Showing posts with label Farah Damji. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farah Damji. Show all posts

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Resilience training Cardiff. Be the best YOU!

Resilience and trauma in the criminal justice system
Venue: Ocean Academy, Central  Cardiff, 24 July 13 00 – 17 00 hrs
In conjunction with Diverse Cymru, challenging discrimination in all its forms to create a more equitable future.
By invitation only, free to third sector organisations and public service employees,  providing services to people affected by the criminal justice system.“I know that I need to deal with it to heal,” says a woman we’ll call Ramona. “But sometimes I just have to take a step away from it too. I have experienced very painful flashbacks. The memories get so vivid; I literally, physically feel the pain again.”
Many people working in third sector organisations think of trauma as something that will affect others. Prisoners, survivors of domestic violence, asylum seekers and  recovering addicts all display signs of post traumatic stress disorder. The increase in direct exposure to violence or through the coverage of 24/7 events across the world by the media and the impact of hearing the experiences of  traumatised people are resulting in creating traumatised communities.  This is  already having significant social, economic and infrastructural impacts. The predicament of the  War Child  refugee and the direct correlation in the increase in violent gang crime is but one example.
This simple 4 hours training will introduce you to the concept of secondary trauma or compassion fatigue and provide you with a tool kit to overcome mixed emotions. We explore incorporating resilience into your core day. It is led by Flo Krause and Farah Damji.
Flo Krause a leading human rights barrister is on the frontline of changes in the criminal justice system. She represented prisoner John Hirst ,  Hirst v UK in which the actions of the UK government in denying the vote to serving prisoners were deemed to be illegal. Flo deals with parole boards and is in prisons almost on a daily basis and practices transactional analysis.

Farah Damji is a former offender whose life was shattered as a result of early life trauma and whose self destructiveness, mental illness, depression and substance dependency precluded living an authentic life. This came to a halt in 2005 when she was sent to prison. She set up a company in 2010, Kazuri which works with former offenders and other traumatised women to house them and provide safe pathways to employment and resilience training.

The topic of resilience, it seems, provides a solid platform for identification and for the education of the public on what constitutes good psychological health. As a result, individuals can put together their own strategies for building resilience, depending upon their individual strengths, styles and cultural differences. Resilience can even apply to organisations faced with significant pressures and challenges. After all, turning adversity into opportunity--a potential by product of resilience--is critical for organizations to thrive. Without question, building resilience is currently an important strategy as we deal with significant budget pressures and staffing shortages . But if we can draw on our strengths and build our resilience, we will most certainly "bounce back" from present difficulties.
 For more information please contact Kazuri on 020 7 377 5791. Places are limited and if you would like to attend please email info@kazuri.org.uk
Third sector and public sector: FREE, private  sector organisations £110


"Be like water."

Thursday, 8 November 2012

Unlock's the Record presents The Women's Issue 'Sex and the System'


The Record is a fantastic free magazine produced by the award-winning charity UNLOCK, the National Association of Reformed Offenders. It is written by reformed offenders, for reformed offenders. This month sees the first ever 'women's only' edition of the Record guest edited by Farah Damji, former prisoner, ex journalist, reformed socialite now running a social lettings agency and campaigning for change in the way women in the criminal justice system are treated.  This issue is also endorsed by best selling author Martina Cole and features an exclusive interview with Martina. This month’s magazine cover is by Sarah Lucas.

Out at the end of the week, this month’s issue will see fabulous femme ex-offenders share their untold stories. These positive success stories from reformed offenders hope to inspire law-abiding people facing discrimination and inequality as a result of having a criminal record. This issue will also contain the latest opportunities for reformed offenders, including job vacancies, volunteer position, consultation opportunities, upcoming event and other information, advice and recent news that relates to reformed offenders.

The first ever ‘women’s only’ edition of the monthly magazine by UNLOCK, The National Association of Reformed Offenders, is so important as this issue will highlight the way systemic abuse and entrenched violence in our public institutions and our personal lives impacts against women. Documenting violence in all its forms: domestic abuse, financial exclusion, the media’s portrayal of female defendants, punitive sentencing, exclusion by enforced separation of the children of female offenders and their families by women being incarcerated hundreds of miles from their communities and roots. 

Containing first hand accounts of women prisoners’ stories, through their voice, art and case studies, this issue will examine what needs to change!

Thursday, 5 April 2012

Open Letter to Grant Shapps, Housing Minister


Ms Farah Damji
Kazuri Properties Ltd
1a Waterlow Road | London | N19 5NJ

The Right Honorable Grant Shapps, MP
Minister for Housing
DGLC
26 March 2012                                                                   URGENT via e mail and Fax


Dear Mr Shapps
I write in dismay about the additional funding being given to charities such as Crisis and Shelter next month,  to “help end homelessness” in the private rented sector.  This is referred hereto on the Crisis PRS website

The Crisis PRS Access Development Programme funds new community based services that help single homeless people find and sustain good quality accommodation in the private rented sector (PRS). It builds on Crisis’ history and expertise in PRS solutions to homelessness and represents an investment of over £10m of DCLG funding over a three year period.

There is no  independent monitoring or evaluation of outcomes or sustainability in what Crisis  and Shelter are doing.     I know of cases in which dozens of tenancies have not been maintained because support was not there for tenants being placed through the scheme, and in others when quite manageable performance targets were reduced by 75% because charities who had been given this funding could not access  private landlords, whom they have to engage in order to get people into properties.  Once a person has been offered a property through the private rented sector they are removed from the Local Authority’s Housing List and are no longer able to access it, therefore  if they cannot maintain the tenancy, they are homeless again  without recourse to the Local Authority or indeed the charity funded by these hare-brained schemes. One I know , Vision Housing   claims to house ex offenders and has been granted  fifty thousand pounds. The owner then insists the tenant also gets a crisis loan from the DWP to pay a “referral fee,” thereby poverty pimping off the most needy and destitute. I am an ex offender, I have gone through the ridiculous process of trying to access suitable housing  and that this is not acceptable, you cannot seek to profit through other people’s desperation, it’s worse than loan sharking or doorstep payday loans which at least are  in the process of being regulated.

I attach a schedule of Kazuri’s outcomes  up to November 2011 so you can see the model works. Not one woman has been sent back to prison, bee convicted of a new offence  or gone back to a violent relationship and we are now expanding the provision to assist Local Authorities move men and women  off the Housing Lists and also out of prison and from Accident and Emergency wards into sustained housing. 

 This has been good for Kazuri, when charities who have been funded through the Crisis grants  have not been able to access landlords  even through letting agencies, they have approached us and paid referral fees because ours is not a leaky charity bucket model which breeds disempowerment ,  we are a social enterprise, with a triple bottom line, human, social and financial return on investment.  Our tenancy agreements actually state the tenant must partake in employment, education and/ or  training, do a minimum of 5 hours of volunteer work  in a recognized project for the benefit of the community to help restore the broken social bond and work with a mentor. We undertake monthly tenancy checks and support our tenants  to become self sufficient, contributing members of society. This is not the model to which charities who have been rinsing Supporting People budgets for years work. They are being paid through Supporting People budgets to keep people on benefits  disempowered and  dependent on Local Housing Allowance. Rather like characters from a Dickens novel, they are paid to retain  a substrata of society  to  stay within the culture of entitlement which is no longer affordable to our society . Sadly in this case, truth is stranger than fiction.

Crisis and Shelter fund charities who cannot compete in the highly competitive private rented sector and whilst there are undoubtedly pockets of good practice, they are not given any outcomes which they have to attain, by Central Government. This is free money, literally for nothing except to manage their own top heavy bureaucratic structures. This  is far removed from this Government’s move away from  non-performance and moving towards rewarding success rather than stagnation  through  the payments by results models. I am greatly concerned at the lengths to which Crisis and Shelter attempt  to demonize and indeed criminalize all landlords with their recent Rogue Landlords campaign and by the flyer attached herewith , which I picked up in my local Sainsbury’s  supermarket. 

The sector has long called for regulation and good landlords, which are the vast majority do not condone or participate in the illegal activities of a few rogue landlords who are common criminals, benefitting from the poorest and most vulnerable in society . Indeed one of the most respected landlord’s organizations has just started a petition asking the Government to bring in mandatory licensing of lettings agencies. This should  be supported and applauded. I ask where the funding is coming from for the film that Shelter has commissioned  and whether this has been sanctioned by Government. Surely it is in everyone’s interest to work with the landlords who are the gateway to the private rented sector, not disgust and alienate them completely.  Why then would they  encourage name-calling and  hostility towards those people who must engage in the process of providing shelter.  When private landlords see  campaigns based on bullying, they cease to offer their properties up to the private rented sector. Let’s face it, who hasn’t been burnt by private rented sector “incentives” run by Local Authorities? Tower Hamlets and Brighton councils are now planning to run their own social lettings agencies.  With the amount of bad feeling and arrears  they generate and the rush to remove risk and responsibility to the private  sector, these schemes are doomed to fail and I will be there lighting the funeral pyre when they implode and Heads of Housing are asked why they didn’t act in cooperation with landlords  rather than trying to change the sector to fit public sector preconceptions, backwards momentum and rigidity. 

 The voluntary sector cannot take on the risk or the responsibility as pointed out by Bernard Jenkin,    Chair of the Public Administration Select Committee (PASC)   recently when discussing the failure of the Government’s much touted Work Program. There  is no transparency in the process around which funds are decanted to  Crisis or to Shelter and no transparency either in the way these funds are given the charities who benefit or to the tenants they are supposedly placing in tenancies. 

Until the complete and audited evaluation of the current funding schemes in place and a report  is published concerning  what has actually been achieved in the way of sustained (longer than 6 months) tenancies and other outcomes, such as lessened benefits and journey travelled towards employment or education, I must ask that this next round of funding is suspended. There is no case to be made for simply passing money on to charities who do NOT help homeless people and who have never built a building or been a landlord.  Based on the Housing First model which Kazuri has successfully deployed, there is no point offering jewelry making classes, as do Crisis in their lovely building (located in a prime location and expensively staffed),  for people to get into work as they cannot work if they have nowhere to live. The voluntary sector cannot sustain the risk of the responsibility to engage the private rented sector in this manner. Shelter and Crisis are good at academia, policy and research, let them raise and generate funding for that, not pretend to be tinkering round actually putting people into long term homes, which is the heart of the problem.

Kazuri is in the process of compiling a response along with some of the largest landlord organizations and regulatory bodies, developers, builders, town planners , property lawyers and housing specialists  as well as institutional investors and high street banks   to Sir Adrian Montague’s call for consultation asking why the private and institutional investor will not engage in the private rented sector. I would urge you to wait till the evaluations of Sir Adrian’s findings  before funding anymore “charity”  private rented sector schemes. 

I hope to hear from you as a matter of urgency. I am considering having the funding  issue brought forward to the Public Accounts Committee and will seek Judicial Review about the process as to how the funding has been allocated. I trust this will not be necessary.

Kind regards
Farah Damji
Director of Development
Kazuri  Properties Ltd