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I could volunteer a name for pests like this
08 May 2007
by Carol Sarler

Round my way, one of the charity shops that speckle the high street is managed by someone you will recognise.

Radiant with sacrifice and self-importance, she has honed the art of sorting your rags from mine and selling them back to us – an art that is apparently enhanced by reducing to tears her slower, more timorous fellow volunteers with plaintive irritation and tangible contempt.

She would tell you, as she frequently tells them, that she doesn’t know how they’d manage without her; in fact, she is there because thanks to – what shall we call it? – her “personality”, this thug, in real life, would be completely unemployable.

It is with this gorgon in mind that I worry about the revival of interest in the voluntary sector: pats on backs from the Cameron camp, last week’s special edition of You And Yours and, now, a book – The Guardian Guide to Volunteering, which asks: “Are you keen to put something back?”

On the face of it, this is just a beneficial feast of altruism: give a little, live a little, polish that halo and the world will be a fitter place. In practice, however, there is too much to go wrong. During many years I spent as a charity trustee, one of our first lessons, harshly learnt, was to resist the entreaties of volunteers in favour of at least minimally paid workers – even though it meant we had far fewer of them.

Too much of the free labour was offered by, as with our lady above, those whom nobody else wanted. And with good reason. So you start out with the handicap of their flaws, which doubles when you discover that to lead “an army of volunteers” is to herd cats. Without the mutual discipline of financial contract, you can neither make them do nor stop them doing anything, as each pursues his or her amateur conviction of the correct way to proceed.

The slightest sense of power, usually hitherto denied them, is hungrily embraced; little people become big people, weight is thrown around, and such is their relish for the sense of office that they can be mighty hard to get rid of: how do you “sack” somebody you have never “employed”?

This is not to decry doing our bit. Rattling tins come Poppy Day, for instance, where everybody is clear about who’s what and what matters, is obviously to the good. But if you are, say, running a shop or an office, if it’s a long-term position, if it carries title or hierarchy, that is different; in short, if it looks like a job and it quacks like a job, then it is a job and in the wider interest should be paid as such.

If a worker is good, she will earn her slender wage back in spades. And if she is a saint, nobody says she may not donate it straight back again.
From: Times Online, UK
© Times Online, UK
More about: Infrastructure


  User Comments        Add a comment

Posted by: Debadideb   Date: 09 May 2007 07:34   From: New Delhi, India
I both agree and disagree with Carols views. According to me it is true that many (I won't venture to say most) volunteers fit the description that Carol has painted in her article, but there are also a significantly large number of volunteers who are extremely professional in their volunteering. Personally, I have come across many GREAT volunteers like this while setting up a suicide prevention centre in Calcutta, India. Also recently we got the expert involvement of a software professional over a period of almost an year to set up our knowledge management system. These guys are neither amateurs nor are they good for anything else. And for sure none of them were trying to be holier than thou.

Now that I have gotten off my chest the emotions that the article (I assume was designed to) provoked, let me agree with Carol that Volunteer Managers need to both recruit and sack volunteers. Often times one has to be more careful in recruiting volunteers than paid employees to avoid the pitfalls mentioned in the article. And when the situation demands, the volunteer needs to be sacked, albeit with sensitivity.

Volunteering is a give and take scenario and everyone involved needs to accept that no one is doing another a favour. There is something in it for everyone and as soon as there is a mismatch of expectations that cannot be resolved constructively, the relationship needs to end.


Posted by: E. P.   Date: 15 May 2007 19:34   From: USA
It is sad that much of society, those with and those without, define their own worth by money; thus a volunteer is not perceived to be motivated to do valuable work. Perhaps I and many in my circle are exceptions.

Prior to my retirement at the beginning of 1995, I explored, applied for and was accepted for Peaace Corps. I spent 2 1/4 years in duties related to this volunteer assignment. Though my salary at a State University was far from lucrative, my Peace Corps living allowance was far less, so I feel justified in claiming that I was a volunteer. Then, in the years subsequent to that period, I spent three months as a volunteer in Japan, teaching community-based English in the interest of the University from which I had retired; here, I paid my own way and only received housing and a small honorarium - very small in the Japanese economy, so I, again believe I am justified in claiming volunteer status. Subsequent to those two experiences, I was invited to become a consultant to the Worldwide Polio Eradication Program, where I received a $1 contract per three month term from UNICEF or WHO and travel costs on a reimbursement basis; this service included three three-month trips to northern India, often living in places where hotels were deemed by host country staff to be unfit for a woman traveler to stay; then four similar experiences in four different African countries.

Clearly, I benefited from the described endeavors, but not in a monetary manner. I believe we would collectively be able to accomplish more in this world if money was not THE defining characteristic; consider the fact that some may work to see their worth reinforced by other measures and, at the same time, some may even see money as too limited in value for measuring the worth of an endeavor.

In my 12 years of retirement, I have collectively spent more than 6 years of clocktime in volunteer service. I have never missed a day of any assignment due to illness and certainly not to any less frivolous matter. In most of my assignments, most persons with whom I have worked have done no less than I have. Thus, it is no wonder that I think volunteer service is something to be proud of not something to be castigated. I am now exploring possibilities for my next volunteer assignment.


Posted by: Marco   Date: 15 May 2007 20:22   From: West Palm Beach, Florida, USA
I was a United nations Volunteer from 1985 to 1992 in Honduras, Guatemala and equatorial Guinea. Very professional.

But I was in Angola, Sudan and Somalia with other agencies and I found volunteers that lacked the basic skills in humanity, education and everything.

They thought that can do everything they wanted in an another country.

I am very critical of volunteers, because agencies just hire anybody who wants to be a volunteer: young, unexperienced, without very much education.

We need to select strictly our volunteers so we can improve our work around the worldwide village.


Posted by: Anita   Date: 16 May 2007 15:14   From: London, UK
I find that many organisations just have no work available to volunteers and I have experienced where volunteers end up sitting around doing nothing. While looking for paid jobs, I want to spend some free time volunteering. Sometimes I have to hunt for a volunteering opportunity just like looking for a job. Either you are not given an opportunity to offer constructive help or there is just nothing to do. I realised now that there is actually not enough work available for too many idle people to do in the country. There are already a lot of idle retirees taking up volunteering,even office work. People just don't want to sit idle. So please, people in my situation - don't feel guilty about not contributing to society. There are other people who are dying to do it.

Posted by: Howard   Date: 05 June 2007 13:55   From: Devon, UK
Oh, Carol! For every over-blown volunteer such as you describe, I will show you ten people in high-paid top jobs who make the lives of others a misery through their selfishness and lack of empathy. And I will show you a thousand volunteers who bring unique personal insight and high skill to their role of helping others. Please, get out there again and take a closer look.




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