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#21 |
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A wild and crazy man
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Streatham
Posts: 5,529
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Something which the current system doesn't address is that as membership increases, the proportion needed by the BFA vs the HC's will decrease (there can only be a limited number at the elite end by definition) and that the HC's need the incentive to grow.
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Roger Barnes Streatham Fencing Club |
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#22 |
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Forum Rabbit
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 9
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Are we now not adding to the costs - the "Somebody" at the other end will need to be paid even if the comp organiser does not.
"Light blue & dark blue" cards again will also add extra admin costs on all levels - surely a computerised system would be easier and cheaper in the long run? the initial database/website setup cost would need to be found but after that it would pay for its self with probably less admin costs than now. Barcodes would be another way forward. |
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#23 | |
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A wild and crazy man
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Streatham
Posts: 5,529
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Different colour cards = no cost at all. (Possibly a tenner in lost bulk order discounts) That's what we tell the clients, while trying nnot snigger.
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Roger Barnes Streatham Fencing Club |
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#24 | |||
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Cthulhu fhtagn!
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Gateshead / Laszlo's
Posts: 814
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If I don't belong to a club, why should I pay more than a club member? I join on line; the admin costs are minimal. What do I get for my extra £3? Quote:
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"I do not have to forgive my enemies. I have had them all shot." - Ramon Maria Narvaez "Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn" - HP Lovecraft |
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#25 |
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Cthulhu fhtagn!
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Gateshead / Laszlo's
Posts: 814
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Another point on the coachs licence.
Do you intend to make such a licence a mandatory requirement for a coach to trade? Will you be negotiating with HMRC to have it included in the list of approved subcriptions to professions bodies & societies (List 3) so that members can claim the cost as a tax deductable expense against their coaching income?
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"I do not have to forgive my enemies. I have had them all shot." - Ramon Maria Narvaez "Ph-nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn" - HP Lovecraft |
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#26 |
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Moderator
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Why make it so cumbersome and complicated?
Ps. I didn't see this thread earlier when I posted the same question elsewhere.
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"Evil does not wear a bonnet!" "Thanks Ants ... Thants. It is forbidden to dream again; We maim our joys or hide them; |
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#27 | |||
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Forum Rabbit
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 9
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your income should only be between yourself and the HMRC - this is for insurance purposes only - therefore it will be up to the coach to tell the truth to the BFA - if there is an accident and the coach has lied about his earnings his insurance will be invalid and recourse would have to come via a criminal proceeding no doubt brought by both the injured party and the insurance company - so the coach would be rather draft not to get the correct level of insurance. The insurance certificate showing the coaches level should be made available to the members of the club anyhow.- again, only as I read it |
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#28 |
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Forum Rabbit
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 9
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Disagree - we currently have different levels of membership anyway - all the suggestion is to amend these levels to open membership out to the masses - fencing needs to take into account ALL the possible members we don't have and probably should have.
The cheaper general membership ensures everyone will join, therefore producing real fencing participant figures. The different levels based on comps is far more realistic than age - we have many young fencers that will only compete in LPJS and fence for a social experience - why should they pay the same as those that want to take the sport more seriously and fence at a higher level or at more comps? Effectively its a pay as you go type system - a consumer choice is the way to go |
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#29 | |||
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Jelly Baby
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Miles and miles from all major comps!
Posts: 4,202
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I was trying to differentiate between coaches who are largely amateur, but may accept money for giving lessons a couple of evenings a week, from those for whom coaching is a full time profession. Any reasonable mechanism would do, possibly even an "honour" system. It wouldn't be the end of the world if 5% of people slipped through the net, or cheated the system, so long as most people complied.
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www.englandfencing.org.uk |
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#30 | |
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Jelly Baby
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Miles and miles from all major comps!
Posts: 4,202
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The NGBs can use the levers that they do control (affiliation, insurance, appointment as team coaches etc) but can't make anything mandatory. Whether this would count as a tax exempt subscription, I don't know.
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www.englandfencing.org.uk |
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#31 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: i live in islington (north london)and am chairman of my own club,fighting fit,also in islington
Posts: 204
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Overall, I like the ideas you are putting forward Baldric.
A few points/questions. How would it work with schools? Would the children have to be members to be able to get a competition license? Would schools have to become a club to be able to get insurance? Jed |
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#32 |
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Jelly Baby
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Miles and miles from all major comps!
Posts: 4,202
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If you look at it from the position of most fencers, there is nothing cumbersome about it.
Many fencers (possible most) will just become members of the NGB, and won't even know that a transaction has taken place until the club secretary gives them their membership number.* The vast majority of current fencing members would transact once with the NGB - when they bought their competition license. A relatively small number of people, mostly those who have a deep understanding of the sport, would have to think a couple of minutes about what membership product(s) they needed. Even that would lessen after a year or two. Club secretaries and treasurers would have more work, but they would also have the chance to make a few quid for their club out of it. If we can get the IT right, it shouldn't be too onerous. (Upload templates for mass membership seems the obvious option) R *Incidentally, I don't think that there should be an actual card. A membership number (possibly barcode as well to speed up check in at large comps) emailed directly would be much easier, and far less expensive and time-consuming to process. It would need an easy IT portal for comp organisers to upload a list of entrants membership numbers, and the database to return a list of invalid ones. It would be very easy to have a numbering system where all level one licenses started with a 1 and all level two licenses started with a 2. Want to upgrade? Pay your money and get an email confirming your new number, which would be your old number with the first digit changed.
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www.englandfencing.org.uk |
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#33 | |
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Jelly Baby
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Miles and miles from all major comps!
Posts: 4,202
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If the school children did not belong to an affiliated club, then yes they would have to become a basic member (£12.50) and then buy a comp license (another £9.50). I appreciate that isn't ideal, but it is a bit less than the £25 or £30 that they would have to pay now. In an ideal world, the school fencer would join a club (and thus acquire the basic membership as part of the club membership package) and later, when they entered their first comp, the only immediate "extra" would be the level 1 license. My understanding is that most schools already have insurance, and so affiliation for them would be a choice. One of the reasons for the higher cost of membership for professional coaches would be enhanced insurance cover, which I envisage covering them to coach at non-affiliated club premises, and to coach non-members. (note - this would be cover for the COACH, not the non-members). Before you all drown me in questions, can I repeat that this is just an idea of mine at this stage? I don't pretend to have all the answers.
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www.englandfencing.org.uk |
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#34 | ||
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Jelly Baby
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Miles and miles from all major comps!
Posts: 4,202
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My best guess is that it would take 2 years to implement in full. Apart from anything else, someone who joins today is entitled to the benefits that they have paid for, for the next 365 days. Also, IT systems rarely work as specced from day 1. Quote:
BF get about £200k p.a. EF get about £95k p.a. The other home countries get about £40k p.a. between them. By my calculation, the income from my proposed scheme would be a about £315k which is a little less than that - the difference being accounted for because I propose to make the Sword a paid subscription, taking it out of the current cost base. BF bear virtually all the cost of running the system, paying the insurance premiums and (at present) printing and distributing the sword. They also employ other staff who do work on behalf of the whole sport, which benefits all home country members, as well as elite fencing. If you look at BF accounts, and remove the UKS grant funding, not very much of the membership income goes on elite fencing. I don't want to get into a bun-fight over the exact split between BF and the HCs - that is a complex negotiation with lots of layers to it. Regarding the charity - I would very much like to see a charity doing the work that you describe, but I think that its income should be based on voluntary contributions. For example, my personal membership cost under this scheme would drop from £40 to £12.50. I would happily donate the difference to a fencing charity, and tick the gift aid box. If I ever get round to making a will, I might even be tempted to leave a few quid to a fencing charity, but I don't think I would be tempted to make a voluntary donation to BF or even EF.
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www.englandfencing.org.uk |
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#35 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Lytham St Annes, Lancs
Posts: 4,493
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What you are all forgetting is that change is, by definition, bad.
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Advocate extraordinaire to Beelzebub. |
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#36 | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 348
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Are you suggesting that people who want insurance to fence at a club but not do competitions should pay the full £40? That's ridiculous. Start with the prices we have now, ~£10 social membership, ~£40 competition membership (or introduce another class, say ~£25 for regional comps as suggested). Why is this a problem? |
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#37 | |
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Moderator
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Baldric,
It is overly complex. All you are doing is instituting another bureaucracy. Especially things like the tiers for coaches. Who exactly is going to police that? Are you now suggesting that people submit receipts? If not what's to stop them just going for the lower rate. I just don't see the point. And what about this concept of tiering returns from competitions? Who is going to audit that? What's a level 1? What's a level 2? Who decides? Quote:
And I read the rest of your annotation with a lot of eye rolling. I know there's no real reason not to have online lookup but it seems many organisers have limited access to the net at tournaments. I am not sure you can get away from cards either. Particularly if you want barcode scanning. All of these things cost money you need to get from somwhere.
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"Evil does not wear a bonnet!" "Thanks Ants ... Thants. It is forbidden to dream again; We maim our joys or hide them; |
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#38 |
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Moderator
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I actually resent that Mavis because one thing I am not against is change.
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"Evil does not wear a bonnet!" "Thanks Ants ... Thants. It is forbidden to dream again; We maim our joys or hide them; |
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#39 | |
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+1
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London (ULU)
Posts: 701
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Having said that it is quite likely the only way we will not put some new members off is to 'tax' them by stealth. £10 would be, by the way, a full third of our yearly student rate fee if it were included. By their nature, student clubs have a large intake of fencers at the start of each academic year and a relatively low retention in percentage terms. This means that in such clubs, the NGB will get a large cheque every year, paid for by people who can't afford it, and who are relatively unlikley to continue fencing compared to those in a non-university club. |
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#40 | |||||
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Jelly Baby
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: Miles and miles from all major comps!
Posts: 4,202
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Wow Gav, you are in a negative mood today!
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See my note about SE funding above. We have a limited period of reasonably generous funding. If we don't take this chance to invest in some modernisation and expansion, I doubt we will get another chance. Ray
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