Wednesday 27 August 2014

Grants III - Tourism and Leisure

This is the latest in a series of articles looking at the grants industry. Today we look at tourism, leisure and the heritage industry.

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A few years ago Cneifiwr had visited what must have been one of the most depressing holiday destinations in Wales. The holiday complex is just outside a small village in Ceredigion, and at the time it specialised in holidays for the disabled, although it was open for general bookings as well.

The owner was a rather terse and deeply religious man who had been keen to provide holidays with a Christian ethos.

The chalets and cottages were shabby, damp and in as much need of a good clean as a lick of paint. In the centre of the complex was a cold and drab entertainment centre (a glorified shed), next to which stood a very large wooden cross which dominated the grounds. The idea was presumably that the holidaymakers would contemplate the meaning of life as they made their way to play tiddlywinks.

Tucked away to one side of the extensive grounds in an area which had become badly overgrown was an adventure playground with rope walks, turrets, ladders and slides. The whole thing had been cordoned off with red and white plastic tape and clearly had not been used for some time. Somewhere next to the enormous decaying wooden structure was a plaque to commemorate the official opening of the play ground which had been built with generous funding from some grant fund or other.

The adventure play ground was not that old and could have been tidied up and repaired, but it was clear from talking to the owner (a man originally from the Birmingham area) that he was not very keen on children, and the facility almost certainly ended up as firewood.

There was enough wood there to keep the fires going for several winters, so at least someone benefited. The complex was eventually sold to new owners.

And that raises a general question about many of the grants awarded to private businesses in this part of Wales - to what extent are they really contributing to the local economy and creating jobs?

Hot tubs

Last year this blog noted that a holiday cottage business near Newcastle Emlyn had picked up £25,000 for two hot tubs and gazebos to protect them from the elements. You can buy a very good hot tub for around £6,000, and even if they are carefully maintained they will not last much more than ten years. 

Looking after a hot tub is a time consuming business. You need to test the water and add chemicals several times a week, and the filters need to be cleaned at least twice a month because they get clogged up with hair and other detritus. How many holiday cottage owners go to all that trouble? Some perhaps, but not all. Why bother when it will be easy enough to get more grants in a few years time?

Those two hot tubs will probably cost the tax payer around £3,000 a year for 8 years, after which they will be scrapped.

As the owner of a holiday cottage business, the next step is to apply for a grant to install solar panels to heat the hot tubs. Another Carmarthenshire business was awarded £10,000 for solar panels for one holiday cottage and hot tub. If our friends near Newcastle Emlyn follow suit, which by all accounts they are very likely to do, we could be talking about £45,000, or somewhere in the region of £5,600 a year over the lifetime of the installation.

Hot tubs certainly make a holiday cottage more marketable, but do solar panels? And will these grants really translate into local jobs and more than £5,600 a year in spending in the wider local economy?

A short hop away from the luxury hot tubs and gazebos is another family-run holiday business near Drefach Felindre. 

Dirt jumps

The Ceridwen Centre offers slightly alternative holidays with a green feel, tipis and composting toilets. In 2012 Meryl awarded it £23,000 for a wedding tipi, and she was pictured with the lucky winners in a press release last year. 

A couple of months back Meryl handed the family another £24,630 for a "pump track, set of dirt jumps and technical skills area". The grant went to a company called West Wales Trails Ltd, a new business set up by a member of the family which owns Ceridwen, and the track will form a new attraction alongside the wedding tipi.

It brings the known total of grants for this outfit to £100,000 over the last few years, and there may be more.

Good luck to the owners, but how many local jobs have been created, and what is the benefit to the wider community? Trip Advisor, usually a good place to look if you are deciding to stay somewhere, has nothing to say about Ceridwen. You could be the first to provide a review, it says.

Peeping Tom

Just down the road from Ceridwen was another major recipient of grants at Penboyr. This was run as a charity called Harvest Trust specialising in holidays for deprived children.. The charity's founder is currently languishing in prison after it was discovered that he had secretly filmed children naked, and the holiday complex was sold off at a knock down price.

Another private business not far away from the scene of all this grant action has just been awarded over £22,000 to install a wood burning stove, solar panels, double glazing, landscape its garden, etc.

And while the public is constantly baffled by the rules which govern declarations of interest in council meetings, it seems that no declarations of interest were necessary when Meryl dished out a £27,000 grant to her chum, Cllr Andrew James (Ind) for solar panels, a hot tub and work on a toilet block at his caravan site last year. Meanwhile Towy Community Church, the beneficiary of so much council generosity, has just been given another £2,135, although we are not told what for.

Up there with Towy Community Church among the biggest recipients of grants and other public money in Carmarthenshire is Llanelly House.

Feasibility

By all accounts, Llanelly House is a good place to visit, and it has brightened up a corner of Llanelli, so no complaints there. It is owned and run by a charity called the Carmarthenshire Heritage Regeneration Trust (CHRT), a charity which aims to save various old buildings for posterity.

CHRT's most recent accounts (to March 2013) boast that turnover rose again during the year, although closer inspection shows that turnover was almost entirely grant income, and expenditure exceeded income.

Strangely there is no mention in the accounts of a funding crisis which caused the Executive Board of Carmarthenshire County Council to approve an interest-free loan of up to £250,000 to Llanelly House in 2012. Half of that loan was supposed to be repaid in July 2013, but when the council's chief executive was asked whether the loan had been repaid in a meeting of the full council, he replied that the matter was not on the agenda.

We can probably take that as a "no".

CHRT has noble aims, and there is no suggestion that its trustees are spending money on themselves, but there are legitimate questions to be asked about the way it operates.

In addition to Llanelly House, CHRT has a number of other major projects on its books. These include the restoration of Gelli Aur, the huge, rambling Victorian mansion near Llandeilo. The recent history of this house is one of appalling neglect, incompetence, greed and even fraud (see previous post here). Nothing seems to be happening to reverse the fortunes of Gelli Aur, and the scale of the undertaking would dwarf what the trust has done in Llanelli. It looks very much as though the charity's ambitions have far outstripped its capacity to carry out its aims.

One of the properties on CHRT's books is the Gatehouse of the former Penlan workhouse in Carmarthen. This is a modest sized building, and the 2012-13 accounts report that the charity received a grant of £11,500 from the Rural Development Programme, EU funds managed by Carmarthenshire County Council.

The grant was awarded so that the trust could commission a feasibility study to determine whether the Gatehouse could be turned into holiday or office accommodation.

£11,500 is a great deal of money for a report of this kind on a modest property, and whoever wrote it did very well out of the commission. Common sense and a chat with a few local property specialists would have been enough to work out that turning the building into holiday flats or offices was a non-starter, and that appears to have been the conclusion of the £11,500 report because the Gatehouse is now up for sale, boarded up, as an "exciting opportunity" for conversion into a family home. Yours for less than £80,000.

So the future of the Gatehouse is once again in doubt, and grant money which could have been spent on something worthwhile has been wasted on a report which quite possibly only helped the author towards his or her next Range Rover.

A common feature of quite a few of the charities receiving grants in Carmarthenshire is that they are almost entirely dependent on grants for their income. Form filling rather than the arduous process of holding raffles, auctions, jumble sales, sponsored swims and rattling tins is how they get their money.


Major restoration projects will always be heavily dependent on financial support from the lottery and other funds, but being obliged to go out to the public and drum up support in local communities is surely a healthy thing. No only does it get local people to buy in to projects, but the likelihood is that charities will be much more careful in how they spend money if they have local trustees who have raised funds from the people around them.

Dylan was 'ere 

Also in the big league when it comes to grants are some other privately owned businesses. One which has benefited from an enormous amount of free publicity this year is Browns Hotel in Laugharne, which was briefly a favoured drinking hole for Dylan Thomas.

Browns was owned for a while by actor Neil Morrissey who sold it to one of the Scarlets' directors, Nicholas Gallivan. It underwent a major refurbishment and re-opened in 2012, with the Welsh Government chipping in £230,000 and Cadw offering a further £62,500 according to a BBC report.


The newly reopened Browns seems to be a success, and the grants have helped restore a Grade II building, create employment and give somewhere for visitors to go.

What is questionable however is whether quite so much public money should be handed to businesses which could well afford to invest from their own resources.

Meanwhile, Mr Gallivan and Nigel Short, chairman of the Scarlets, have been making quite a name for themselves in Bulgaria where they are involved, through a maze of Channel Islands and British Virgin Islands offshore companies, in a scheme to build a gigantic holiday complex and series of "eco villages" at Karadere Beach, one of the last remaining undeveloped parts of the Bulgarian coast.

A Guardian piece with a description of the project can be found here, while an investigative article on who some of the investors in this project are can be found here (in English after an short piece of text in Bulgarian). The scheme has sparked major protests in the Bulgarian capital as well as in Karadere itself.

What we need, and not just in Carmarthenshire, is a much more open and rigorous audit process to establish whether the public is really getting value for money. If you receive £100,000 from public funds to invest in a private business, transparency should be a condition.

 Did the money translate into more business, and what was the benefit to the local economy? 



4 comments:

Jac o' the North, said...

Carmarthensire Heritage Regeneration Trust is no longer confining itself to the county, as this comment to my blog makes clear. What is going on?

"In a massive geographical expansion, Carmarthenshire Heritage Regeneration Trust has recently purchased the title freehold to the empty YMCA building in Pontmorlais, in the county of Merthyr Tydfil. They have also secured £12.8million from cash strapped Merthyr Council and a chunk of £58m from the EU sourced Vibrant and Viable Places regeneration programme. Merthyr is of course the constituency of Huw Lewis AM, who was at the time the deal got signed off, the then regeneration minister for the Welsh Government. I was wondering what interest a Carmarthenshire Heritage charity has in Merthyr Tydfil? The currently empty building is tipped for use as the “Universities Heads of the Valleys Institute”. No surprise then that Huw Lewis AM is now the minister for Education and Skills.

http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/local-news/merthyr-tydfil-set-128m-funding-7284306

This coincided with the announcement that the Pontypridd YMCA, a fully solvent and popular community facility which owns it’s own substantial premises in Pontypridd town centre, is to get a similar cash injection to deck it out with internal kit for services previously provided by the council This decision coincided with the closure of RCT council owned ‘Municipal Hall’ situated just round the corner from the Pontypridd YMCA. This was due to cutbacks from RCT council. As it happens, a trustee and treasurer of YMCA Wales, Mr Skinner, also happens to be a trustee and treasurer of YMCA Pontypridd. The CEO of the Pontypridd operation is Cllr Steve Carter, a Labour member of RCT council, who supported the closure of the council run ‘Muni’ in Pontypridd, in the face of stiff local opposition.

http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/local-news/pontypridd-town-centre-set-6m-7283189

Whatever financial gymnastics went down in Llandovery, it’s peanuts compared the sums of public money the YMCA is to be showered with in the central valleys. Maybe the departure of Mo Sykes from YMCA Wales was just the result of a financial probity exercise uncovering something naughty by a Cardiff civil servant. The Welsh Government have a clear policy of displacement of council services in Wales as public services are being hived off to the YMCA under the guise of ‘community regeneration’. I ask again, what interest has a Carmarthenshire Heritage charity have in imposing Victorian halls in Merthyr Tydfil, and what pre-determination did Labour Minister have to close/supplant the main council owned community facility in RCT with a massive expansion in the public funds handed over to the YMCA in Pontypridd?"

Anonymous said...

Nicholas Gallivan is no longer company secretary of Scarlets Regional Ltd. He terminated at the end of July. The accounts for the year to end-June 2013 have still not been submitted.

Anonymous said...

I see the National Botanic Garden of Wales in Carmarthenshire has just been awarded £300,000 by the Heritage Lottery Fund as part of a £6.7million spend to uncover the original Middleton Hall, and restore seven ornamental lakes and garden waterfalls. They were originally created by Sir William Paxton Perhaps Carmarthenshire County Council will be erecting suitable monuments in keeping with the history of how the hall came into existence and how the original ornamental lakes were funded. Here are my suggestions...(a) two black slaves manacled to the entrance gate to represent the slave trade, (b) a burnt French Canadian to celebrate the bombardment of Louisburg, (c) a path of blooded coins to commemorate the Bengal currency and the Dutch East India massacres, (d) three flagons of ale, the purchase price Paxton paid at the time for representing Carmarthen in the Westminster parliament.....Why is it they can get millions of pounds in grants for heritage commemorating incoming colonialists who bought nothing but shame on Wales, while real Welsh heritage schemes are scratching around for pennies?

Unknown said...
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