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Good Practice On Tap at Yorkshire Water

Volunteering magazine article, issue 113, December 2005

Yorkshire Water provides its local communities with enthusiastic volunteers as well as high quality water and sewerage services.

The utility company has extensive volunteering opportunities - co-ordinated by Community Affairs Manager Anne Reed.

Currently it has more than 500 volunteers, which represents 28.5% of its workforce.

The company offers an extensive range of volunteering opportunities, including:

  • It was one of the founding partners of Right to Read, a major campaign launched in 1999 aimed at improving literacy standards among seven to 11-year-olds across Yorkshire and Humber.
  • It is also involved in Number Partners, which brings together business volunteers and schools, providing extra help with maths for seven to 14-year-olds.
  • Science and engineering ambassadors - where employees help to enthuse young people and develop links between what they learn at school and the world of work.
  • Linking up with the School Governors' One Stop Shop, Yorkshire Water has employeees who are governors within their local community.
  • Employees volunteer to act as ambassadors for the company and give talks and presentations to organisations across the region.
  • The company is a keen supporter of the Yorkshire Challenges, which were established in 2001 by Business in the Community. Teams are encouraged to choose a community challenge to work on.
  • The Halifax 'Blue Sox' Rugby League After School Club - based in The Shay Stadium - this is aimed at raising literacy, numeracy and ICT attainment levels. Yorkshire Water employees attend weekly sessions to help at the club.
  • GCSE mentoring - set up in 2001, working in conjunction with Education Leeds, this is an initiative working with students who have predicted borderline grades.
  • Waterwheelers was formed in 1995 and is a charity run by Yorkshire Water which every year organises fundraising events to support local causes.
  • Yorkshire Water supports WaterAid, the UK's specialist development charity working to help some of the poorest countries in Africa and Asia to provide themselves with a safe water supply and adequate sanitation.
  • Cool Schools was launched in 2002 to combat the damaging effect of dehydration on children's health and the company is installing water coolers in every primary school in the region.

VE's Penny Gee visited the firm's Bradford headquarters and spoke to Anne about the company's volunteers.

"For the last three years we've had 25% of employees taking part in our programmes - and this year we've seen a significant increase because it's now within our company vision, one element of which is that in five years time we'd like to be known as the national role model for volunteering. So we have had a little bit more awareness in terms of people being able to sign up for it.

We envisage that we will be over 30% by the end of this financial year - which is absolutely brilliant. We've engaged as well about 120 of our contract partners so far this financial year, because they come in as part of our challenges in the areas that we're working in - Balfour Beatty, Gleeson, Laing O'Rourke, Mott McDonald Bentley. What is really good now is that the contract partners are actually taking the lead from us - and they're going off - off their own back they're doing the projects. So it's really embedded in what we do."

I asked Anne how do they coordinate all this - is there a volunteer manager?

"Until April, there was me - it is my full-time job but I also deal with all our education side as well. From April we actually brought in Area Volunteer Champions - and we have I would say a good 10 who are really committed. The idea is that in each building we have somebody who colleagues can go and speak to if they are interested in a challenge.

Out at our more remote sites, because we have sites all across Yorkshire, again they are a focal point that somebody can go to; they can provide that one-to-one support, they can chat to people, find the right programmes for them and then feed back to myself.

They also help on key projects as well - our Cares at Christmas appeal - we have little roles for people; we have our Chief Wrapping Elf who is responsible for making sure all the gifts are wrapped; our Chief Catering Elf and things like that.

I asked Anne to tell me about supervision, support and training:

There is an Area Volunteers one-day training course which gives an overview of all the different projects we do and also health and safety training as well. On all our projects we do offer support and training anyway. So if they are doing our Right to Read or Number Partners - that training is offered in-house, and I deliver that. If they're doing GCSE mentoring we work in conjunction with Education Leeds and they actually provide that for us.

So there is different training for everybody and we're just piloting Volunteering Plus, which is an accredited recognition scheme in conjunction with City & Guilds. We have 18 of our more established volunteers actually going on that, and hopefully coming out at the end of March with a recognised qualification. Hopefully those people will become our facilitators for the future so that we can then push that out throughout the business.

How did community challenge start?

By default actually; I found out that Business in the Community had sent an invoice up to our directors which had been paid for membership of Bradford Cares. What we didn't realise was that it entitled us to eight community challenges.

Our Cares Programme has literally developed within the last two and a half years. Our first year we did 16 challenges - last year we did 29. This year we envisage it will hit 50 challenges. It is brilliant really.

With that and engaging more of our contract partners I think we'll have nearly 700 people taking part in our Cares Challenges this year which is fantastic. It actually now works across the whole of Yorkshire. Originally it was Bradford Cares - therefore everything was Bradford-centric. People would say to us "we want to go and work in Leeds" and we would go and find that. But it wasn't actually widely advertised and people's awareness wasn't as great. So this year we have changed the programme and it's now called Yorkshire Cares and people can go online and find challenges and activities across the whole of the Yorkshire area.

We're also engaging the technicians, the operators, the people who would not usually get involved in this sort of thing because they would be too busy concentrating on the core element of the business. For example, last week we had a team of 15 field technicians who normally work in isolation and they all came together, and they did the lighting for a community football pitch and renovated a pavilion and actually put their skills forward into the community. That is the way we'd like to go with it, to engage that sort of element.

I asked Anne about the importance of awards:

We have a recognition award ceremony in January. We've had these awards for about four years now and they've grown over the years. We have internal awards - primary mentor, business mentor, speaker of the year (judged by area champions, watching colleagues in action in the community), community teams and various other awards. There's recognition as well, a nice luncheon event; all our directors come and present the awards and we raise money for a charity as well. People need the recognition of an award.

How does a regional company get to be a national role model?

It is very difficult and awards do play a part in raising awareness. We just came across these Year of the Volunteer 2005 awards and we put some entries in, and we were delighted when every single one came back and received something. Our HR Manager Diane Bindley, who won a medal for inspiration, has actually been quite shocked and embarrassed about it all.

I asked Anne about the literacy and numeracy campaigns:

Right to Read was the very first community project we took on board and (although if we go right back we did have a connection with ChildLine in terms of a small cluster of employees who raised money for them) we were one of the leading players. We had 30 volunteers initially - 80 regular volunteers now and 20 Number Partners. We have people who have been reading for years - for example Donna Kingett (who won a Year of the Volunteer medal for commitment this year); we have some people who maybe do a term or two terms; the beauty of it is you can commit on a term to term basis, and every term we offer training.

Number Partners - it has been going for a couple of years and has brought in more men, people from the finance section; it's what makes them tick and is more locally based - for example in Sheffield we have got a team together working in partnership. It's about finding innovative ways of getting volunteers involved, bearing in mind the business needs have to come first.

Previously, we have won the Big Issue Corporate section award - a Big Difference Award for the Right to Read team. Our schools do provide endorsement for us. We're trying to get the Queen's Voluntary Awards for our Right to Read team this year.

I asked Anne to tell us more about the Yorkshire Cares campaign:

Yorkshire Cares is extremely popular. We reckon we're saving £60,000 to £70,000 a year by teams not going on their traditional activities; they are actually choosing now to do the community challenges (rather than go karting, etc) which has produced huge savings. This is a two-way thing for the business.

We're strategically involved in the operation of Cares, we're very big supporters of BITC, one of our directors chairs the leadership team for Bradford Cares, I'm on the Operations team and we're definitely the leading player in Yorkshire and Humber in terms of volunteering at the moment. People look up to us and we have to make sure we're continually improving as well and trying to make a difference where we can.

I asked Anne about Yorkshire Water's approach to mapping Employer Supported Volunteering to core competences and personal development plans?

We have a skills matrix which lists all our projects cross-referenced with the skills enhancement list. Through our Speakers Panel employees can develop presentation skills and confidence - there is a whole range of different elements of skills development you can achieve. If you are looking to develop a particular skill, don't just go down a training course route - take a look at what volunteering can give. For example: to develop leadership skills we give employees a Cares Challenge that involves leading and managing.

Our Volunteering Plus course is a follow-on from that - if someone wants to learn something, they can detail that at the beginning of the course and set out their personal and professional objectives.

This will be reviewed half way through the course and at the end: what have you learned, what would you do differently and how have you improved yourself? That is where we get the City & Guilds accreditation. We're moving quite strongly on to really integrate it into the heart of the business.

I was very fortunate to meet some of Yorkshire Water's dedicated volunteers:

Firstly I was introduced to Customer Services Coordinator Paula Kelly, who has been a volunteer for Right To Read since it started in 1999. Paula reads with two children, a boy and girl aged eight, and also works on Number Partners. "You can see the children gain a lot of confidence, I would recommend it for a lot of my team," Paula said.

John Herdman, Manager of Procurement and Fleet, has been a mentor for the Newlands programme since it began in 2004. John shares his business skills with small businesses and is also involved in the Cares Challenges.

Donna Kingatt, who has been involved with Right to Read for six years told me how children with little hope have gone on to achieve so much and increased their confidence in turn. Donna received the Year of the Volunteer medal for Commitment in September.

Head of Legal Services Stuart McFarlane has been involved for four years with Right to Read and, working in partnership with another director, shares Friday lunchtime slots. Stuart was very aware of the time as he had to dash off to read with the children at a local school.

IT Manager Dave Perrins, who has been with Yorkshire Water for 27 years, is one of the Area Volunteers Champions. He also told me how he is one of Anne's "backroom boys" who helps out with odd jobs is a Cares Challenge Manager and Chief Wrapping Elf. Dave received a Year of the Volunteer medal for Impact in September.

Team Manager Wayne Christie, who has been with Yorkshire Water's parent group Kelda for 29 years, started the WaterWheelers charity group.

Wayne is also an Area Volunteer Champion and a Cares Challenge team leader.

Quality Regulation Scientist Meryl Knapp has been with the company for 16 and a half years.

Meryl is an inspirational volunteer, taking part in the Speakers Panel, Right to Read and Cares challenges.

She speaks about Yorkshire Water and WaterAid, going into schools and helping the children to see the contrast between what life is like here and in Africa.

Meryl told me: "I really enjoy the Speakers Panel. The WI, men's pension clubs, University of the Third Age, all make you very welcome. We have a good story to tell about Yorkshire Water. Water is the only essential utility and I think it is important to get out into the community and explain this." She added: "The Speakers Panel - it is the workers who go out and speak, not the PR team, so it has a vibrancy; we all have different experiences and we bring our own personal knowledge of the company to it. It really does make it meaningful."

I also spoke to Asset Performance Technician Elaine Young, who has been a mentor for of the Halifax 'Blue Sox' League after school club for two years. Elaine told me how the children come along for 10 weeks; they are bussed in for a couple of hours and learn numeracy, literacy and communication skills but they don't realise they're learning.

"They have laptop computers, take part in reading and number skills. They can also kick rugby balls and are shown different kicks by an ex-player and measure how far they have kicked, then go into the gym (measure pulse rate - maths skill again); the children learn to work and achieve things together as a team, which involves team-building games outside; it's just a terrific atmosphere".

At the end of 10 weeks they take an exit test to see how they've done (fill in evaluation form - what they have enjoyed, what they'd like to see). "It's not a school atmosphere, you have fun and learn and we all get on really well, end of 10 weeks - presentation certificate evening with rugby players attending. It's a really nice thing to be involved in - I get a lot of satisfaction out of bringing these kids along."

Finally I met Field Technician Adrian Roberts, who had just completed a Community Challenge "mini-groundforce" at a primary school, in partnership with with Morrisons. Adrian told me how the team "did a deck area, fences, groundwork for tarmac, and felt a great sense of satisfaction. Not only that but my manager said at the end of the day - 'we do these team-building things like clay pigeon shooting and a night out in a town with a few beers, that works out expensive, but yesterday at the challenge there were more laughs and more smiles and giving something back than you would get on a night out - it was really, really good."

Adrian has also been involved with the Right to Read campaign for three years and Number Partners, which he rotates on a weekly basis, working with three boys, so they get help with literacy and numeracy. Adrian told me how the "children love the maths part of it". Adrian is also on the Speakers Panel and involved with WaterAid. He told me how he had: "Fingers in all different pies - I really enjoy it. I'm looking forward to doing another Community Challenge in the New Year. "

Visit to Newlands

Yorkshire Water managers are also working with the Newlands Community Business Club through the Partners in Leadership Community Enterprise programme. Newlands Community Business Club enables Social Enterprises from the Newlands regeneration area of Bradford to share in, and benefit from, the business experience of Yorkshire Water.

Anita Bolland, from Newlands, told me they made the connection with Yorkshire Water. "We met with Anthony Waddington of Bradford Vision and BITC, to try and meet some companies we thought could help our social enterprises. Anthony brokered an arrangement with Yorkshire Water - we got our social enterprises together and showed them a plan and said 'here's an idea, what do you think of it?' The enterprises came up with lots of ideas - business plans, marketing, we put a programme of events together and we have partnered up each of these social enterprises with a mentor from YW. We have just never looked back since, I can't even think of all the words to say - awesome, wonderful, magnificent, fabulous, frustrating. Not all of the mentors got what they wanted and not all of the social enterprises got what they wanted from the mentors - but I would say we've had an 80% success rate matching people up.

The Newlands pilot been so successful, we want to continue it...nothing is insignificant and little, everything has a part to play. I am really chuffed to be part of it."

Anita also told me about Snoop - which stands for Special Needs Objective Outreach Project - which runs a nearby out of school activities club for children with multiple disabilities - downs, autism and ADHD. Yorkshire Water also supports this initiative. There had been a struggle with funding and Snoop was almost forced to shut, until they met Diane Bindley, who helped them turn the situation around. Anita said: "Their own words were 'we were at a crossroads'; Diane turned their traffic light from red to green. Great for Diane, great for Snoop."

Anthony Waddington told me: "My role is all about engaging businesses in some of the areas where the people are the most disadvantaged in Bradford - people in the bottom 20% for income and educational attainment. This enabled us to link specifically business people with those people who have been working on the ground here trying to do things and to try and transfer some of the skills across and try and reduce this dependency on government grants and European money.

It's about trying to create in the community a business model of how you operate. For me Yorkshire Water took this really seriously and that made all the difference. If we manage to secure the funding I'd like to see this rolled out across Bradford, outside of the city centre."

Anne Reed explained: "It is not all about big corporate budget - it is the time and the passion - we can actually have the power to make considerable changes in the community."

Anthony added: "This type of volunteering proves you don't have to be Yorkshire Water to do it, it could just be the owner manager of a small business who came in and did this role, a much better model of how you deal with volunteering in the community, it's not about "can you give us some money?" Come and share some of your brilliance with the people. All of these people started it because they cared about something. Hopefully we are creating the start of a network which will grow, beyond Bradford. Employee volunteering (particularly management) people are looking at this as a national role model."

My next visit in the community was to the Springfield Community Centre to meet development worker Helena Rhodes:

Helena told me how a group of Yorkshire Water employees had joined forces with the company's contract partners in a team challenge. The team came in to redecorate the centre, including the main sports hall, which has been repainted with bright, colourful murals.

Helena said when local children were brought into the hall: "It was like Christmas."

The children have taken a role in setting up the hall and they respect the equipment and premises now; girls are more active, taking part in tennis, badminton and dance. "They want to keep it clean and nice. It makes a difference and we haven't had any vandalism in this hall at all," Helena told me.

"As a consequence of contractors coming in - we now have a 24-hour internet radio station run by volunteers and a teaching room upstairs for alternative education for pupils who have been referred after being excluded from school. It is a nicer room to be in, they have more respect as a result; we have been able to save some money for the electrics and other parts of the building which need work as a result of the Cares initiative," Helena added.

The centre has a mentor, Duncan, from Yorkshire Water who supports the management committee by helping with training and expertise. Helena described how useful it is to have a mentor. "Initially he was someone to moan at but also someone to to reflect back on to provide support." He encouraged Helena to go back to college (the management committee have provided funds).

I asked Helena how many volunteers helped run the centre? She told me: "For each group in the centre there is a team of volunteers - about 25 in total, three to four for each group running in the building; two volunteers for youth service."

Anne said: "Engaging children, taking ownership of equipment, doing more sport, leading healthier lives. That's really important."