240614 - 14Jun24
Last updated
Last updated
00:35:54 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Those who have said "Yes" to an EoI - do they need further prompting (eg a proposed wording), or will they just get round to it of their own accord, please?
00:38:29 iFarm / CCA: Yes @Graham Stoddart-Stones - they need a follow up and boiler plate example (i.e. like the one we had from SALC).
00:39:11 Andrew Maliphant: I can re-circulate the draft
01:01:34 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Gentlemen, am running into my next appointment, regret that I need to go......sorry
WEBVTT
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good day, Andrew.
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Andrew Maliphant: Major, you aren't.
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Andrew Maliphant: was it? The other.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Step.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Who's it? They all of zoom.
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Andrew Maliphant: Was it the old email passport you wanted, or the most recent one?
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Andrew Maliphant: The.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, whatever the current one is, yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: Right? Okay,
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Andrew Maliphant: fine. So I I'd send you the old one. But it's not where you wanted
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well.
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Andrew Maliphant: No, let me see what I've got
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Andrew Maliphant: I've authorized the payment to Michael Jones so that that's done.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Thank you so much. Great, alright, good.
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Andrew Maliphant: Wanted.
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Andrew Maliphant: I will have it on my machine somewhere.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. Escape. The rush.
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Andrew Maliphant: Essentially digit. Dig it out?
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Andrew Maliphant: When was it we set it up? Was it September or something? Was it.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, yes, last yes, last year.
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Andrew Maliphant: So it was a did you change the you change the the password as well? Then.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm not aware that I did, but that I didn't. Even
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: I did. I didn't even note it down, so I don't remember what I made it.
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Andrew Maliphant: Alright! Here we're good.
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Andrew Maliphant: Oh, yep, found it.
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Andrew Maliphant: okeydokey!
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Knew you would.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah. Do you want it in the chat, or separately?
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, the chat's fine. Thank you.
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Andrew Maliphant: And then have to.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, thank you. I needed that good.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: hey, Jared, you did that for this
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Andrew Maliphant: miles.
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Andrew Maliphant: Speaking of Gmail so and get onto what other stuff we're looking at.
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Andrew Maliphant: I have chat. I've so I paid Michael Jones. I have chased him up about the telling us how we add new topics, because we really need that was almost spec.
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Andrew Maliphant: I think the next issue is, when, how soon
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Andrew Maliphant: do do we then transfer that login onto the live site?
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Andrew Maliphant: That's partly connected to how far Chris thinks he's got with the
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Andrew Maliphant: single sign on.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Exactly.
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Andrew Maliphant: Go ahead. And the apologies for today.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: We have had one from Liz.
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Andrew Maliphant: Right.
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Andrew Maliphant: So obviously, I've been away for a week. If there's nothing hopefully, there's nothing that I've
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Andrew Maliphant: promise to do that I'll sign you fall down on me.
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Andrew Maliphant: Oh, yes, but we haven't.
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Chris Pointon: You know.
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Chris Pointon: Yep.
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Andrew Maliphant: I'm just checking the notes to make sure there wasn't anything I said. I'll do which I haven't done, which I'm
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Andrew Maliphant: I think I've escaped this time, but
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Chris Pointon: I won't do.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: Did you have a good chat with Tristram on Tuesday? Graham.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: We did we had Jules with us, and it went very well.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: And I think I think Jules got everything he needed.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. And
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: and yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: Issues, of.
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Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I agree that we'd hold a separate meeting to cover all the ground that we were going to cover, but didn't.
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Andrew Maliphant: Good oak. Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: holding you.
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Andrew Maliphant: Well, we wouldn't not have him. But there we are.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, I think one of the things wanted to check was whether it be there need to be some kind, you know the data control, wasn't it?
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Andrew Maliphant: Whether there needs to be some data, agreement or whatever at any moment they're in.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yes.
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Andrew Maliphant: Chris, I was just saying to Graham, one of the things I wanted to raise today was when
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Andrew Maliphant: we might move some of the stuff we're putting on the Dev website onto the live one and that the reason for that is that
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Andrew Maliphant: I've had a a email from Oswald Street Town Council to shorter, saying
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Andrew Maliphant: they've been to build in login, you know. What's the latest. So obviously, we've
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Andrew Maliphant: we haven't got the council login on the live live site yet, but of course don't want to press that until we know what to
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Andrew Maliphant: what the thinking is on the the single sign on.
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Chris Pointon: So
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Chris Pointon: is the dev done on the Council actions. Is that ready? Did so. I'm slightly lost. The thread of.
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Andrew Maliphant: Okay. Well, there's 2 things that they can't.
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Chris Pointon: A good.
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Andrew Maliphant: One of which is added in the collective actions that we've got so far, and he's done that very successfully, and they coded by the same topics as the individual actions. I've still got to add in the photographs to some of them to complete that process. But that's something for me to do, not him
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Andrew Maliphant: so at that, at some point that needs to go over to the live site.
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Andrew Maliphant: to say, ask him as part of the deal to let us know exactly how. We then add further actions to the live site. So you know, we need that idiots, Guy.
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Andrew Maliphant: the other thing he's done is he's put up set up on the Dev website.
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Andrew Maliphant: different logins for community groups and local councils.
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Andrew Maliphant: When we looked at it a couple of weeks back when you're in Scotland. There were some other tweaks, we decided we need to add in as well.
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Andrew Maliphant: So I suspect maybe on the
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Andrew Maliphant: early notes, actually,
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Andrew Maliphant: and like.
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Andrew Maliphant: I know, they're on some they're on.
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Andrew Maliphant: Oh, there it is. Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: on the 24th of May. We talked about it.
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Andrew Maliphant: so there's something there already, and it's about some extra bits drop down boxes, tick boxes,
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Andrew Maliphant: emails,
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Andrew Maliphant: projects and so forth. So there's some extra coding been suggested there.
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Andrew Maliphant: so as and when it goes to the life site.
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Andrew Maliphant: the suggestion is, it isn't just simply transported across that. It's upgraded again at the same time.
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Andrew Maliphant: But if you
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Andrew Maliphant: it's difficult. So you
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Andrew Maliphant: Michael, did show me how, if I log into the website. And then I said, Oh, you can't register because you're already registered. Yes, show to me how I can do it by pretending to be, you know. Just get past the Gcd bit, and then we can have a look.
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Andrew Maliphant: So we've got that. I I've just. We've just paid Michael Jones for what he's done for us already.
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Andrew Maliphant: and I've asked him if he might have some time to do the next bit. That's simply a question of what what time he's got available.
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Andrew Maliphant: I know Jules tends to come back to the same issues around single sign on. But I think we we discovered it wasn't actually that as owners, as he feared it would be.
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Andrew Maliphant: and to extend things later on that
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Andrew Maliphant: again. That was a long discussion we had last Friday, wasn't it?
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Yeah, I think the problem.
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Chris Pointon: we
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Chris Pointon: yeah, it is difficult. There.
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Chris Pointon: we will be stacking up problems for ourselves later on, and a risk that people lose what they've they've done in there.
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Chris Pointon: And I think
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Chris Pointon: and
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Chris Pointon: I'd
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Chris Pointon: I'm I'm I'm I'm sort of persuaded by Jules's position on this that
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Chris Pointon: there's plenty for us to do. And and the pilot already to do the groundwork, like we're starting to do with finding
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Chris Pointon: connecting groups and finding out what's going on in the projects
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Chris Pointon: starting, you know, I've connecting with someone who's already working with a sports club in Cambridgeshire
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Chris Pointon: about sustainability stuff. And that looks quite promising as a potential one of our 3. So it's things like that that are just
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Chris Pointon: it feels like we that there's stuff we can do that's just
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Chris Pointon: people and brains, and talking as opposed to tech, which gives me some air cover to be continuing to chip away at the thing.
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Chris Pointon: But
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Andrew Maliphant: Okay.
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Andrew Maliphant: and I'll.
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Chris Pointon: And and the
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Chris Pointon: there isn't a great deal of update on that on the single sign on this week. I'm afraid I've been out at a conference, Wednesday and Thursday, which is very interesting
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Chris Pointon: about civic technology. So technology for people and technology to do with democracy. The second day yesterday was all to do technology for climate action.
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Chris Pointon: and one of the takeaways from that.
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Chris Pointon: I'm getting a bit sorry there's a bit of a
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Chris Pointon: maybe this is a bit of a random walk from the topic of the website. So I'll put on the agenda a quick update on things I learned at the Civic tech conference. How about that?
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Andrew Maliphant: Fine.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, I was at the innovate Uk event in Cardiff yesterday, so picked up some good odd bits of goodies on that as well.
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Andrew Maliphant: that was particularly about one of the big themes of that was how
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Andrew Maliphant: in small companies that are developing great innovation products and services for climate, how do they actually connect with
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Andrew Maliphant: the local councils? Because
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Andrew Maliphant: if these are new, new, if these are new ideas, how does a local council know that that it might be of interest, and then, of course.
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Andrew Maliphant: they have to go through attending process schedules.
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iFarm / CCA: I am.
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Andrew Maliphant: So
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Andrew Maliphant: you're in a different place now. Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: so that that was useful.
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Chris Pointon: So. So what
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Chris Pointon: there is definitely a challenge in connecting the data with the councils and innovate UK. Are
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Chris Pointon: funding
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Chris Pointon: an initiative called locally determined contributions in Cambridge. I went to the week before last.
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Chris Pointon: and there is an entire data.
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Chris Pointon: Work stream as part of that in Cambridge, so that I'm
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Chris Pointon: overdue to to follow up about and get myself inserted into.
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Chris Pointon: That is
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Chris Pointon: all about trying to get data
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Chris Pointon: to communities, and from them.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, yeah, I hear you
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Andrew Maliphant: and to say, when we know once we've got community groups and
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Andrew Maliphant: local councils, real bedded into great collaboration site. Then we need to.
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Andrew Maliphant: You know, the next horizon will be businesses. But
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Andrew Maliphant: we know we know about that. So I've had quite a lot of ideas and feedback about that which don't need to involve people with at the moment. But.
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Andrew Maliphant: There we go.
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Andrew Maliphant: of course, a lot of count. Local councils don't
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Andrew Maliphant: When they say community, they tend not to think of businesses as part of the community, which of course they they are and should be.
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Andrew Maliphant: So what's the recipe today, Jim? Then you will need the feedback. Chris, from your
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Andrew Maliphant: conferences? And perhaps Jules and Graham could tell us a bit more about parish online.
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Andrew Maliphant: but Liz sent her apologies today, apparently, so she might be.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah. So you going first, st Chris.
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Chris Pointon: So yeah, I was just
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Chris Pointon: just kind of carry forward the actions from the last one.
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iFarm / CCA: Alright! Sure I haven't done anything about Trello. By the way, busy Week. Great is great big green week, and I've had 3 speaking events, and met 2 different
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iFarm / CCA: 2 different Mp. Candidates. And then on Saturday I'm sharing a stage with Adrian Ramsey and
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iFarm / CCA: breathing.
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Andrew Maliphant: Well, that's the price of fame, Julie.
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iFarm / CCA: Alright! Oh, blonde!
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, I was in Cardiff yesterday, this innovate Uk thing which is safe. They've got 50 old projects around the country, including Forestedine District Council, which I didn't know about until yesterday. You think I might have been aware of. Never mind, we're on my doorstep
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Andrew Maliphant: so they there'll be some.
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Andrew Maliphant: They're all very pleased with that way that's going. I haven't haven't sent me the notes yet, but.
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Chris Pointon: Like case
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Chris Pointon: on single sign on. I, like Jules, have not had a lot of time this week. I was out at Ticok on Wednesday and Thursday, which displaced
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Chris Pointon: absolutely
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Chris Pointon: everything else into Monday, Tuesday, and today.
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Chris Pointon: tech tech is a civic tech
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Chris Pointon: conference. So a conference of
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Chris Pointon: a lot of a lot of it's to do with democratic rights and disinformation. So a lot of the focus is on that. But they had a whole strand yesterday on climate and data which was more
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Chris Pointon: in I I went to both days because there's always interesting things talking about that I'm interested in intellectually rather than
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Chris Pointon: app in terms of direct application. But the second day was sort of the climate day to day.
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Chris Pointon: So that's by way of my justification for single sign on having moved him in since our last conversation, but.
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iFarm / CCA: Let's hope it's.
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Chris Pointon: Continues to be the 1st thing
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Chris Pointon: on my great collaboration list. As soon as I have great collaboration time.
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Chris Pointon: The other small update is that there's some progress in Cambridgeshire.
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Chris Pointon: I've got a meeting next week specifically to talk about proposed
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Chris Pointon: community initiatives being funded by the combined authority that wrapped up in. That is
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Chris Pointon: the great collaborations. Train the trainer stuff by our cable and English carbon footprint
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Chris Pointon: and also direct funding for the great collaboration as a network of support in the county.
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Chris Pointon: So I'll keep you posted on indications that they're not going to allocate budgets until the end of July, though.
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Chris Pointon: Because
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Chris Pointon: of the General Election. So they were due to meet next week and allocate budgets which we were trying to get under the line, for they've pushed that out to July end of July. Now.
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iFarm / CCA: So.
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Andrew Maliphant: Oh no!
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iFarm / CCA: So just in relation to obviously following our banter session with Adam Virtue or Essex.
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iFarm / CCA: Conversations have continued between myself and Stuart to do something in great done by
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iFarm / CCA: for with community contact. And then we are. We're writing a proposal. Yeah, I think you send the correspondence under our proposed that the 10,000 pounds goes through place based initiative to pay community action to deliver
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iFarm / CCA: the workshops.
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iFarm / CCA: So that will have some cash flow and status benefit charity status benefits, I think, for Bbi.
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iFarm / CCA: Equally, I'm gonna approach the or similar offices in in roles in Norfolk and Suffolk
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iFarm / CCA: for a similar amount of money and say, Well, can you give us 10,000 pounds and we'll deliver some community climate action planning for a group as a test.
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iFarm / CCA: And I'm wondering, Chris, if you have a similar connection in Cambridge
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iFarm / CCA: that we could ask as community kind of action. We'll go through Pbi, but it would. It would. I mean, there's this most is. There's direct costs, you know. It's not for development. This kind of thing.
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Chris Pointon: Process, delivery rather than development.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, it's delivery of. So, for instance, the conversation with Essex was
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iFarm / CCA: with Adam Birch Weaver, who's low carbon Homes officer.
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iFarm / CCA: I met with him in Colchester with Colchester community energy and their car, their climate emergency sends the guys and said, Love what you're doing. I've got 10 grand. Let's find somewhere in Essex to do it.
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iFarm / CCA: and
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iFarm / CCA: on the banter session
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iFarm / CCA: Stuart put his hand up and said, well, I'm in Great Dumbo, and which is in uttals for district, and that was the district that Adam mentioned.
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iFarm / CCA: And I said, I said, on the call I said, brilliant, should we do this then? And then in the follow up call emails are, yes, yes, let's yes, let's do it. And what Adam wants is either 2 or 3 workshops for that sort of money for specific areas, right? Community collaboration plan. I'm going to be asking Emma Dixon, who's climate change, partnerships manager herself with County Council.
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iFarm / CCA: and also Greg Pearson. He feels the same role that Norfolk County Council.
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iFarm / CCA: and I just wondered if there was a similar officer
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iFarm / CCA: or contacting Cambridge and Peterborough combined authority. We could do a similar ask.
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Andrew Maliphant: It it it it also kills me. If we've got a a
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Andrew Maliphant: standard thought about what these you know, subject to transport, or whatever, what a community or action work would cost, depending on
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Andrew Maliphant: how many people, depending on how many people facilitate, depending on
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Andrew Maliphant: you know how much preparation, so forth that that will perhaps help.
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Andrew Maliphant: not help.
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Andrew Maliphant: You know, turf out some more money, so people can see exactly how how it's being worked up.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, very much, particularly if somebody else has already said Yes, and is doing it.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, yeah.
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Chris Pointon: So just to answer Jules's question, so we don't leave it hanging.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Almost certainly, yes, but the way that
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Chris Pointon: it's been packaged for the combined authority in in Cambridge is slightly different
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Chris Pointon: to
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Chris Pointon: that. They're not at the moment geared up to give out
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Chris Pointon: grants at that level.
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iFarm / CCA: They're not grants, they're not grants
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iFarm / CCA: is procuring a service.
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iFarm / CCA: So yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Exactly.
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Chris Pointon: I think the point is that we need to.
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Chris Pointon: They are trying to find
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Chris Pointon: program partners that can run
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Chris Pointon: the sort of program that would hand out that money
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Chris Pointon: times 50.
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iFarm / CCA: Show.
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Chris Pointon: Few years. And
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Chris Pointon: so
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Chris Pointon: we're approaching it more in that way. And we would talk about doing pilots using Cca. Delivering it. That would be part of the train. The trainer program
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Chris Pointon: for a longer term intervention in Cambridgeshire that would continue.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, that's that's the current conversation. And that's a strategic conversation. And I would suggest one that should continue.
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iFarm / CCA: I I think concurrently, we might just ask, and it might even be a District council like East Cambridge.
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Chris Pointon: Right.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, or or the county or the combined authority. They will have someone in that role. They will have a budget right now.
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Chris Pointon: Oh, totally yeah, I I'm not certain they'll have a budget, but it's worth shaking the tree to see if they do.
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Chris Pointon: Certainly the the 2 to 2 South Cams offices throughout. Follow up with you, Andrew Ola, and
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Chris Pointon: I'm not sure what they've got Budget wise, but that might be a thing they'd be interested in. Say they've invested in the net 0. Now, training, which is what Cambridge carbon footprint has been doing, which is, as you know, is a different.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: A different component of the same
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Chris Pointon: wheel, if you like.
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Chris Pointon: so I'm not sure whether they then consider that's their job done for that kind of stuff.
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iFarm / CCA: Don't!
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Chris Pointon: No deal.
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Chris Pointon: Don't have any.
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iFarm / CCA: Let's have an ask, you know.
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Chris Pointon: Yeah. And and Peter is. Peter Bates is is super networked on the East cam site. So it might be.
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iFarm / CCA: Ok.
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Chris Pointon: That would be a good thing to set his
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Chris Pointon: right. Take a go.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, I mean, I'm obviously corresponding with Peter. He wants me to come and do a couple of talks.
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Chris Pointon: Right.
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iFarm / CCA: Up near Ely. I think. So I'll just. I'll also ask Peter as well say, Okay, great. This is this is what we're doing in other areas. And I in an ideal world we've we've pretty much already got. Yes, from Essex.
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iFarm / CCA: It's likely, I think, that would get yes from Suffolk and from Norfolk. So then, if we go to Cambridgeshire and or Peter Cambridge and Peterborough, and say, Hang on well, actually, 3 the 3 other counties in. This pilot said, yes, we are doing these things with. This is the price. This is what we're delivering. And do you have a similar budget? We've got a place in East Cambridgeshire. We've got community group that wants it.
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iFarm / CCA: You know, it's it's just having. It's just just on that basis having an ask, and it can be concurrent with other other conversations, so.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah. And and if you could do a a a bit of a a puff whatever you wanna call it. Menu of of one pager about what you know. CC.
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iFarm / CCA: I told you.
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Andrew Maliphant: Then.
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iFarm / CCA: So I've already sent through the proposal for pizzas field Town Council, which was again, around 10,000 pounds.
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Andrew Maliphant: Okay.
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iFarm / CCA: I will. I'm currently finishing off one for Worthing.
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iFarm / CCA: That's funded that's funded by the local resilience Forum.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yep.
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iFarm / CCA: And that's funded by Sussex police, which is really interesting as well. So another avenue is to ask such. My next step is to ask Suffolk resilience, forum, Norfolk, resilience forum.
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Andrew Maliphant: But.
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iFarm / CCA: The other resilience for funding so that's so, that's what I'm currently doing. Then I'll then I'll be writing the one for Adam.
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iFarm / CCA: and that's the boilerplate, basically that. Yes, we'll share. I've also discussing with Bonnie how we chat, how? She's working on our Cca website with a charging structure and this kind of thing, and that we publish shortly. So again, when people go well, what Cca, that will be a website that we prices all of those kind of things. Say.
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Andrew Maliphant: Special.
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iFarm / CCA: Yep.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, yeah, as it's, what does it say? What? It's sort of
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Andrew Maliphant: plan for success. We get somebody say, yes, and then say, right here it is, you know.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, the the.
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Andrew Maliphant: Lovely, who is.
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iFarm / CCA: So also had a constructive meeting with brought up Bromsgrove Community Climate Action group there up in the West Country.
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iFarm / CCA: We were near Birmingham, anyway.
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iFarm / CCA: and equally also, retrofit Balsall Heath, who are in Birmingham, and I I expect to get an expression of interest for our fund for national lottery bid from both of those groups, as well.
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iFarm / CCA: Good.
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Andrew Maliphant: Thank you. Yeah. I've had office support from also Street Town Council as well on that.
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iFarm / CCA: Oh, there's a Cbc in those history, though I'm
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iFarm / CCA: there's a there's a climate emergency center in Oswestry.
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Andrew Maliphant: Okay. Alright!
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iFarm / CCA: To you.
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Andrew Maliphant: I had a long chat with Linda from the Climate Research Centre people. So this is
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah. She mentioned.
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Andrew Maliphant: Good to get engaged. Yeah, so.
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iFarm / CCA: Great, so.
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Andrew Maliphant: My my current plan is to spend time next week doing the 1st draft for the lottery bid, and we'll have a chew at it.
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iFarm / CCA: Brilliant. 2 things on that for the 19, th for our next pilot meeting. I know. I know we tend to go off topic. This is not really a death meeting. This is more of a general catch up. But Tess Draper has confirmed that she'll come along and and volunteer to head up the schools or join the Schools group.
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iFarm / CCA: So she's confirmed. And also, next next Wednesday I've got meeting with an Academy Trust following my presentation on Wednesday at the the West Africa college green skills they've gone. It was. It was predominantly about the great collaboration. You know. My presentation is a beautiful huge, wide screen, massive light. Ted talk
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iFarm / CCA: and immediately got the headmistress and the trustee of an Academy trust. Say, we want to be your partners and exemplar in Suffolk for schools. So I meet. So I'm physically going to their high school on Wednesday. And we're also gonna discuss the primary schools and other other schools in their trust in Suffolk. So we've got some schools signed up already, which is great. And then I also had a meeting with a chat called Mark's
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iFarm / CCA: and Mark runs the people's pub partnership and is very involved in community pubs.
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iFarm / CCA: Has been for decades, you know. He's the granddaddy of community pubs and co-ops, and this kind of thing. He's the one that gave me advice on how to do how to do our pub. Yet I didn't know what acv was before I talked to Mark.
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iFarm / CCA: and I've asked Mark to come and join that meeting a a explain the great collaboration and asked him to co-lead with me or lead the pubs section.
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Andrew Maliphant: Right, yeah.
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iFarm / CCA: And he's agreed, and he's agreed to do that. So we're broadening our capacity. We've got more volunteers. We'll have specifically.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah.
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iFarm / CCA: The waves.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, cause. That's that's right, the more the better. And then, of course, as I say, we we've all got sort of national things to be doing as well. So that's that's sounds good. Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Just well, just around that one out. I'm talking to
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Chris Pointon: Anne Mcmillan, the librarian person from Cambridgeshire, about heading up library stuff. She's very interested in that. We've got a chat with her on Monday.
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iFarm / CCA: Fantastic.
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Chris Pointon: I would imagine she'll be in on Wednesday, unless unless
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Chris Pointon: either I cock up flogging it to her, or she's got a crash. But I'm pretty sure she'll pick up the library thing.
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iFarm / CCA: Okay, that'd be fantastic. Suffolk libraries hired an Eco warrior in residence.
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Andrew Maliphant: Oh, really.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, I applied to the job. I applied to the job and didn't get didn't even get an interview but they but that they would be a good port to call when you when we have a library, for instance, because I know they're interested in it. So
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iFarm / CCA: yeah, yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah. Well, if we've got more hands on deck, come Wednesday, then there'll be. You've been getting some nice actions for each each group to get get
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Andrew Maliphant: greatly
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Andrew Maliphant: pretty good.
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Chris Pointon: Right.
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Andrew Maliphant: I just had this image, Jules, of you going on a lecture to across North America. I don't know how that image came. We soft talk about the big screen, I thought, oh, there we go.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, we should. We should definitely all organize a Tedx.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yes, it. Why not? Why not? Indeed?
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Andrew Maliphant: I'm a guide
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Andrew Maliphant: back to the check. Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Actually, I was going sorted back to the tape. But I'm interested. What the initial
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Chris Pointon: what we've got back on the survey
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Chris Pointon: so far
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Chris Pointon: I saw, saw that little conversation from the council officers, who, I think, rightly felt that the questions didn't feel like
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Chris Pointon: questions to council officers so much as
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Chris Pointon: you know, sort of people in parishes and communities, or whatever
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Chris Pointon: and I wonder whether that means
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Chris Pointon: the
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Chris Pointon: survey
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Chris Pointon: But whether the survey was
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Chris Pointon: correct for the people who got it.
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Chris Pointon: and whether the
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Chris Pointon: dude
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Chris Pointon: and what we've got back from the people we sent it to have. We got some responses that have built it. I must admit I've skated along just watching. The survey seems to have been
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Chris Pointon: sort of
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Chris Pointon: happily and properly worked up between you and Jules, which is cool. I'm just interested in how it's landing now with this out there. Having seen that little snippet of a conversation with the council officers.
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iFarm / CCA: So let me let me just bring up the results. We've had a handful of responses.
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iFarm / CCA: Not a huge amount.
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iFarm / CCA: But that's not surprising. When it's when we're doing essentially direct marketing, you can re, you can expect
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iFarm / CCA: 2% of people to respond. You know.
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iFarm / CCA: if you get 4%. You're doing well, kind of thing.
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iFarm / CCA: Some of it might require more personal follow ups.
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iFarm / CCA: So we got a reply, for instance, from Denise Ludlow
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iFarm / CCA: at sport, England, who replied to Andrew, who said, Thanks, thanks for the update. Keep me informed.
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iFarm / CCA: but she hasn't completed the survey.
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iFarm / CCA: Yay.
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iFarm / CCA: so! And the key questions in the survey for Denise are, would you write as an ex expression of interest?
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iFarm / CCA: And what can we Co brand and use your logo. I mean, those are 2 things that we really want to just nail with.
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iFarm / CCA: Denise, so that might require me just writing to Denise and saying, oh, Hi! Here's a survey, you know. And or there are these 2 particular questions we'd like we'd love love you, to confirm
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iFarm / CCA: in terms of the actual responses. Let me just bring it up.
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iFarm / CCA: so we haven't had as many as I would have hoped.
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Andrew Maliphant: They all got individual emails, so it shouldn't have gone to spam.
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iFarm / CCA: Oh, absolutely. But I mean, it's just like it's like most things. People are busy. There's a lot we've provided a lot of information, particularly to people that didn't come like. Here's the slides. Here's an hour to watch the, you know. Read all of this stuff, and then can you please fill out a survey. That's a lot. So people people like Greg Pearson, who's climate change partnerships manager for Norfolk.
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iFarm / CCA: I've just sort of pinged him on linkedin he's he's had his one year anniversary. So I've started a conversation, I guess, and congratulations. We've started a conversation again, but these things will be a bit slower.
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iFarm / CCA: So let me just have a look at results.
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iFarm / CCA: so
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iFarm / CCA: we've had 48 views. 29 people have started the survey, but only 10 people have completed it, and actually, probably 3 of them are me.
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Andrew Maliphant: But one of them's me.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, absolutely. So we've got 10 responses. One of them just says in a, it just is a a a is that you, Andrew?
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Andrew Maliphant: No, no, no.
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Andrew Maliphant: no one.
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iFarm / CCA: So I've no idea who that is. But then at the end they said,
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Andrew Maliphant: Wanted to do it anomalously, did they? Hmm.
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iFarm / CCA: Well, yeah, everything's anonymous. And then they've said, would you be happy to provide an expression of interest in support of funding applications for the great collaboration that said, Yes.
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Andrew Maliphant: Alright!
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iFarm / CCA: No idea who that was. So they've just got.
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Chris Pointon: Of course.
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iFarm / CCA: No information on it.
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Andrew Maliphant: Who have already done it. Of course.
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, obviously, Tristram from parish and line has completed it.
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iFarm / CCA: Let me just close this. Tess Rogers from Brampton Parish Council.
377
00:31:35.970 --> 00:31:37.123
iFarm / CCA: I think
378
00:31:38.130 --> 00:31:41.810
iFarm / CCA: So, Brampton have said yes to to an Eoi.
379
00:31:41.890 --> 00:31:46.539
iFarm / CCA: So these are. These are bits of information that I need to feed back to you, Andrew, to follow up on to say, Well, here's the.
380
00:31:46.540 --> 00:31:48.199
Andrew Maliphant: Okay? Bye. Bye, okay.
381
00:31:51.320 --> 00:31:53.737
iFarm / CCA: They've said no to official partnership.
382
00:31:54.680 --> 00:32:02.876
iFarm / CCA: they have so suggested a drop, a permanent drop in center, or for Ccs that kind of thing. So it's kind of handy. So that was
383
00:32:04.370 --> 00:32:13.670
iFarm / CCA: Brampton. So we've got Brampton Parish Council. We've had community energy cold chest to reply. We've had Tim, who's President of
384
00:32:14.830 --> 00:32:19.799
iFarm / CCA: Norfolk Association of Local Councils, but he's filled out on it as a on a personal basis.
385
00:32:20.396 --> 00:32:22.823
iFarm / CCA: We had Charles Fuks from Adas reply.
386
00:32:23.952 --> 00:32:26.729
iFarm / CCA: That's the Agricultural Development advisory service.
387
00:32:27.116 --> 00:32:30.140
iFarm / CCA: But again, no, to no to co branding and
388
00:32:31.710 --> 00:32:34.310
iFarm / CCA: and no to an Eoi, which is a bit of a shame.
389
00:32:34.330 --> 00:32:38.390
iFarm / CCA: I might again have a private conversation and try and convince him otherwise.
390
00:32:39.450 --> 00:32:43.380
iFarm / CCA: Emma, yeah, Emma, Emma Daniel, Senator East Cams
391
00:32:43.700 --> 00:32:45.919
iFarm / CCA: district councillors, filled it out?
392
00:32:46.513 --> 00:32:50.956
iFarm / CCA: So that's that's a win. Yeah, that's good. And basically said,
393
00:32:52.380 --> 00:32:58.460
iFarm / CCA: would you be, you say, should yes to an AI. So that's brilliant. That's an AI from a district council.
394
00:32:59.420 --> 00:33:02.290
iFarm / CCA: And she said, what other local funding sources she's
395
00:33:03.457 --> 00:33:07.750
iFarm / CCA: she suggested this, the Cpca net 0 villages fund.
396
00:33:08.630 --> 00:33:09.630
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, we get some.
397
00:33:09.930 --> 00:33:15.249
iFarm / CCA: So again, Chris, that might be the 10 K. Kind of let's do a climate action plan. No.
398
00:33:15.560 --> 00:33:17.880
Chris Pointon: They've got no one to administer the fund. It's a million.
399
00:33:18.135 --> 00:33:18.390
iFarm / CCA: Right.
400
00:33:18.390 --> 00:33:27.470
Chris Pointon: They came out 3 years ago, and they've never managed to deploy it. And part of the conversation is, how do we tap into that get all 1 million of it, and then the 10,000 would come out that but this this steps.
401
00:33:27.816 --> 00:33:32.669
iFarm / CCA: So, yeah, so do you have someone in mind for to administer that fund.
402
00:33:35.120 --> 00:33:38.619
Chris Pointon: that will probably get pushed out to the districts again eventually.
403
00:33:39.183 --> 00:33:48.440
Chris Pointon: It's not at all. It's not entirely clear there will be a fund that is giving out grants in that level, and it will be administered by the districts. They'll probably get chunk of money each for that.
404
00:33:49.430 --> 00:33:51.559
Chris Pointon: But I. It is possible
405
00:33:52.170 --> 00:33:54.379
Chris Pointon: they will decide to put it out through.
406
00:33:54.700 --> 00:33:55.210
iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
407
00:33:55.210 --> 00:34:02.924
Chris Pointon: One of the other partners, Ccf. Process. I doubt they'd put it through. Ccf. But they might. There's a organization called Pect in Peter Brothers, also.
408
00:34:03.210 --> 00:34:13.839
iFarm / CCA: There will probably be. If if that's the case, if they're gonna subcontract the work to an old, an organization, they will be required to do what's called an Rfq. Request for quotes in a tender.
409
00:34:13.840 --> 00:34:14.290
Chris Pointon: Yeah.
410
00:34:14.679 --> 00:34:17.409
iFarm / CCA: In a similar fashion. Community energy South.
411
00:34:18.250 --> 00:34:26.959
iFarm / CCA: you know, they've just got 1 million pounds worth of funding from Uk power networks. They're also contracted with Essex County Council, with their contracts coming up for review.
412
00:34:27.625 --> 00:34:38.020
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, that's an Rfq. For 57,000 pounds to deliver a pathways program in S. 6, that kind of thing. So, but okay, well, back to the survey. Yes, that's an AI
413
00:34:38.650 --> 00:34:42.469
Chris Pointon: By the way, Emma Danielsen would be the person you would be asking for
414
00:34:42.840 --> 00:34:49.379
Chris Pointon: a 1 off if if she says she hasn't got budget, then that might make it harder for Peter to represent it. You can.
415
00:34:49.380 --> 00:34:50.290
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, absolutely.
416
00:34:50.290 --> 00:34:54.097
Chris Pointon: I don't. I don't see any reason, not. She's obviously engaging, which is great.
417
00:34:54.699 --> 00:34:55.029
iFarm / CCA: Release.
418
00:34:55.280 --> 00:35:03.560
iFarm / CCA: and the next. The next particular pertinent question that she answered was, would you be interested in forming a community plan action plan in your local area. Yes.
419
00:35:04.064 --> 00:35:08.540
iFarm / CCA: so she said, yes, and so, and also will give us an ei
420
00:35:09.012 --> 00:35:13.960
iFarm / CCA: she she also se, suggested Ely. Library for CC. Pop up.
421
00:35:14.240 --> 00:35:15.100
iFarm / CCA: and that's precisely.
422
00:35:15.100 --> 00:35:18.820
Chris Pointon: What I talked to Anna about. That's that is her patch on Monday.
423
00:35:18.820 --> 00:35:34.769
iFarm / CCA: So that's it. If we've got the support of the library, we've got the support, the community group. We've got the support to the District Council and the District Council said yes to any Oi, and yes, to doing a community kind of action plan in it. That that's a whole lot of pieces right there. So that's result.
424
00:35:35.190 --> 00:35:36.760
iFarm / CCA: That's really cool.
425
00:35:37.378 --> 00:35:41.799
iFarm / CCA: Then we've got Stuart. Obviously, he's already on our team. Offering.
426
00:35:41.910 --> 00:35:43.110
iFarm / CCA: And we've got
427
00:35:43.550 --> 00:35:47.880
iFarm / CCA: conversations started with Essex County Council in funding that
428
00:35:49.920 --> 00:35:55.759
iFarm / CCA: There's a Stansted Airport Community fund he's recommended as well we could. We could look at
429
00:35:56.881 --> 00:35:58.728
iFarm / CCA: yes, he wants to
430
00:35:59.370 --> 00:36:03.729
iFarm / CCA: Yes, he wants to do community climate action plan, as we know. Yes, he'll give us an expression of interest.
431
00:36:04.580 --> 00:36:06.420
iFarm / CCA: So again, that's 1 to follow up on
432
00:36:08.083 --> 00:36:11.486
iFarm / CCA: so and then that that was it, that's all we've got really
433
00:36:13.390 --> 00:36:15.240
Chris Pointon: That's a little positive vibes there.
434
00:36:15.670 --> 00:36:20.809
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, 2 of 2. 2 of them were me. I can't actually see a response from you, Andrew.
435
00:36:21.080 --> 00:36:22.130
Andrew Maliphant: Haven't did it yet. Yeah.
436
00:36:22.130 --> 00:36:33.139
iFarm / CCA: Oh, okay, that's why you'll be one of the 48 this started. But we've we've a lot. We've got a lot of people. We've got a lot of people that started it. So we've got 30 people have started it.
437
00:36:33.370 --> 00:36:37.485
iFarm / CCA: And then we've got about 6 people have actually finished it.
438
00:36:38.130 --> 00:36:48.749
iFarm / CCA: So you're right, Chris. It might be a case of we're not asking the right questions, but what I would propose is, bonnie is getting much more involved now Bonnie is a marketing strategist.
439
00:36:49.130 --> 00:36:52.529
iFarm / CCA: and I would hope that this piece of work in terms of surveying
440
00:36:52.640 --> 00:36:58.519
iFarm / CCA: is, you know, we kind of. I kind of do that with Bonnie and try and get greater engagement.
441
00:37:00.540 --> 00:37:04.199
iFarm / CCA: but we've that means we've got some very low hanging fruit here.
442
00:37:04.270 --> 00:37:11.539
iFarm / CCA: particularly with East cams for community climate action planning, particularly with Essex for community climate action planning
443
00:37:12.020 --> 00:37:17.919
iFarm / CCA: and once we've got yes, from either of those, then it's very easy to get one from Suffolk or from Norfolk.
444
00:37:18.640 --> 00:37:19.310
iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
445
00:37:20.500 --> 00:37:31.040
Andrew Maliphant: Well, I still got to get back to all our South cams. shall I do we? Do? Do you have a regular phone call with a Chris, or shall I just ring her through the switchboard?
446
00:37:34.130 --> 00:37:38.809
Chris Pointon: I would drop her a note and and set up a time for a call. That's probably the thing. Okay.
447
00:37:41.090 --> 00:37:44.441
Chris Pointon: let that way. You know that it's on her schedule and stuff.
448
00:37:45.000 --> 00:37:48.169
Andrew Maliphant: I wanted to speak to you beforehand, because in case there's any other, you know.
449
00:37:48.360 --> 00:37:48.900
Andrew Maliphant: bits and.
450
00:37:48.900 --> 00:37:51.310
Chris Pointon: No, I don't think so. As I say, I think.
451
00:37:55.520 --> 00:38:02.399
Chris Pointon: yeah, I think this comes under the same as if they'd filled it in, and we'd needed to follow up with them about it. I think if you if you
452
00:38:02.740 --> 00:38:04.900
Chris Pointon: put up and and yeah.
453
00:38:05.570 --> 00:38:09.190
Chris Pointon: yeah, do you think a call is necessary? Or is the ask simply.
454
00:38:09.190 --> 00:38:22.029
Andrew Maliphant: Well, I but she said she sent, you know. Is it is it time for the is it the right time for digital council to get involved in this number. That's quite a broad question. My instinct would be to discuss it rather than just trying. Send her an written email reply.
455
00:38:22.030 --> 00:38:22.840
Chris Pointon: That sounds great.
456
00:38:22.840 --> 00:38:24.833
Andrew Maliphant: Cause. I don't know where she's coming from, you know. So that's.
457
00:38:25.000 --> 00:38:28.859
Chris Pointon: Go for it, but you know she's good people, so I.
458
00:38:29.210 --> 00:38:31.843
Andrew Maliphant: She came to the mediates. Do, yeah.
459
00:38:32.474 --> 00:38:48.770
iFarm / CCA: Graham is just asking in the chat those have said yes to an AI. Do they need further prompting? And the simple answer to that is, yes, we need to do a follow up thanks for expression of the just, acknowledge the response on the survey. You know, brilliant, we're really pleased that you wanna do this here hit. Just fill this out
460
00:38:49.415 --> 00:39:01.039
iFarm / CCA: equally. There are others that haven't completed the survey that we still need neo I from or or for more formally, you know, and that that would just be personal conversations. I think, Chris, at this stage.
461
00:39:01.620 --> 00:39:02.330
Andrew Maliphant: I don't know.
462
00:39:03.900 --> 00:39:04.720
Andrew Maliphant: Yep.
463
00:39:06.650 --> 00:39:08.278
Andrew Maliphant: yeah, I've got. I've got the
464
00:39:08.900 --> 00:39:09.820
Andrew Maliphant: the draft
465
00:39:10.290 --> 00:39:17.269
Andrew Maliphant: ui for people to customize. Yeah, that can be shared again. Yeah. So if there are,
466
00:39:17.880 --> 00:39:22.490
Andrew Maliphant: is, is it? If there, if, Jules, if you, you're hook keeping on the replies, if
467
00:39:22.600 --> 00:39:27.820
Andrew Maliphant: if you want to parcel out? Who does the follow up? Depending on what? Said, does that make sense? Yeah, please do.
468
00:39:27.820 --> 00:39:46.760
iFarm / CCA: Absolutely. I mean majority will be just sending to you, Andrew, for some of you know. Here's an he's an Ei. Those that said yes, to commute. I mean, it was really only the it was East Camis and Stewart, I think, said yes to the Cca. Planning, and those. So those are 2 all
469
00:39:46.820 --> 00:39:48.049
iFarm / CCA: I'll follow up on
470
00:39:48.160 --> 00:39:50.064
iFarm / CCA: in terms of but
471
00:39:50.600 --> 00:39:59.290
iFarm / CCA: with East cams. For instance, if you ask for the ui and I go in and say, great! Let's move forward with some Cca stuff working with Peter and.
472
00:40:01.120 --> 00:40:04.003
Andrew Maliphant: Pencil movement. There you go.
473
00:40:05.190 --> 00:40:09.277
Andrew Maliphant: Yes. Sorry. What I refer to as the ironfest in the iron glove. Yeah.
474
00:40:10.860 --> 00:40:19.789
Andrew Maliphant: please. Like that. Okay, thanks for everybody that's great update there. Oh, I did speak with the Peter
475
00:40:19.910 --> 00:40:30.319
Andrew Maliphant: pecked at Peterborough City Trust this morning. They'd got in touch. They're gonna complete the survey as well. They have done some funding. They have done some teaching. They've done quite a lot of stuff.
476
00:40:30.824 --> 00:40:36.840
Andrew Maliphant: So that's I think that's a per solid foot on the ground in in Peterborough, which is good.
477
00:40:37.359 --> 00:40:43.860
Andrew Maliphant: So yeah, they're going to come on board. They they're going to say I met. There's the lady called Gemma Burley.
478
00:40:44.458 --> 00:40:47.879
Andrew Maliphant: who came to May the 8, th
479
00:40:47.890 --> 00:40:51.489
Andrew Maliphant: and also her boss. A chap called Tim.
480
00:40:52.116 --> 00:40:54.755
Andrew Maliphant: His name is really Stuart, I think.
481
00:40:55.630 --> 00:40:58.350
Andrew Maliphant: So that that was her her chief executive.
482
00:40:59.030 --> 00:41:01.960
Andrew Maliphant: So that's that's pretty solid. So that's good
483
00:41:02.400 --> 00:41:03.380
Andrew Maliphant: boom.
484
00:41:03.970 --> 00:41:07.919
Andrew Maliphant: and they've offered to. They have a fundraiser within their team.
485
00:41:08.300 --> 00:41:16.640
Andrew Maliphant: So they said if we if I was, we talked a bit about the Luftwaffe bit, they said, Well, if if they, if I wanted to share the draft with them they'd be happy to to comment on it. So that's fine.
486
00:41:17.970 --> 00:41:22.740
Andrew Maliphant: I mean, if any partners wants to have a look at the bid. Of course they can. You know it's a joint bid really
487
00:41:25.020 --> 00:41:27.731
Andrew Maliphant: great, and we do have time calls for
488
00:41:28.090 --> 00:41:33.461
Andrew Maliphant: So Covid sick, so I don't covered the survey. Was there something else about
489
00:41:33.850 --> 00:41:35.162
Andrew Maliphant: Anything else on
490
00:41:36.588 --> 00:41:39.100
Andrew Maliphant: parish online? Graham.
491
00:41:39.520 --> 00:41:47.070
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, we, we, Jules and I, had a talk with Tristan on Tuesday, and basically confirmed the arrangements for
492
00:41:47.610 --> 00:41:55.919
Graham Stoddart-Stones: publishing data. So we can do anything we like in our copy of X Map and produce it as a public map on our website.
493
00:41:56.230 --> 00:41:56.720
Andrew Maliphant: Bride.
494
00:41:56.910 --> 00:41:59.449
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Once we've got the
495
00:42:00.800 --> 00:42:07.932
Graham Stoddart-Stones: basically the fields of any particular item that we're happy to go with. Then we go to geosphere and say, would you publish this.
496
00:42:08.610 --> 00:42:09.110
Andrew Maliphant: On it.
497
00:42:09.110 --> 00:42:12.980
Graham Stoddart-Stones: And again. Yes, I don't think there'll be any issues there.
498
00:42:13.170 --> 00:42:13.620
Andrew Maliphant: And it.
499
00:42:14.660 --> 00:42:17.070
Andrew Maliphant: So how soon can we have a copy to play with.
500
00:42:17.680 --> 00:42:19.949
Graham Stoddart-Stones: We've got one we can. We can start as soon as you like.
501
00:42:19.950 --> 00:42:21.070
Andrew Maliphant: Oh, we've got one. Okay.
502
00:42:21.070 --> 00:42:32.719
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, so I'm very happy to give people access to it. Just have a question whether you all want to have your own individual account. So should we have just one combined login, that
503
00:42:33.410 --> 00:42:37.390
Graham Stoddart-Stones: the one advantage of having a combined login is that
504
00:42:37.430 --> 00:42:46.889
Graham Stoddart-Stones: bookmarks in parish online slash X map are very individual. So if you create bookmarks, you'd like the rest of us to see we have to log in with the account that created them.
505
00:42:46.890 --> 00:42:47.680
Andrew Maliphant: Sure.
506
00:42:47.680 --> 00:42:50.210
Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's quite a good idea to have a single account.
507
00:42:50.520 --> 00:42:52.830
Andrew Maliphant: Do we need? Do we need a single account
508
00:42:52.940 --> 00:42:58.919
Andrew Maliphant: because of the adding in the data loads, because we need to have a discussion about it, and then it goes in under one hand. Does that make sense.
509
00:43:00.570 --> 00:43:02.080
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Say that again. Sorry, Andrew.
510
00:43:02.080 --> 00:43:08.970
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, if we're gonna have new data, there is it? It makes a bit of sense. If it's just one person adding them, isn't it rather than everybody, adding in tons of stuff.
511
00:43:10.760 --> 00:43:18.610
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I I suspect people, it's gonna be very much a time based thing. The only person who really got time to learn and do it is probably myself.
512
00:43:18.950 --> 00:43:20.140
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. And you know.
513
00:43:20.140 --> 00:43:21.820
Andrew Maliphant: The Lord's love is a volunteer. Yeah.
514
00:43:22.265 --> 00:43:25.380
Graham Stoddart-Stones: I speak English. Yeah, we've all got.
515
00:43:25.380 --> 00:43:28.818
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah. And I've said that before, yeah.
516
00:43:29.310 --> 00:43:38.080
iFarm / CCA: Yes, that would be, that'd be grand. Just have a plan. Let's get some data on there. We can get transition towns and foe data in terms of groups just straight on there. That kind of thing.
517
00:43:39.370 --> 00:43:44.669
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, I was mentioning to peck this morning about the
518
00:43:44.930 --> 00:43:49.999
Andrew Maliphant: the National network for joining up public data. So they were quite interested in that as well.
519
00:43:51.400 --> 00:43:54.920
Andrew Maliphant: so. But if we've got a version that's brilliant, we can. That's great news.
520
00:43:56.360 --> 00:44:00.154
Andrew Maliphant: Okay, cookie. So that's good. And then, in terms of the.
521
00:44:00.500 --> 00:44:04.229
Chris Pointon: On the accounts, guys, can I propose we we do both
522
00:44:05.972 --> 00:44:07.910
Chris Pointon: have a shared and an individual.
523
00:44:08.730 --> 00:44:09.340
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
524
00:44:09.340 --> 00:44:10.600
Chris Pointon: Sort of play
525
00:44:11.360 --> 00:44:20.359
Chris Pointon: in the individual one, and if something looks good we can bring it in and bookmark it and stuff. So you know I feel like, otherwise we will probably end up
526
00:44:20.640 --> 00:44:24.760
Chris Pointon: and we sort of use the we use the main one for stuff that's got a little bit further along.
527
00:44:26.890 --> 00:44:29.980
Chris Pointon: because we can always just share a screenshot or whatever
528
00:44:30.410 --> 00:44:33.270
Chris Pointon: to talk about it. In the meantime, I just feel like
529
00:44:34.000 --> 00:44:42.209
Chris Pointon: I have a feeling that it will get a little bit muddy otherwise, in the shared accounts we don't be sure who who changed what and how, and that's going to get hard to work out.
530
00:44:42.710 --> 00:44:43.689
Chris Pointon: Yeah, okay.
531
00:44:44.560 --> 00:44:51.659
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, equally. If there's only one account I don't know what it's like with multiple logins at the same time, or collaborative working probably won't work.
532
00:44:52.240 --> 00:44:55.949
Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, it has no problems. That's the full multi user system.
533
00:44:56.260 --> 00:45:00.289
iFarm / CCA: Oh, right? Okay. So you can all log in with the same username and email at different locations at the same time.
534
00:45:00.290 --> 00:45:01.599
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Same time. Yes.
535
00:45:01.600 --> 00:45:03.249
iFarm / CCA: Alright. Okay, right?
536
00:45:03.340 --> 00:45:12.909
iFarm / CCA: But yeah, equally like Chris says. Might want to have our own accounts to have a muck around and get it wrong without mucking up what we've done on the main account, you know.
537
00:45:12.910 --> 00:45:13.530
Andrew Maliphant: Bro.
538
00:45:13.700 --> 00:45:15.700
Chris Pointon: What I can do is set this up
539
00:45:15.970 --> 00:45:16.930
Chris Pointon: a group
540
00:45:17.550 --> 00:45:18.859
Chris Pointon: in Google
541
00:45:19.240 --> 00:45:21.469
Chris Pointon: for a group inbox, basically.
542
00:45:21.650 --> 00:45:22.220
iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
543
00:45:22.220 --> 00:45:27.327
Chris Pointon: If anybody does need need to reset. So we I'll I'll give you an email address for that. What should we call it?
544
00:45:28.000 --> 00:45:29.030
Chris Pointon: X map
545
00:45:29.540 --> 00:45:31.870
Chris Pointon: at great collaboration.uk. How about that?
546
00:45:32.140 --> 00:45:32.750
iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
547
00:45:33.730 --> 00:45:35.000
Chris Pointon: I'll do that now.
548
00:45:35.280 --> 00:45:36.600
Chris Pointon: Stickers all in it.
549
00:45:37.630 --> 00:45:44.649
Andrew Maliphant: So Graham's gonna be the editor of the official version. But meantime we can now have a play separately. Is that what I'm paying? Yeah.
550
00:45:44.920 --> 00:45:52.649
Chris Pointon: I think we all get to potentially do stuff in the official version. So it's not lumped on Paul Graham. But we've got owned accounts that.
551
00:45:52.950 --> 00:45:55.452
iFarm / CCA: If we want. And if we have to have the yeah.
552
00:45:55.680 --> 00:45:59.959
Andrew Maliphant: I've I've I've never really used parish online. So I'm a complete novice. So.
553
00:45:59.960 --> 00:46:00.836
iFarm / CCA: Yeah.
554
00:46:02.590 --> 00:46:03.309
Andrew Maliphant: But if you.
555
00:46:03.480 --> 00:46:05.719
iFarm / CCA: With parish online.
556
00:46:05.920 --> 00:46:07.649
iFarm / CCA: We confirmed
557
00:46:07.860 --> 00:46:13.990
iFarm / CCA: that we would wait for the 3 months trial until we're ready with some kind of Sso map in pilot.
558
00:46:14.950 --> 00:46:16.330
iFarm / CCA: We confirm that
559
00:46:16.920 --> 00:46:18.360
iFarm / CCA: during that period
560
00:46:18.530 --> 00:46:46.699
iFarm / CCA: community groups would have access to parish online, either the full version or just you know what we've got in the great collaboration. Equally any layers that we upload. Yes, the, you know, have access to an ongoing basis. And of course, if accounts will then subscribes the community group also have access to parish online. We've described just putting the X map version via an iframe straight into highlight. So that's a conversation with highlight.
561
00:46:47.313 --> 00:46:54.976
iFarm / CCA: But yeah, much much as per the dev chat where I propose to splash screen. You know, we just we I frame it
562
00:46:55.820 --> 00:47:01.639
iFarm / CCA: and that's that's a really good starting point, you know, that's a really good. When we can say we're, we're actually launching a thing.
563
00:47:02.404 --> 00:47:13.759
iFarm / CCA: When we've got those those component bits in we had long conversations with Tristram about data sets, you know, ex university, which friends of the earth use versus Rna's, which is
564
00:47:15.230 --> 00:47:19.879
iFarm / CCA: Anglia Ruskin or University, I believe. In East Anglia they're slightly different.
565
00:47:20.180 --> 00:47:27.510
iFarm / CCA: equally the wind data, for instance, and we won't win Stefan's data, and I'm not sure where Stefan gets his data from.
566
00:47:27.780 --> 00:47:28.980
iFarm / CCA: They're different.
567
00:47:29.160 --> 00:47:32.540
iFarm / CCA: you know. So we we had a discussion about well, which data?
568
00:47:33.027 --> 00:47:41.250
iFarm / CCA: You know, we should be displaying with the caveat that we will understand. None of all of all of the data is imperfect.
569
00:47:42.295 --> 00:47:48.519
iFarm / CCA: And it's just a starting point for desktop feasibility study rather than any detailed stuff.
570
00:47:48.540 --> 00:47:50.559
iFarm / CCA: But we do need to decide which.
571
00:47:50.980 --> 00:48:12.899
iFarm / CCA: and obviously that we've then had a conversation with Toby from friends of the earth which is fantastic. He was on our banter session. That's a that's a coup. Well done, big up Graham. Getting Toby on this talk about data, and we've got then got concurrent conversations with friends of the Earth in the environmental data network about that. And following our banter session.
572
00:48:12.900 --> 00:48:25.799
iFarm / CCA: there was, there was, there was lots to be discussed about things like environment, you know, biodiversity mapping and citizen science and all of that kind of stuff. So that's again, that's that's really interesting.
573
00:48:26.882 --> 00:48:29.060
iFarm / CCA: And with friends of the earth
574
00:48:29.850 --> 00:48:37.159
iFarm / CCA: again, what amazing partner! I mean, we should. We need to capitalize on that conversation and and get friends of the earth to
575
00:48:38.140 --> 00:48:45.699
iFarm / CCA: give us an expression of interest for the national lottery bid, and to say, yes, we want to be a partner. You can use our logo, you know.
576
00:48:47.080 --> 00:48:49.730
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, I've got to.
577
00:48:50.860 --> 00:48:53.910
Andrew Maliphant: I just find on on. We've got our our
578
00:48:53.930 --> 00:48:58.498
Andrew Maliphant: strategic contacts on a on the Google drive at some place, haven't we?
579
00:48:59.010 --> 00:49:00.620
Andrew Maliphant: If it was under comms?
580
00:49:02.750 --> 00:49:11.060
Graham Stoddart-Stones: I've got contact with both the CEO and with Toby from yesterday or Wednesday, so I can certainly follow up with that if you like.
581
00:49:11.600 --> 00:49:16.631
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, I'm just trying to remember the name of the lady from Friends of the earth I spoke to some time ago.
582
00:49:17.690 --> 00:49:18.309
Andrew Maliphant: But yes, but.
583
00:49:18.310 --> 00:49:20.895
iFarm / CCA: Please. Yes, please, Graham, if you can follow up with Toby.
584
00:49:21.130 --> 00:49:24.040
Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think, very encouraging call, isn't it?
585
00:49:24.380 --> 00:49:34.439
iFarm / CCA: Yeah. And perhaps CC, me, that'd be handy. And I'll also carry. I'll have. I'll also carry on conversations in the Forum and Environmental data network chat with Toby.
586
00:49:35.700 --> 00:49:40.903
iFarm / CCA: But yes, we need. We need to kind of get in bed with and have close relationships with friends of the earth.
587
00:49:41.140 --> 00:49:43.089
Andrew Maliphant: Sandra Bell, who's 1 of the
588
00:49:43.520 --> 00:49:51.522
Andrew Maliphant: leading personalities? I spoke to says here it's 29th of March, not 2023. So it's been a bit.
589
00:49:52.210 --> 00:49:52.540
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
590
00:49:52.540 --> 00:49:58.715
Andrew Maliphant: No, so that's but I haven't spoken too much lately. Yeah, I've just been looking under partners. We've got all the
591
00:49:59.690 --> 00:50:04.019
Andrew Maliphant: you know, the various organizations we're trying to reach. As to who's getting in touch. And
592
00:50:04.900 --> 00:50:08.475
Andrew Maliphant: you know, Graham, you've been using it for your banter bookings, haven't you?
593
00:50:09.682 --> 00:50:18.489
Andrew Maliphant: so you know, we could easily see. But I mean Ashton. I know we don't seem to contact for their national crew on this score.
594
00:50:18.900 --> 00:50:19.760
iFarm / CCA: The zoom.
595
00:50:19.760 --> 00:50:21.660
Andrew Maliphant: There's always more we can do on these
596
00:50:21.850 --> 00:50:25.350
Andrew Maliphant: part of things in between all the other things we're doing. Of course.
597
00:50:26.410 --> 00:50:33.160
Andrew Maliphant: one of the things that occurs to me is I need to at at at the at the find. One is the psychological moment
598
00:50:33.340 --> 00:50:46.150
Andrew Maliphant: to to say to Nalk, you said you would to support us as and when we got to a certain stage, look at the pilot, look at the stuff that we're doing, can we now? Perhaps start having you up your divert support?
599
00:50:47.930 --> 00:50:48.910
Andrew Maliphant: the
600
00:50:49.110 --> 00:50:59.750
Andrew Maliphant: I I've I've got a copy of the letter that was advised of the things I should check out before they support us. I mean, one of them was funding. But I think it's also about getting
601
00:50:59.960 --> 00:51:04.699
Andrew Maliphant: choosing the moment within now. But I think that that's that's something I need to to work out on
602
00:51:05.100 --> 00:51:08.890
Andrew Maliphant: one of the things I raised. The meeting is
603
00:51:08.970 --> 00:51:16.210
Andrew Maliphant: we've got some things that we're developing on the Dev website. There's a question of timing as to when we put them on the
604
00:51:16.410 --> 00:51:21.970
Andrew Maliphant: live site. If we're not ready to put the local councils sign on yet.
605
00:51:23.680 --> 00:51:32.680
Andrew Maliphant: The what we could stop publishing the collective actions on the live site. Because that's that's up and running on the
606
00:51:33.600 --> 00:51:41.285
Andrew Maliphant: on the dev site already. That is another way of showing to all and sundry partners and funders that things are developing.
607
00:51:42.330 --> 00:51:45.380
Andrew Maliphant: Are we happy to proceed with that?
608
00:51:46.150 --> 00:51:47.109
Andrew Maliphant: But the question is.
609
00:51:47.110 --> 00:51:52.970
Chris Pointon: Who who's registering to do that? And are we now creating registrations that we're gonna have to back out later.
610
00:51:53.310 --> 00:51:59.360
Andrew Maliphant: Well, the only people that register at the moment are individuals. Through the current live registration.
611
00:52:02.370 --> 00:52:06.919
Chris Pointon: Yes, but if we put the group actions up there, our groups going to be able to register.
612
00:52:07.610 --> 00:52:12.505
Andrew Maliphant: Well, not unless we make that available which goes back to the sort of single sign on discussion, doesn't it?
613
00:52:12.750 --> 00:52:16.829
Chris Pointon: So so we can put the group actions up there, but they can't at the moment do them
614
00:52:16.860 --> 00:52:19.420
Chris Pointon: that. That's why I'm trying to work out whether the 2 are connected or not.
615
00:52:19.570 --> 00:52:26.659
Andrew Maliphant: Oh, yes, that's right. If you're if you're if you're a group, you need to have be registered, and then you, you adopt an action. That's quite right.
616
00:52:27.386 --> 00:52:29.290
Andrew Maliphant: There's nothing to stop
617
00:52:29.810 --> 00:52:34.570
Andrew Maliphant: an individual line. It's signing on as an individual. And then they say they're gonna do a group action
618
00:52:34.990 --> 00:52:37.170
Andrew Maliphant: that that would be possible.
619
00:52:37.170 --> 00:52:41.700
Chris Pointon: So. But is that what would happen at the moment without a group registration, capability.
620
00:52:41.700 --> 00:52:44.140
Andrew Maliphant: That's what would happen at the moment. Yeah, right?
621
00:52:45.302 --> 00:53:03.140
Andrew Maliphant: It's just it's no. We're we're being careful. We're plotting this with some tagging. This is all the rest of it. But it's a question of 2 things. One is, when do we do stuff for for operational purposes? And when do we do stuff for promotional purposes, showing people what we're doing and how it's developing?
622
00:53:03.890 --> 00:53:07.409
Andrew Maliphant: So it was more on the second line I was thinking about in terms of putting.
623
00:53:07.630 --> 00:53:10.360
Chris Pointon: When you say showing who which people are we showing.
624
00:53:10.760 --> 00:53:15.810
Andrew Maliphant: Well, the people I've just been talking about is now you know. How do I? How do we say to now? You said
625
00:53:16.050 --> 00:53:19.469
Andrew Maliphant: you wouldn't look at this again until the summer. Well, it's now the summer.
626
00:53:20.237 --> 00:53:24.120
Andrew Maliphant: What can we show to them to say this is operating. This is working
627
00:53:24.630 --> 00:53:27.389
Andrew Maliphant: pilots, some funding coming in. Yeah. Jills.
628
00:53:29.320 --> 00:53:35.149
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, I absolutely. We need to go back to them and show per and show the amazing progress that we've made.
629
00:53:35.630 --> 00:53:38.600
iFarm / CCA: and that we now have a suite of
630
00:53:38.650 --> 00:53:42.199
iFarm / CCA: associations of local councils formally supporting us.
631
00:53:42.640 --> 00:53:47.989
iFarm / CCA: That's it's gotta be worth something to now in terms of evident facing what we're doing.
632
00:53:48.636 --> 00:53:57.163
iFarm / CCA: Equally, I would suggest a good next step might be to. So we've got the now climate emergency network on
633
00:53:57.870 --> 00:54:01.727
iFarm / CCA: chat. I'm in there. Find it.
634
00:54:03.146 --> 00:54:07.256
iFarm / CCA: And they recently had a presentation from George Petty.
635
00:54:08.220 --> 00:54:13.120
iFarm / CCA: so I think we should ask if we could do a presentation at their next one
636
00:54:13.720 --> 00:54:22.040
iFarm / CCA: cause. That's just like banter session. Basically, it's just asking, can we present to your this the the now climate emergency network chat.
637
00:54:22.200 --> 00:54:22.890
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah.
638
00:54:23.580 --> 00:54:31.584
iFarm / CCA: Good people. You know, we can start putting posts in the chat in the Whatsapp, and we can specifically say to now, can we be the next presenter.
639
00:54:31.870 --> 00:54:44.339
Andrew Maliphant: You could do that. I'll speak. I'll speak to Chris Paul. Person. He's he's our friend on the inside there. You know. He's he's loyal to his employees, but he's very clear how corporate they can be from time to time.
640
00:54:44.627 --> 00:54:49.339
Andrew Maliphant: and he but he certainly does set the agenda for the quarterly meetings. So that's no problem.
641
00:54:49.520 --> 00:54:52.060
Andrew Maliphant: It's just that. The
642
00:54:55.520 --> 00:55:03.299
Andrew Maliphant: I mean, I'm see. Take up your point, Chris. I mean, the collective actions is a step that we have taken, and we gonna extend further, and we can have in there.
643
00:55:04.830 --> 00:55:06.410
Andrew Maliphant: I don't know how
644
00:55:06.600 --> 00:55:09.110
Andrew Maliphant: much of a pain it would be for
645
00:55:09.400 --> 00:55:14.320
Andrew Maliphant: community groups to join as individuals and start doing stuff on the live site as opposed to
646
00:55:14.450 --> 00:55:18.619
Andrew Maliphant: the more slightly more detailed login as a community group, and or as a local council.
647
00:55:21.400 --> 00:55:26.429
Andrew Maliphant: let me get up. Let me get. Let me remind myself how to get onto the current login so that we can
648
00:55:26.730 --> 00:55:27.879
Andrew Maliphant: have a shifty
649
00:55:29.486 --> 00:55:33.213
Andrew Maliphant: was there anything else? And we wanted to talk about? It's only 4 min to one now, isn't it?
650
00:55:36.050 --> 00:55:37.960
Chris Pointon: I've got a couple of
651
00:55:39.320 --> 00:55:43.150
Chris Pointon: things from tic tech that I
652
00:55:43.180 --> 00:55:44.890
Chris Pointon: very briefly share.
653
00:55:45.646 --> 00:55:46.160
Chris Pointon: They're not.
654
00:55:46.390 --> 00:55:49.689
Chris Pointon: So there was. There was a presentation yesterday
655
00:55:49.800 --> 00:55:51.080
Chris Pointon: by a group
656
00:55:51.350 --> 00:55:57.270
Chris Pointon: who did a coordinated response to the Pakistan flooding.
657
00:55:57.400 --> 00:55:59.850
Chris Pointon: where citizens reported in
658
00:55:59.950 --> 00:56:03.910
Chris Pointon: so where aid stations were open, where they had suppliers.
659
00:56:03.910 --> 00:56:04.650
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
660
00:56:05.140 --> 00:56:05.930
Graham Stoddart-Stones: Alright!
661
00:56:05.930 --> 00:56:16.110
Chris Pointon: Where people were stuck in that sort of thing, and they used a data collection platform called Usha Hidey that I hadn't heard of before, but seemed to be relatively well known amongst the people around me.
662
00:56:16.691 --> 00:56:27.359
Chris Pointon: That seems to be a really interesting citizen science data collection platform that integrates with like SMS and Whatsapp and things like that for people to report stuff.
663
00:56:27.490 --> 00:56:28.440
Chris Pointon: And
664
00:56:28.570 --> 00:56:33.479
Chris Pointon: I, it seems like that might be an interesting platform for us to take a look at, for
665
00:56:33.670 --> 00:56:36.130
Chris Pointon: you know we were talking about having a layer between
666
00:56:36.170 --> 00:56:48.219
Chris Pointon: as sorry which a layer we provide between community data collection and what goes on the map. That means that we can coordinate and and convene. So they had hundreds of volunteers working to
667
00:56:49.324 --> 00:57:00.445
Chris Pointon: aggregate this information that's coming in from the field and turn it into stuff that they can be shared with charities and aid agencies who are responding to the floods. And it was quite a success story all around from a quite
668
00:57:00.830 --> 00:57:01.729
Chris Pointon: you heard
669
00:57:03.040 --> 00:57:05.689
Chris Pointon: extreme situation in Pakistan. So
670
00:57:06.410 --> 00:57:07.510
Chris Pointon: I think a
671
00:57:07.930 --> 00:57:15.319
Chris Pointon: that's it's an open source platform. It looks pretty cool. I think we should add that into our collective thinking.
672
00:57:17.030 --> 00:57:22.319
Chris Pointon: was there anything else that was for Gc. Victor in particular?
673
00:57:32.320 --> 00:57:36.069
Chris Pointon: There's quite a lot around climate data collection and community stuff.
674
00:57:36.850 --> 00:57:37.320
Chris Pointon: With
675
00:57:39.060 --> 00:57:43.624
Chris Pointon: I met someone from the Tuc who said they'd be interested in great collaboration.
676
00:57:44.776 --> 00:57:46.204
Chris Pointon: notes that that's
677
00:57:47.770 --> 00:57:50.069
Chris Pointon: felt like, that's another
678
00:57:50.170 --> 00:57:51.450
Chris Pointon: potential
679
00:57:51.530 --> 00:57:54.030
Chris Pointon: grouping a bit like our pubs and everything else.
680
00:57:56.480 --> 00:57:57.330
Andrew Maliphant: Union, Jimmy.
681
00:57:57.330 --> 00:57:57.900
Chris Pointon: Yeah.
682
00:57:58.230 --> 00:57:58.850
iFarm / CCA: Yes.
683
00:57:59.840 --> 00:58:09.270
iFarm / CCA: I've already had opening conversations about community climax and planning with trade unions trade and the Tuc, and specifically, Tc, locally.
684
00:58:09.846 --> 00:58:14.003
iFarm / CCA: I also had the opportunity to discuss it with Mick Lynch. And
685
00:58:14.880 --> 00:58:16.000
iFarm / CCA: and
686
00:58:16.360 --> 00:58:17.120
iFarm / CCA: yeah.
687
00:58:17.430 --> 00:58:22.219
iFarm / CCA: and this is, this is a while ago. I think it was last year or the year before.
688
00:58:22.300 --> 00:58:28.510
iFarm / CCA: And so it wasn't specifically about the great collaboration. It was more about community benefits, societies and community climate action.
689
00:58:30.430 --> 00:58:38.470
iFarm / CCA: Mick's response was interesting because, he said, I have to remind you it's the rail and maritime transport museum, and I represent a lot of oil and gas workers.
690
00:58:40.520 --> 00:58:41.015
Andrew Maliphant: Off.
691
00:58:42.168 --> 00:58:48.779
iFarm / CCA: But that said, I think the Tcs and Regional Tucs in particular are would be an absolute
692
00:58:48.980 --> 00:58:50.340
iFarm / CCA: gold mine. It.
693
00:58:50.360 --> 00:58:55.180
Chris Pointon: Yeah, I I that's what I was thinking, too. There is a southeast region.
694
00:58:55.460 --> 00:59:01.399
Chris Pointon: So there is an east of England region of Tuc, that pretty much maps to our stuff. I think it might be Bedfordshire, but
695
00:59:02.710 --> 00:59:03.893
Chris Pointon: And there is a
696
00:59:04.460 --> 00:59:06.970
Chris Pointon: There's also a Tuc Central.
697
00:59:07.375 --> 00:59:07.650
iFarm / CCA: Good.
698
00:59:07.650 --> 00:59:13.751
Chris Pointon: Group. So I I think it's worth the sniff around. I'll I'll follow up on that.
699
00:59:14.110 --> 00:59:20.409
iFarm / CCA: Is definitely worth it. Is cause climate is a is is a health and safety work issue.
700
00:59:20.955 --> 00:59:26.320
iFarm / CCA: You know. It's too hot. It's too cold. It's flooded, you know. It's like, hang on
701
00:59:26.710 --> 00:59:31.749
iFarm / CCA: as a union. We need to be doing something so. And there was some that are obviously keener than others.
702
00:59:32.860 --> 00:59:33.370
iFarm / CCA: so.
703
00:59:33.670 --> 00:59:36.429
Andrew Maliphant: That's not a surprise, is it? No, we've gone across that.
704
00:59:36.620 --> 00:59:45.981
iFarm / CCA: Yeah, united. Particularly good. Gmb, obviously, not not so great. Cause I get again, they represent a lot of oil and gas workers. So.
705
00:59:46.960 --> 00:59:50.919
Andrew Maliphant: The thing about oil and gas workers and electricians and plumbers is
706
00:59:50.940 --> 00:59:57.010
Andrew Maliphant: securing their their jobs and their future prospects by upgrading their their skills training. This isn't just about.
707
00:59:57.010 --> 00:59:57.550
iFarm / CCA: Where's it?
708
00:59:57.550 --> 00:59:58.400
Andrew Maliphant: Scratch.
709
00:59:59.290 --> 00:59:59.950
iFarm / CCA: Yes, but.
710
00:59:59.950 --> 01:00:02.429
Andrew Maliphant: You'd like to think the units would be interested in that as well.
711
01:00:02.820 --> 01:00:10.601
iFarm / CCA: That was my response to Mick. I said, Yeah, I know you represent a lot of oil and gas workers. But they're gonna need to transition at some point. Let's help them, you know.
712
01:00:10.830 --> 01:00:13.240
Andrew Maliphant: Yeah, that sounds yeah, sounds good.
713
01:00:13.440 --> 01:00:24.950
Andrew Maliphant: I've just got up on screen. Thanks for the what we've got at the moment on the dev, website. You get on the the register. Thing. And is, it says local council community group itself.
714
01:00:25.020 --> 01:00:28.892
Andrew Maliphant: If it's a community group, you get things like
715
01:00:29.350 --> 01:00:47.310
Andrew Maliphant: name. Do you have a lead person? Because they're not necessarily a client group? Of course our projects for staying last name. We did look at this at the end of May. So there's suggestions that we add to this to expand it. But that's what we've got there. One of the main things was suggesting that they use the
716
01:00:47.530 --> 01:00:51.004
Andrew Maliphant: the the an email address for a login.
717
01:00:52.080 --> 01:00:59.999
Andrew Maliphant: So if you're a local council, then you get a different stage in the climate journey again, these kind of things.
718
01:01:01.782 --> 01:01:10.159
Andrew Maliphant: council website. Okay, we thought we'd do some more change to that if we're going on as an individual, which is pretty much what we've got there at the on the live site at the moment.
719
01:01:10.566 --> 01:01:12.990
Andrew Maliphant: It's just this, you know, it's just
720
01:01:14.429 --> 01:01:26.640
Andrew Maliphant: username email address, postcode lookup and password and they've got to agree to our. And I'll the bit to add in is this bit down here which there isn't live here.
721
01:01:28.180 --> 01:01:32.700
Andrew Maliphant: so that's the distinction between 3. So at the moment, if you are
722
01:01:33.168 --> 01:01:40.810
Andrew Maliphant: logging into the live site, you. You're just you're not this. All this is all that you're doing. You're not giving any extra information
723
01:01:44.270 --> 01:01:45.020
Andrew Maliphant: where? Aye.
724
01:01:46.960 --> 01:01:48.901
Andrew Maliphant: so, as I say, whether
725
01:01:49.710 --> 01:01:57.800
Andrew Maliphant: when we get to single sign on? Are we saying that's only going to be for the groups? Or is that going to be for individuals as well? I can't remember. We've discussed that one.
726
01:01:57.800 --> 01:02:00.590
Chris Pointon: We're not expecting individuals to be part of
727
01:02:01.160 --> 01:02:02.859
Chris Pointon: the great collaboration
728
01:02:03.240 --> 01:02:04.889
Chris Pointon: in the sense that.
729
01:02:05.510 --> 01:02:06.850
Andrew Maliphant: In that same sense. Yeah.
730
01:02:06.850 --> 01:02:11.040
Chris Pointon: In that same sense. Th, this is the only bit where individual actions happen.
731
01:02:11.300 --> 01:02:12.019
Chris Pointon: Go ahead.
732
01:02:12.500 --> 01:02:14.910
iFarm / CCA: Gonna have. I'm gonna have to shoot off. I think.
733
01:02:14.910 --> 01:02:15.350
Chris Pointon: Craig was.
734
01:02:15.350 --> 01:02:16.040
iFarm / CCA: We see?
735
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iFarm / CCA: Yeah, so
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iFarm / CCA: so I'll catch you. I'll catch you soon.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah. Alright. Julie.
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Chris Pointon: Like you guys.
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iFarm / CCA: Speak!
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: okay. So yeah. So I think that that's sensible, isn't it? So that the single sign on is really for groups, not for individuals.
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Andrew Maliphant: And therefore, if you're an individual
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Andrew Maliphant: getting in and
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Andrew Maliphant: wanted to do a collective action.
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Andrew Maliphant: that's not the handle there.
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Andrew Maliphant: but they'd have to re register if they wanted to share stuff with us or
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Andrew Maliphant: get on the mapping and so forth. Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: I mean. Personally, I think we should
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Chris Pointon: remove the individual actions at some relevant point, so that the membership of the great collaboration is clearly for
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Chris Pointon: people who are getting
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Chris Pointon: group stuff
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Chris Pointon: happening. I think we'll have a lot of individuals turning up on
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Chris Pointon: great collaboration chat. And what have you confused about. Why.
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Chris Pointon: there's all this other stuff.
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Andrew Maliphant: I think I think I've got you your point, and I think that there's 2 things about that. One is. Yes, we don't want 65 million people coming into these forms, whatever it is. But it is also still a way in for individuals. So
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Andrew Maliphant: if we're having that separate somehow. So that if you're an individual and you get this bit, yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: But the the joining up and interchanges are happening at group level.
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Chris Pointon: Yeah, I think the problem is thinking about the climate action people that I client leaders list. I have. Many of them would consider themselves to be individuals, even though they are trying to get community stuff happening. And so I think we've got a tough
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Chris Pointon: alright. But but
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Chris Pointon: I.
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Andrew Maliphant: Let's think some more about it, because that.
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Chris Pointon: Yeah, I don't. I don't think we're going to fix that on this call, and I would quite. I think maybe we should.
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Chris Pointon: We should reconnect with
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Chris Pointon: who was his name?
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Chris Pointon: Mark Mike, the the.
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Andrew Maliphant: Michael Jones.
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Chris Pointon: The designer in the.
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Andrew Maliphant: Like, Smith, yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Smith. We should reconnect with him about just thinking this through. I think that would be if he's got the right brain for this. I've got a
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Chris Pointon: note to also reconnect with Tara. So I haven't done that.
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Chris Pointon: But yeah, I'll I'll add it to do to the to do this for me to about that? Yeah.
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Andrew Maliphant: So. Yeah. Well, you you you hear from my voice. I'm keen that we don't just just the individual, the entirely. But I do hate. Take your point that it's
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Andrew Maliphant: it's not our current focus at the moment, and we don't want to make life more complicated in the future.
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Chris Pointon: Exactly what I say. What I don't want is lots of people
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Chris Pointon: who are not getting groups going, causing a lot of unnecessary conversation and confusion in that? Because.
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Andrew Maliphant: Yeah. And we we all know there are individuals in the world that are complete mavericks, and they just want to elbow their way in and and and grab the conversation. Yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Okay, I better shoot to my next call.
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Andrew Maliphant: Okay, my friend, yeah.
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Chris Pointon: Great good to see you soon, Andrew.
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Andrew Maliphant: See you soon. Take care!