Peace on Earth (Transparency Required)
It’s amazing what happens when you open a window.
Since publishing my earlier piece on the use of Wednesbury Town Hall and the way certain “community” activities are being run, the amount of information that has landed in my inbox has been nothing short of astonishing.
And no — this isn’t gossip, rumour, or Facebook froth. It’s documents, letters, screenshots, and first-hand accounts.
So let’s be clear from the outset:
this blog follows on from the original, builds on it, and reflects new information received in recent days.
And yes — before anyone else rushes to sharpen a calculator — one of the figures previously referenced related to two people, not one. Accuracy matters, so that’s corrected here. What hasn’t changed, however, are the far more serious questions about governance, exclusion, transparency, and oversight.
“Decisions Are Final” – Community, But With Terms & Conditions
Multiple people — many elderly, some long-standing attendees — have now shared copies of letters informing them that they are no longer welcome at events, coffee mornings, trips, or activities.
The wording is strikingly consistent:
- Attendance terminated.
- No meaningful explanation.
- No appeal process.
- Decisions described as “final”.
For groups that publicly describe themselves as tackling loneliness and isolation, this raises an obvious question:
since when did community support come with a one-strike policy and no right of reply?
Trips, Refunds, and Who Holds the Keys
Documents seen show that trips and outings are being organised under the banner of the organisation, with payments taken and refunds issued directly.
What has caused concern for many is not the trips themselves — people enjoy outings — but how decisions and finances appear to be controlled.
Letters instruct excluded members to provide bank details directly so that refunds can be arranged. That immediately raises legitimate governance questions:
- Who authorises refunds?
- Who independently checks them?
- Who has access to bank information?
- What safeguards exist around personal data?
- Where is segregation of duties?
These are not accusations.
They are basic governance questions any properly run organisation should be able to answer without defensiveness.
Accounts That Don’t Explain Themselves
Several people with experience in finance and governance have now contacted me independently, all asking variations of the same thing:
“How do the accounts explain the scale of activities people are being charged for?”
This blog will not speculate with figures. It doesn’t need to.
The issue is simpler — the published financial information does not clearly explain income and expenditure relating to trips, events, and refunds, nor how funds are controlled or overseen.
Transparency isn’t optional just because an organisation calls itself a charity or a community group.
Promotion, Preferential Access, and Public Space
Another recurring theme raised by multiple contributors concerns the use of a public building.
Wednesbury Town Hall is not a private club. Yet concerns have been raised about:
- Preferential access and hire arrangements.
- Other groups being edged out or discouraged.
- Promotion of certain activities by elected representatives.
- A lack of clarity over who approved what, and why.
Public spaces must be open, fair, and demonstrably neutral — not quietly monopolised.
When Raising Concerns Becomes the “Problem”
Perhaps the most troubling pattern is this:
people say they were excluded after raising safeguarding, conduct, or fairness concerns.
That should ring alarm bells for anyone involved in community work.
Silencing people who ask questions is not protection.
It is the opposite.
A Simple Principle
Let’s strip this right back.
If an organisation is:
- using a public building,
- handling money from members,
- organising trips,
- holding personal data,
- excluding people without appeal,
then it must expect scrutiny.
That isn’t hostility.
It’s accountability.
If This Has Happened to You
If you have:
- received a termination or exclusion letter,
- been removed without explanation,
- been discouraged from raising concerns,
- questioned finances or governance and been shut down,
you are not alone.
You may wish to:
- keep copies of correspondence,
- note dates and witnesses,
- seek independent advice,
- or raise concerns with appropriate oversight bodies.
This blog exists so people know they are not imagining things.
Final Thought
“Peace on Earth” is a lovely slogan.
But peace without fairness is just quiet.
And quiet, in public life, is where problems grow.
#Wednesbury #CommunityGovernance #TransparencyMatters #PublicSpace #CharityAccountability #Safeguarding #AskingQuestions #FollowThePaperwork #NotHostilityJustOversight
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