http://www.podnosh.com/
The Grassroots Channel is here to provoke and inspire anyone who thinks they just might want to change the world around them.
Brought to you by Podnosh and the Birmingham Community Empowerment Network, we share with you stories and ideas from people who've taken practical steps to build stronger neighbourhoods and happier communities. The Grassroots Channel is produced by Nick Booth of Podnosh.
Looking back at February’s Social Media Surgery and a brilliant turnout
Posted: February 2010
Well, it seems sometimes you get what you wish for. February’s Central Birmingham social media surgery had a really good turnout. Nick decided to make me ‘organiser’ for the night and, perhaps, it would have been best if it had been a quiet night.
But, largely because everyone was so nice and actually knew a lot more about what was going on than I did, it ran very smoothly. A big thanks in particular has to go to the surgeons who did a really good job to juggle the large numbers of people, who often had very different interests.
We had folk in looking for help with everything from Twitter to Google Analytics on the evening – and from lots of different organisations.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
5 things Beth Kanter has taught me…..
Posted: January 2010
Beth Kanter is
the social media expert for non profit organisations. Last year I made
this promise to pay more attention to her prolific blog output.
Today is her 53rd birthday, and in keeping with a small tradition built up over the last 3 years, she is again using her birthday as an excuse to show how social media and trusted networks can combine to help charities. She is
raising funds for her favourite charity, the
Sharing Foundation.
I first met Beth almost exactly 3 years ago when she visited Birmingham from her home in Boston, New England. She was working with
David Wilcox to deliver
a presentation at
a conference for people who provide IT support for charities and the like. It was a time when social media had not become the generic term it is now. I was mostly thought of as a podcaster, one of the one’s who’s job it was to help with telling the story. So naturally enough I
interviewed her for the
Grassroots Channel podcast.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
A lifetime devoted to the community
Posted: November 2009
John Barron is 90 years old and has spent a lifetime working for his community. He has volunteered at St Mary’s Hospice in Sellypark since it opened, and also introduced the Annual Flag Day – a street collection day for the hospice – which he has been running for over 25 years and raised nearly £300,000. He said when you see a need in the community you want to fill it – and once you have a acceptance it is a good idea – you have the determination to see it through.
In 1950 John started taking patients to Lourdes in France, arranged through Birmingham Diocese. He remembers transporting them in old coaches which were previously used for soldiers. He said his motivation is always the patients. He is cherished in his community and for his work, has been nominated by St Mary’s Hospice worker Joanne Proudler for the lifetime achievement award of the
Birmingham’s Local Hearts Award. Here’s his story.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
The reluctant activist
Posted: November 2009
This is the story of Michael Tye, the man who helped set up
Aston Vision Ministries Association in 1984. The organisation aims to reach people in the community, particularly asylum seekers, by helping them with language and social integration. For his relentless work engaging the community through Aston Vision, Michael was nominated by Eunice McGhie-Belgrave for the
Birmingham Local Hearts Award, in the active citizen category.
Michael said people who want to give some back to their community do so because they recognise how helping the community will in turn help themselves. He questions those who do community work for self-aggrandisement. He wants to work towards the common good – and is not so keen on being the one in the spotlight. Here he tells us his story.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
A whole lot of courage
Posted: October 2009
When Suzanne Coward’s daughter Sarah, who has learning difficulties, turned 23, she realised she could use
direct payment money to set up a cafe, Stepping Stones. Situated in Sutton Coldfield at the
United Reform church, the cafe offers a day experience for people with learning difficulties to hang out, socialise and feel enabled to do things which they wouldn’t often get the opportunity to do.
Suzanne saw a gap in the north of the city, where there were no social enterprise services for people with learning difficulties. She wants to encourage healthy living, exercise and creating things which are meaningful for people with learning difficulties. Linda Kelly, Senior Youth and Community Development Worker in Sutton Coldfield, has nominated Suzanne for the active citizen Local Hearts award for the work she has done for children with learning difficulties.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
Helping the community where we can
Posted: October 2009
This is the story of Dolores Pinkney who runs
the Dojo project in Handworth. She has been working tirelessly for her community since she moved to Birmingham with her family in the 1960s, and now she has been nominated by Kevin Duffy for Birmingham City Council’s Local Hearts Awards in the active citizen category.
She says her parents were her inspiration – they opened up their home to everyone in the area and it became a focal point of the community. Now with her brother Hector, who works at Handsworth Library, Dolores has continued her parents’ legacy with the Dojo project. It ranges from jogging sessions on Tuesdays & Sundays to securing the lease to build a community play centre on the derelict site of the Hockley flyover.
Dolores says her motivation is “encouraging everyone that we meet, enabling and empowering,” and if someone is there who needs help, she cannot turn them away. Here’s her story.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
Making Britain a better place
Posted: October 2009
Noorin Ahktar wants to change Britain. She goes out interviewing the people at the top – leaders of the council, councillors, public service providers and holds them to account in a way accessible to her community. Her aim is to make sure some communities know about the changes being made in public services – she promotes and raises awareness in ethnic communities – she now has a programme called ‘Community Time’. She has set up a
blog, and uses
radio and
tv channels to make the short programmes in English, Urdu, Punjabi, and a number of different languages.
Noorin thinks some communities are wrongly perceived as ‘hard to reach’ – she challenges this point of view with her truly innovative and brilliant work. Her inspiration is the fact if people of aware of what is going on around them, they will have the knowledge to be able to do things.
Manjit Singh nominated Noorin for the active citizen award, one of the shortlist categories for
Birmingham’s Local Hearts Awards.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
Faith and climate change
Posted: October 2009
Four years ago, after running an Islam and the Environment Week, Maud Grainger decided looking at climate change with faith communities would be a great way to take action. The group
Faith and Climate Change was set up by Maud Grainger with help from Keith Budden, who has nominated the group for Birmingham’s Local Hearts Award, in the community group category.
Birmingham has over one million of the population belonging to a faith, and this was too big a group not to help with combating climate change, said Maud. The programme has now been replicated across the UK – looking at climate change in terms of values regardless of faith. Why else would a group a young muslim men from Small Heath meet some old Quakers in Bournville? To look at how they installed solar water heater in the Friends Meeting House. Looking at climate change has brought these communities together. Here, they tell their story.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
Heavily Involved in Northfield
Posted: October 2009
Involve is Northfield’s Young Peoples Forum – it was set up in 2005 for 12-19-year-olds to meet monthly.
Involve are given money by local government, which they can then distribute to young people to help them run various activities or projects which they would not otherwise have been able to do. Through this they help young people develop a number of skills such as organisation, teamwork and communication skills. INVOLVE believe they are giving a voice to young people – to get their opinions across to people with power in Northfield and to further that they recently launched their own website:
www.involvenorthfield.com.
In the last three years the group have distributed £75,000 of community chest money and £20,000 of youth opportunity fund to individual young people and groups and projects. They recently started their own radio show and videocasting channel – getting young people to comment and debate on prominent issues such as abuse in a relationship. This podcast was recorded in October 2009, just after they had been shortlisted for Local Hearts Award. It has Nick Booth talking to Karen Cheney, Luke Bowles, Sophie Lynch, Jo – spoz – Esposito and Lauren Synott.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
Hawksley Young Volunteers
Posted: October 2009
Aimee Coakley first came across the Hawksley “young vols” as a small child. She watched them working in her neighbourhood in Kings Norton in Birmingham and wanted to be one.
Thanks to that experience she has traveled as far afield as France and India, cleaned streets, helped people keep their gardens tidy and supporting friends and neighbours. Now she has a job because of her volunteer experience. Hers is just one of dozens of stories which explain why the Hawksley Young Volunteers were shortlisted for a Local Hearts Awards in October 2009. For more, listen to the podcast below.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
Training Adults to understand Young People
Posted: October 2009
Nicole White and Rourke Holmes have been training adults. They volunteer with different organisations in the
Erdington Constituency of the City of Birmingham to help they appreciate how young people view the world.
The aim is very simple, to improve the relationship between government services and the young people who use them in Erdington.
The Forum began in 2005 when the Erdington Constituency asked a group of young people to set up a consultation in the form of a questionnaire which asked about issues which affect them and their peers. One of the questions was, “Who would you prefer to ask you questions – children, or adults” – and all the children said adults. But it became clear adults lacked knowledge and how to engage with kids in the decision making process.
So the Children’s Forum made a training package for the adults looking at the benefits and barriers of involving children. The Children’s forum then tracked the progress made following the training every six months. They also ran a second training session. Over four years ECCF have reached over 258 adults and 486 children. This podcast, with Tom Sandars, was recorded just before the Local Hearts Awards October 2009 – where the group was shortlisted for the award for Young People’s Group.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
About Brum podcast features social media surgeries
Posted: July 2009
Some of you may know that podnosh began as a podcasting business in 2005, with the
Grassroots Channel - audio stories of active citizens in Birmingham.
At the last
social media surgery Christopher Woods interviewed me for what has become the first episode in his freshly minted
About Brum podcast. You can listen below, and it’s worth it, because Christopher has a very appealing and relaxed style.

An audio podcast in MP3 format.
