Why are Community Surveys so Important?

Since 2014, Moniaive Initiative has been delivering projects to help the Glencairn thrive and adapt. This includes affordable housing at Sawmill Green, The Hive community shop, improvements to Macara Park play equipment and other projects committed to making our community a safer, healthier and ultimately better place to live.

It might seem like magic, but in order for the Moniaive Initiative to do what it does, we rely on funding from different organisations. These funders expect to see evidence that our projects are carrying out the will of the community. That’s why we do surveys! 

We are opening up into a new world and our community needs to be ready for it. That’s why we’re acting now to see what our community wants its future to look like. Think of it as exercising your right to free speech. If you want to see change, let us know… and fill out that survey!

Shaping Glencairn

Shortly, a colourful community survey will be arriving at your home. Moniaive Initiative is a community organization dedicated to the vitality and resilience of the Glencairn Parish. Recently we have developed a set of questions based on key topics raised at community meetings, from affordable housing and local businesses to land access and environmental sustainability. There will be one survey per household. This is your chance to sit down with your family and discuss what matters to you in your community.  It would be a great help if you could take just a bit of time to fill it out and return it to a drop-box near you. 

“Why another community survey?” you might be asking. Did you know all the projects delivered by Moniaive Initiative rely on grants from a range of funders? Our achievements at The Hive, the affordable housing project at Sawmill Green, improvements to Macara Park, the successful campaign to lower the village speed limit to 20 mph, and projects to help install renewable energy in our community spaces have all required substantial fundraising.

We have lots of exciting ideas for things to come. In order to secure funding for the future of Moniaive, Kirkland and Wallaceton, our community needs to demonstrate to potential funders what we hold most valuable. The best way to do that is to hold a community survey. The information that you provide now will be used to support our future grant applications.

So sharpen your pencils and get ready for the Shaping Glencairn community survey coming your way. Moniaive Initiative has taken great care to make sure each household gets just one copy, and that they are anonymous and fair. For that reason, each survey will be delivered in an envelope. Once you have completed the survey, put it back in the envelope and seal it. Then you can return it to a local drop off point or arrange for a pick up by using the contact details above. If for some reason you don’t receive a survey, please be in touch and another will be sent to you right away.

This is the easiest way you can help shape your community. Moniaive Initiative thanks you.

Funding Success with Blackcraig

We are happy to announce that we have been granted £7,800 from the Blackcraig Windfarm Community Benefit Fund. This grant will enable us to offer a one-year employment contract to a Volunteer & Retail Coordinator at the Hive in Moniaive. With the exception of a limited opening period over Christmas 2020, the Hive has been closed for the duration of the Covid emergency. We have used this time to carry out essential repairs to the building, including damp treatment and floor replacement and levelling. This grant will now help us in our efforts to reopen as quickly as possible, because we appreciate how much the Hive has been missed by so many of our regular customers and service users.

We would also like to congratulate three other community groups who have achieved success in the same funding round. All three are currently being supported by Moniaive Initiative as they bring forward new projects:

Glencairn Memorial Institute has been granted funds to carry out essential building repairs (damp remediation and electrical improvements) to allow the building to re-open to the public following a long closure during the covid emergency.

Moniaive Playcare has been granted funds towards the internal fit-out of their new childcare facility in Corrie Doon in Chapel Street.

And finally, Glencairn Land & Woods Trust has been granted funds to enable them to employ a Development Officer to carry forward their aspirations for woodland ownership and management.

Our Chairman, Bill McLarty, said: “It is great to see over £47,000 of Blackcraig Wind Farm Community Fund monies coming into Glencairn and we were delighted to be able to support so many of our local community organisations to make successful bids”

We would like to thank the Blackcraig Windfarm Fund, and everyone at Foundation Scotland who administer the fund.

You can see the full list of awards here:

https://tinyurl.com/blackcraigawards

Project Officer Vacancy

Moniaive Initiative currently have a vacancy for a short-term Project Officer(s) to help us kick start project work delayed due to the Covid pandemic.

  • Fixed Term (to 30 June 2021) – 36 hours per week (options for job share / flexible working)
  • £12 per hour
  • Based at Home / in Moniaive

The successful candidate will have proven Project Management and Project Finance skills and a sound understanding of community organisations. An organised, efficient and resourceful approach is necessary, along with a proactive approach to community engagement work.

The post requires working on projects with three local organisations (approximately 12 hours per group, per week):

  • Moniaive Playcare
  • Glencairn Memorial Institute
  • Glencairn Land and Woods Trust

A full Job Specification can be found here:

Please email your CV and covering letter to deb.moniaiveinitiative@gmail.com

by 5pm on Monday 26 April 2021

At Home – A new Heritage project for 2021

Seeing our home in a new light

Over the past year we have all spent a lot of time at home. This has been both in the building we call home and in Moniaive, the place we call home, among the people who help to make it our home.  We have juggled with working from home, home schooling, and worrying about our jobs and incomes. On the other hand, within our four walls there has been a resurgence of interest in domestic life reflected in baking, crafting and gardening.  Confined to our immediate surroundings, many of us have happily rediscovered the place in which we live by observing our gardens or walking in the countryside around us.  

An opportunity through heritage

The story of our home is part of our heritage.  We see this time as a golden opportunity to begin to explore and record that heritage. Moniaive Initiative are collaborating with Jackie and Chris Lee of Moniaive-based Artemis Scotland, which specialises in heritage interpretation.  Together we would like to invite you to participate in a community project that highlights Home and will focus on the Bank Holiday weekend of 1st-3rd May 2021.

Why are we suggesting this?

Recent studies have shown that heritage plays a powerful role in wellbeing and therefore the economy and regeneration. In terms of mental health, it is said to be “transformative” – when we feel good, we are more creative and make fewer demands on the NHS. It provides us with a sense of rootedness, connects us and helps us to belong. In short, it is about helping us to secure our future.

What is heritage?

Heritage is not just “old stuff”, it is the evidence history leaves behind. It can be a building, a landscape, a drystone dyke, a coin, a teacup, a tractor, a painting, a tradition, a language, or a belief. It is your traybake recipe, your lambing techniques, or your back catalogue of video games. It is the pub, the church, and even grandparents with another tale of the old days. It does not matter whether you have lived here for only weeks, or all your life: this is your heritage.

How can we engage with our heritage?

There are many ways, but a good starting point – given social distancing – would be to think of ourselves as heritage detectives, looking at what is around us. What is special about the place where you live? What is your house made of, and does it have any special features?  Is it old or new?   Are there any stories about it?  Who used to live there? What was there before your house was built?

Perhaps it is not the physical building itself which speaks of home to you. Perhaps it is an object with a story – a shepherd’s crook, a chair, a patchwork quilt, a photograph of the milkman’s horse. It might be an experience about shops that have gone, a gala day or a memory of the “great snow”.  And it’s not just the story of those who have lived in Glencairn for generations we are interested in hearing.  Everyone’s story is important, even if you have just arrived here.  Why you have chosen to make Glencairn your home is part of your story and the heritage of our community.

How can we share our heritage stories?

This is challenging during the pandemic, but we will ensure that everyone can participate safely.  To begin with we would like to suggest two simple ideas:

  1. A window into the heritage of our homes

The tried and tested method of village window displays has worked so well that we would like to use it again on the May Bank Holiday weekend.  We therefore invite you to be as imaginative and creative as possible on the theme of At Home. Think of it as creating a mini museum or gallery that will be part of a trail around the village.  People will be able to follow the trail at their leisure over the course of the weekend, according to whatever rules are in place at the time. It is not a competition, just some creative fun with some heritage information on the side.

The Trail will be based in Moniaive, so we are currently developing ideas to involve those who live in the wider Glencairn area.  One suggestion is for those outside the village to contribute to a virtual scrapbook. Another idea would be to create a temporary display around Macara Park, or to utilise ‘unused’ windows around the village.  We welcome your suggestions on how to make this work.

  • A trail within a trail

To put the At Home trail into context we will provide an updated heritage trail of village landmarks, looking at the stories of the heritage sites we know well, and few that have been forgotten. There will be some old ones, some new ones, some loved ones, and some neglected ones. Again, the idea is that you follow the trail at your leisure, within the current social distancing guidelines.

Where do I start?

For those with internet access, we recommend you start by checking if your home is listed on the National Record of the Historic Environmentwebsite called Canmore at:

https://canmore.org.uk

If you type key words like ‘Moniaive’ or ‘Glencairn’ into the SEARCH box, it will bring up Site Records on the front tab, and an interactive Map on the second tab. By clicking on the map, you can zoom down to building level.  If your building is overlaid with a black dot, you can click on that to access the information held on file. This might include date information, building construction details, or digital images or documents.

Over the coming weeks we will be offering further tips on research which we will share on the Moniaive Initiative and Artemis Scotland Facebook pages, and on the new dedicated ‘Heritage’ page on this website. We will also find ways to share other ideas to ensure that those without internet access are able to participate.

For your well being

One last thing, as with any community project, it is important to respect other peoples’ privacy. Any information that you chose to share should not compromise your own, or other people’s privacy, safety or security.  We ask that you do not reference living persons, or share (identifying) photos of them, without their permission.  We likewise suggest that you think carefully about the type of photos of your home that you share.  This is not about revealing where you hide the Rembrandt!

We hope this project will inspire you, and the local organisations and businesses that are part of our daily life, to begin to build on our heritage. Your suggestions and feedback are welcome.  We hope At Home is just a beginning; the past has a long future!

Moniaive Affordable House wins Empty Homes Award

at the Scottish Empty Homes Partnership Annual Awards Ceremony on 2nd February 2021

Moniaive Initiative are very pleased to announce that we have won the “Best Long Term Empty Homes Restoration Project” – for our house renovation at Sawmill Green, Moniaive. #scottishemptyhomes#emptyhomes2021

A big Thank You to Mike Staples of (SOSCH) for collecting the award for us, and to SOSCH for all their help along the way. Thanks also go to the Rural Housing Fund and SSE Renewables for funding the project; to our main Contractor, JW Vernon Ltd, for completing the project under very difficult circumstances; and to all the local volunteers who helped us to make this project happen.

Mike Staples (SOSCH), Bill McLarty (Chair, MI) and John Murray (Treasurer, MI) outside Sawmill Green, with the Award for Best Long-Term Empty Homes Restoration Project 2021

Mike Staples, Chief Executive at SOSCH said: “Everyone at SOSCH is really excited about this award because it recognises the role community-led housing can play in bringing empty properties back into use as bright, safe, secure, warm and accessible homes.  We’re delighted for the team at Moniaive Initiative whom we worked in partnership with over several years to secure ownership and funding to redevelop Sawmill Green, and who have demonstrated that new locally managed affordable housing supply in our rural communities can be provided through existing properties”. 

Moniaive Initiative Chairman, Bill McLarty, said “This award is a lovely way of recognising several years’ of hard work by a range of people from across the community.  We would just like to thank everyone who helped us to make this project happen.”