{"id":84,"date":"2015-06-30T11:53:52","date_gmt":"2015-06-30T10:53:52","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/blogs.iriss.org.uk\/homelessness\/?page_id=84"},"modified":"2019-03-11T09:01:57","modified_gmt":"2019-03-11T09:01:57","slug":"making-a-house-a-home","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/blogs.iriss.org.uk\/homelessness\/making-a-house-a-home\/","title":{"rendered":"Making a house a home, Midlothian Advice and Resource Centre"},"content":{"rendered":"
This case study describes a furniture reuse service in Midlothian. It is based on a discussion with Willie Dunn, Project Coordinator at Midlothian Advice and Resource Centre (MARC). MARC was established during the miners\u2019 strike in the 1980s. During this time MARC provided food, furniture and money to help the striking miners get by without the welfare benefits that the Government had withdrawn. In addition to donations from the public, the organisation received funding from the local authority and from Europe which enabled it to offer benefits and welfare advice as well as furniture. Since then, the organisation\u2019s trading arm has been developed into what MARC is today. Now a social enterprise, MARC has built upon the original philosophy to embrace a greener and more experimental approach to providing choice and affordability for people who use its services. It is with a view to enable people at risk of, or with experience of, homelessness to establish and sustain a home.<\/p>\n MARC is open to everyone, and the organisation actively advertises to a broad audience, which allows for additional income, which in turn enables the organisation to reinvest in additional services. Every MARC employee has either been a volunteer or on a placement with the organisation, for example, the job training scheme Community Job Scotland. In the last year MARC has become a Living Wage employer.<\/p>\n Contact<\/a> ‘To change our philosophy and to change the way that we were as a nice little local community charity to a social enterprise business by all intent and purposes, to change that philosophy that was required has taken time, and it\u2019s not easy. And some charities aren\u2019t geared for that, and so, therefore, what we have been doing is talking to other charitable organisations throughout Scotland to say \u2018you can do this.\u2019<\/em><\/p>\n Working in collaboration with Midlothian Council\u2019s Homelessness team since 2001, MARC has created an alternative to the standard issue council furniture grant that people with experience of homelessness receive when moving into their own home. The council now allocates the same amount of money to all homeless people being allocated a property, and formal financial assessment is not considered necessary, however, needs assessment is undertaken to inform the letter of instruction which the client is given to present to MARC.<\/p>\n Previously, when people\u2019s needs were assessed by the homelessness team, and a grant calculated, the person would receive a small grant that would buy only a few new items, such as a cooker, a bed and a small sofa. Now, at MARC, people have choice between new and reuse furniture, which at a lot lower price, offers the person choice and remit for personal taste. Reuse furniture is also often better quality than the standard requirement issued from the council.<\/p>\n ‘Why are we constantly giving new items, why are we constantly looking at just replacing new with new, why are we not looking at the recycle\/reuse element, environmental element, and more importantly the social element?’<\/em><\/p>\n The\u00a0instruction letter informs\u00a0the\u00a0client that if they choose to get a reuse cooker and a reuse washing machine, and their need is met in terms of the assessment, then the balance of the grant can be used to purchase any other household items within the shop.<\/p>\n There are many benefits of the approach MARC takes.<\/p>\n Most importantly it provides people leaving care, prison or with experience of homelessness with affordable choices in creating a home to their own taste and needs:<\/p>\n ‘... for the person it gives them a degree of dignity and choice. It helps them sustain tenancies because it\u2019s their home, and they have had a choice in what is within that home. A choice that middle class families have all the time when they are moving into houses, they choose the curtains, they choose the sofa. That sense of having control over your life, and control over your choices at the start of your tenancy. Particularly if you have got no dignity, if you have left because of your circumstances, or if you have found yourself living on the streets, or coming from a situation of alcohol or drug abuse. To be given that little bit of dignity, that little bit of choice, and that little bit of responsibility at the start of your tenancy I think will help them to sustain that and make them prouder of what they do, and make them house proud… for us that\u2019s what it\u2019s about.’<\/em><\/p>\n The introduction of MARC\u2019s arrangement with Midlothian Council has also been beneficial to the council financially. And people get a lot more for the money they are given.<\/p>\n
\nMARC<\/a>, 10 Woodburn Road, Dalkeith, EH22 2AT<\/p>\nHelping make a home<\/h3>\n
Dignity and choice<\/h3>\n
Financial sense<\/h3>\n