Print

Print


Once DIAL was a proud bastion of the disabled peoples movement, user
controlled and operated and bloody usefull and well informed for all that,
how did this ever happen? 

 

Oh well I suppose eventually we are going to see the two dragons of SCOPE
and Leonard Cheshire slug it out on the plains of Armageddon.

 

Larry

 

From: The Disability-Research Discussion List
[mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Mike Higgins
Sent: 12 October 2011 16:43
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: SCOPE winds up DIAL UK!
Importance: High

 

An anonymous and perhaps facetious call out today was made for DIAL staff
across the UK to attend the Disabled People Against the Cuts (DPAC) annual
conference at the end of October and, as the old comedy series had it: "take
it from here". For a less cryptic clue, e-mail me off-list.

 

Cynics like me will of course say "I told you so". Spookily enough, SCOPE
(yet again) appears to have hoodwinked a section of our movement controlled
by Disabled People, stolen its clothes, money, reputation, good will and
status (or as SCOPE would have it: it's 'branding'). Lock, stock and both
barrels, SCOPE hijacked the DIAL network a couple of years ago, subsuming it
within SCOPE's monopoly. This meant that  with a couple of chews, a gulp,
swallow and suppressed burp, SCOPE could enhance its pretension to be part
of the Disabled People's Movement.

 

In-line with its providing space for window dressing (such as the project
led by Andy Rickell and others) and the subsequent office space it gave to
Disability LIB, SCOPE has ended its short-term whoring with DIAL. Having
slept with DIAL, it is now administering the morning after pill to the DIAL
network. Closing down DIAL's national office and sacking all of DIAL's
nationally employed staff as of next month, November 2011, is just one of
the ways in which SCOPE is ensuring that any established expertise in
network support for Disabled Peoples' Organisations is expunged.

 

SCOPE has abolished the national trustee body for DIAL and is instead
imposing a SCOPE-appointed (i.e. unelected) steering group with
responsibility for SCOPE dis-information services. As part of its declared
'regionalisation', SCOPE nationally is appointing a top-heavy management
structure with an emphasis upon recruiting people with backgrounds in health
and social care services (rather than in the Disabled People's Movement).
Staff at a national level within DIAL, including many disabled staff, are
apparently surplus to requirements. The new 'regionalised' version of SCOPE
will in reality compete directly with DIAL groups for funding. As we know
from all too bitter experience, SCOPE has the power and resources to play
dirty and win contracts away from local Disabled People's Organisations. It
seems to me at least extremely likely that this will happen as part of the
latest moves by SCOPE  - thinly veiled as 'restructuring' - to silence and
suppress the only self-organised groups to be associated with it.

 

Just in case you're thinking, is this about money? The answer from SCOPE is
'no'. Of course it is! It is about taking money from Disabled People's
Organisations. It is not however about a cash shortage within SCOPE,
according to their own official propaganda about this 'change'.

 

Please circulate this information to anyone you know who is involved with a
DIAL group so that their network can discuss openly how to respond to this
predictable attack upon its integrity and viability. I personally am not
involved with DIAL UK (or SCOPE) but would hope that as a minimum the DIAL
network will decide to dissociate itself from SCOPE and refuse to lend it
any further credibility, publicising this decision as widely as possible.
Whilst DIAL UK national staff are under strict instructions from their
erstwhile employer not to share information about the attempted back door
abolition by SCOPE of the DIAL UK network, I am under no such restrictions
or constraints. The National DIAL office has also made it clear that whilst
SCOPE is attempting to tie their hands, they will not avoid answering direct
questions put to them by interested parties. Those who want the inside track
on these developments could therefore call the national office directly to
discuss strategy for resisting these attacks on telephone: 01302 310 123. 

 

This is also perhaps a chance for a timely reminder to those in bed with
SCOPE, through for example such networks as the Disability Benefits
Consortium and other public campaigns, that the hardest hit appear to
include SCOPE's disabled staff, a number of whom are being made redundant.
In passing, didn't something similar happen to Leonard Cheshire's latest
pretend network of User-Led forra about a year ago when they also sacked a
swathe of Disabled People?

 

I would say that Disabled People's Organisations need (again) publicly to
dissociate themselves from SCOPE and the latest in its long and chequered
series of attacks on our Movement. SCOPE continues to pretend to be a friend
of Disabled People's Organisations as part of its long-term cynical
endeavour to plan the decimation of organisations run and controlled by
Disabled People and their replacement with a consortium of unaccountable
charity businesses in their own image, like Sue Ryder and Leonard Cheshire
et al.

 

I will leave it to others to formulate demands and a strategy as regards
dealing with the immediate fallout from this latest debacle, as I am proudly
ignorant of the internal workings, structures and mechanisms for putting
pressure onto SCOPE. Suffice to say, from my perspective as an activist,
this latest news simply reinforces the vital need to rebuild our Movement
from the grass roots up (for the avoidance of doubt, I mean the Disabled
Peoples' Movement of organisations run and controlled by Disabled People)
perhaps starting with the excellent example being set by DPAC.

 

Best wishes,

 

Mike Higgins (in a personal capacity)


________________End of message________________

This Disability-Research Discussion list is managed by the Centre for Disability Studies at the University of Leeds (www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies).

Enquiries about list administration should be sent to [log in to unmask]

Archives and tools are located at: www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/disability-research.html

You can VIEW, POST, JOIN and LEAVE the list by logging in to this web page.