And by differently we mean precisely the same but we are considering a rebrand so it sounds different."We decided to get the same people to fail differently."
Ish - the ME Association was sitting on £millions in unspent cash which, following a load of noise last year, is now being spent on good things.This is great! But I really want to see the results of WILCO. And it goes to show that charities could fund at least part of SequenceME if it came down to it.
I don't understand why that hasn't happened already.
And as was pointed out on bluesky, it's absolutely insane that six years after the start of the pandemic, this kind of study is only just happening and charity not government funded.
The question is how to we do this? I have limited resources as a severe person, but I want to do everything I can to ensure this happens.We don't need to donate the cash ourselves, but we need to get better at engaging our wider communities to raise money and donate to the ME Association, Action for ME and ME Research UK. That has been a critical failing for years.
The question is how to we do this? I have limited resources as a severe person, but I want to do everything I can to ensure this happens.
I am a writer, and will happy write or copy edit anything (of a reasonable length) that would help towards this end, be it social media posts or something for websites or letters to charity people or whatever. But I have no experience in this field and need help being pointed in the right direction, and less severe pwME or able bodied advocates to help.
Playing devil’s advocate, they might argue that they were holding money back so that they would have enough in the bank to able to fund this type of study.(side note: it's also a vindication of all those who pushed the MEA for change last year - it appears to have paid off! Thank you to all those who supported).
Oh i totally forgot to do this with my big give donation!(requesting that the money goes towards their research work).
Fingers and toes crossed!I can’t remember how much they have hoarded but I’m hoping they might be able to invest a significant sum towards SequenceME too.
Agreed, sadly. They have more work to do to redeem themselves in my eyes.Despite today’s welcome announcement, I’m reluctant to raise money for MEA because of all the issues which has been discussed elsewhere in here.
I’m pretty sure that’s what they did argue in one of their public financial accounts, but i cannot remember which one.Playing devil’s advocate, they might argue that they were holding money back so that they would have enough in the bank to able to fund this type of study.
Regardless, I’m pleased that MEA is funding this.
I can’t remember how much they have hoarded but I’m hoping they might be able to invest a significant sum towards SequenceME too.
On fundraising, I have found that doing birthday and Christmas fundraisers on JustGiving and Facebook has been effective. I try to make the point that I would rather people make donation than give me things I don’t need – because what I need more than anything is to understand what is wrong with me and get better. For significant birthdays I’ve sent circular emails and asked close family to forward them to their contacts too. I’ve raised about £20,000 for different ME/CFS charities doing this and other things since 2013 – mostly for MERUK but this year I’m raising money for AfME for the first time (requesting that the money goes towards their research work).
Despite today’s welcome announcement, I’m reluctant to raise money for MEA because of all the issues which has been discussed elsewhere in here.
I wonder if the problem is with the MEA’s structure per say or mostly the people who happen to be on top of that structure.I know the popular view around here is the CEO approach but I have to wonder how much Sonya Chodhury is influencing people’s thoughts. It is an unusual scenario that she has a child with the condition. There have been CEOs before like Chris Clark (AfME) and Mary-Jane Willows (AYME) who made a right mess of things.
I know the popular view around here is the CEO approach but I have to wonder how much Sonya Chodhury is influencing people’s thoughts.
Well, I have no evidence that Sonya is, or isn't, influencing people's thoughts but your post makes me wonder why would it be a bad thing if she was, and why should there be an assumption that she is only good in her role solely because she has a child with the condition.I know the popular view around here is the CEO approach but I have to wonder how much Sonya Chodhury is influencing people’s thoughts. It is an unusual scenario that she has a child with the condition. There have been CEOs before like Chris Clark (AfME) and Mary-Jane Willows (AYME) who made a right mess of things.
ETA: Also the MEA one in the early 2000s before the trustees took over.
I know the popular view around here is the CEO approach but I have to wonder how much Sonya Chodhury is influencing people’s thoughts. It is an unusual scenario that she has a child with the condition.
Of the four I mentioned:And any CEO of a small charity is likely to be picked for the role because they have some personal knowledge of its area of interest.
Sonya said something along the lines that her son got ill with ME after she applied for the job, it was a fluke she has such a personal connection.
Chris Clark had no stated personal knowledge and behaved like someone who didn’t have good insight into the condition. I heard it speculated he was worried to rock the boat in the sector in case it affected him applying for his next job because why otherwise was he so bad: who knows.
Val Hockey had no personal connection as far as I can recall (and brought in a medical advisor to replace Charles Shepherd who said she wasn’t willing to argue against the statement that ME was all in the head, or something like that, which perhaps hints she might not have a personal connection but who knows).
Agree on feeling their response seems a distraction and there is a major issue with the main action for this not being sorting turn over of trustees and making the role from one not even accessible like normal trusteee roles and therefore ridiculous regarding me/cfs to one that isn’t basically as abnormal as their roles currently are except for reasonable adjustments to ensure pwme are welcomed and accommodatedNo. A charity shouldn't be run by, or operationally controlled by, its trustees. And any CEO of a small charity is likely to be picked for the role because they have some personal knowledge of its area of interest.
There are poor CEOs and a minority of outright bad ones, but the alternative is a group of people who don't have the skills to get a CEO job but do it anyway, and are only answerable to themselves.
I feel even more concerned by that gut feeling that potentially whilst Charles was doing the good work
Playing devil’s advocate, they might argue that they were holding money back so that they would have enough in the bank to able to fund this type of study.
I can’t remember how much they have hoarded but I’m hoping they might be able to invest a significant sum towards SequenceME too.
Despite today’s welcome announcement, I’m reluctant to raise money for MEA because of all the issues which has been discussed elsewhere in here.
Post copied to thread United Kingdom: ME Association governance issues
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It seems to me to be a bit incongruous to be claiming to be funding the biggest charity research study at the same time as not having funds to afford a CEO. Arguably, having a CEO, at some cost over the years, would have yielded a more professional, proactive organisation, more effective fundraising and potentially have supported campaigning for fair government funding, currently standing at 40 times less per person, & 160 times less in total than dementia funding, when dementia economic costs are only 10xs higher (currently) based on pre 2020 £3b ME/CFS annual cost to the economy.
Also there has been reference to long covid swelling the numbers affected by a post-viral syndrome creating a crisis, however I would say the severe ME community was in a state of crisis way before.