and containers are supplied and entrants are given a theme to work to and same amount of time to complete their displays. The Federation will pay the £55 entry fee, travel, accommodation and refreshment expenses.

If you are interested, please contact Diane Sanderson at the office by 5 March as entries close on 25 March. Full details are available via MyWI on the NFWI website.

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Why are they waiting to join?

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DOES your WI have a waiting list, long or short? Then why not encourage those on the list to consider joining other local WIs who have space to spare?

This has been put to Surrey Federation by a WI which would love to welcome more members, while others nearby have waiting lists.

It does seem ridiculous that dwindling numbers are putting some WIs in danger of being suspended while not too far away demand for membership exceeds supply. I’m sure that a message to those on your waiting lists could shift a few who might face a long wait to join your WI.

For help with this, please contact your WI Adviser.

— Chris Butterfield, Federation Vice-Chairman

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What’s New from HQ (February 2020)

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The mailing to secretaries at the end of January should include the following:

  • Presidents and Secretaries List 2020
  • Annual Review 2019
  • Membership Fees Form
  • Two copies of 2020 Yearbook (please use this to book speakers)
  • List of new speakers approved following the November auditions
  • Delegates’ programme for the Annual Council Meeting
  • Letter about the ACM together with Standing Orders for council meetings*
  • Minutes of the 2019 ACM
  • Nominations received for group officers
  • Surrey County Show schedule/entry form.*

To find non-data protected documents on this website, go to the Document Library page. This opens to show five tabs which organise the documents into five folders:

  • General Documents
  • Forms
  • Groups
  • Speakers
  • WI treasurers

Among documents available to download are Keeping of Records and The WI Year.
The Surrey County Show schedule is available from the Agricultural Shows page.
Most items can be emailed on request.

Remember that this is written before Christmas, so please check the letter sent with the mailing for full information on the contents. If something is missing, please contact the office as soon as possible and a replacement will be emailed or posted to you.

— Diane Sanderson, Federation Secretary

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Message from our Federation Chairman (February 2020)

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Yes, we CAN make a difference!

WILL YOU ‘Show the Love?’

On Christmas Eve, 1952, the winter of the Great Smog, I was born in Morley Hall, Leeds, the birthplace of Herbert Asquith.

For the first 18 years of my life I lived in the heart of the West Yorkshire woollen district, above the South Yorkshire coal field and in the middle of the Rhubarb Triangle. It’s not surprising therefore that many generations of my family had worked ‘down the pit,’ or serviced it, until the demise of coalmining.

A life in the industry brought both advantages and disadvantages. Of benefits there were many: relative wealth, security, housing, education, free coal and community.The disadvantages included chronic lung disease and the constant risk of injury or death.The latter was a reality for my family. In 1973, seven men died underground at Lofthouse Colliery, the seams of which ran under my home. My great uncle was the area engineer.

Fossil fuel was central to my community during my formative years. Coal provided our income, powered local industries, the woollen mills, the brick and gas works and, of course, fuelled the rhubarb sheds. It kept families warm and children fed.

Coal, or Black Gold, as it was known, was literally the bedrock of my life and the lifeblood of my community. Smog, the blackened facades of grand public buildings built on the proceeds of industry, the stench of the coke ovens, the constant drumming of the Worsted mills, the extensive spoil heaps, were everyday images. But slowly, very slowly, this was to change.The relationship between the burning of fossil fuels and health and climate change was recognised and initiated the beginning of the end, and a new beginning.

Recently I started to make a patchwork climate scarf. As I pieced it together it revealed to me the climate story of the century. It also prompted me to reflect on significant events of my life that correlate, possibly in a naïve way, directly with climate change.

My climate history begins with the winter of 1962-1963. I recall snow level with our garden wall and the road reduced to a narrow snowwalled path. I remember viewing Ladybower Reservoir in 1976, when the water level had reduced to nothing, revealing the villages that had once stood there — an event that was repeated in 1995 and 2018, all hot, dry years. And in stark contrast, the big freeze of the winter of 2009/2010, recorded as the coldest for 100 years.

Climate change is a reality! How can we make a difference? There are so many ways that we can contribute to reducing climate change. Consider waste, travel, food and home. Identify a change, however small, that you can make every week. Small actions by many can be decisive. Share your passion for your planet. Make a climate scarf and display it. Craft green hearts and share them with your community. Send one to your MP, display them at your monthly and group meetings. Be an advocate for the climate, it needs YOUR voice.

Recently I returned to my birthplace. Long gone are the collieries, mills and fossil-fuelled industries. But where pit ponies once grazed, fossil-fuel guzzling “architect-designed houses” now stand with not a scrap of green space or trees. And what of the community spirit that was once so strong? I see one institution filling that gap for women — the WI. In my home town the aptly named Rhubarb and Custard WI are making a significant impression on their community. Just as the industrialists of old, the WI now offers friendship, support and education. As WI members we should be justly proud.

— Carol A. Gartrell, Federation Chairman

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Campaign Calendar

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A six-month calendar to show that you care

This is a Campaign Calendar for the first half of 2020 which has been drawn up by the Public Affairs working party, listing the campaigns on which we shall focus during the year.

This is what is planned:

February: Show the Love — Each WI is encouraged to make and display green hearts or similar or help with a local climate awareness activity in their local area. [See last month’s News post}.

March: Just Five Minutes At the Annual Council Meeting, spreading the word and offering quiet opportunity to talk about this campaign to encourage women to have a smear test.

May: Dementia Awareness Campaign Encourage WIs to knit twiddle mitts and blankets to deliver to their local care home or hospital and spend time in companionship with residents/patients in a supportive way.

June: Get on Board Bus Survey — Mass trip to HQ on public transport. Lunch for the brave and successful. Surveys to be completed for the bus service operators.

July: Single-use plastic-free month — Ask each WI to change one thing or prepare an activity to share on social media.

Hopefully this gives you something to think about for the next six months!

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