PDA

View Full Version : Tandleman's Beer Blog - The Curious Incident of the Dog That Barked Rather a Lot



Blog Tracker
25-04-2018, 13:41
Visit the Tandleman's Beer Blog site (http://tandlemanbeerblog.blogspot.com/2018/04/the-curious-incident-of-dog-that-barked.html)


https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-l97iTaI24aY/WuBxs90sDGI/AAAAAAAAJnw/6Dw6-GAsf3YiHz52VsdDGA1L-Ae4lgsQgCLcBGAs/s400/Camra-AGM-2018-Coventry-logo-artwork-Converted-11th-Jan-2017-outlined-type-no-background-215x300.png (https://3.bp.blogspot.com/-l97iTaI24aY/WuBxs90sDGI/AAAAAAAAJnw/6Dw6-GAsf3YiHz52VsdDGA1L-Ae4lgsQgCLcBGAs/s1600/Camra-AGM-2018-Coventry-logo-artwork-Converted-11th-Jan-2017-outlined-type-no-background-215x300.png)There has been quite a lot written about the CAMRA AGM and the members failure to vote by the required 75% in favour, of Special Resolution 6. (SR6). (The 75%, for the avoidance of doubt is set as part of UK Company Law.)

This resolution, along with its fellows was a part of the Revitalisation Project and as a whole were intended to modernise the Campaign going forward. This failure, despite the fact that all other resolutions were passed, has been greeted with a great deal of hysteria by many who should know better. Roger Protz (http://protzonbeer.co.uk/comments/2018/04/23/camra-past-present-and-future-1)on the other hand, has summed it all up rather well and I recommend that you read what he says before reading the rest of my tuppence worth.

As someone who was actually there when the result was announced in Coventry - and is a CAMRA activist and, I like to think, a moderniser - I voted in favour of all the resolutions. So what was the reaction at the AGM when this was announced? Well actually very little. All of us who were modernisers had actually feared a much worse result and were rather upbeat we had come so far. These feelings were further enhanced by the Conference which sets policy, passing a number of very progressive motions, including acceptance of cask breathers and lifting the ban on keg beers at our festivals and much more.

So does SR6 matter? Well, it was a kind of catch all that frankly could have been more cleverly worded. It intended, I think, to show that CAMRA accepts that its remit should be formally widened:

To approve the insertion of the following Article 2(e)
in CAMRA’s Articles of Association: “2(e) to act as the
voice and represent the interests of all pub-goers and
beer, cider and perry drinkers;”

De facto of course, that is already the case and the acceptance of other resolutions and motions, while not exactly making SR6 moot, means that the intention of SR6 is more or less covered elsewhere. I would add that those that fondly imagine that the passing of SR6 would result in some kind of sudden support for say, including keg beers in the GBG for example, are likely to have been pretty well disappointed.Even if it had been passed, it would have taken a while for its implications to have worked through the system and there would have been no certainty about how that would have played out.

The hysteria I mentioned elsewhere cannot go without comment. Pete Brown (https://www.petebrown.net/2018/04/23/what-should-camra-do-now-to-save-cask-ale-and-itself/) set out his stall and frankly if I was making a case to reject SR6 due to the parlous state of cask ale - the main raison d'être - then I could have taken almost all of what he said as a bloody good reason to stick to our knitting. In parts it could be used more like a speech for the status quo. Take this for example:

"What I find most alarming is that no one in the cask ale industry wants to ‘fess up that there’s a serious issue here. This is a recipe for disaster, like the middle-aged man who won’t go and get that pain checked out at any the doctor because he’s scared of what he might hear, and anyway it might just go away. Last year. when I wrote about the quality issues around cask in London (https://www.morningadvertiser.co.uk/Article/2017/01/16/Pete-Brown-why-it-s-time-to-say-no-to-bad-cask-ale), I was comprehensively attacked from all corners of the industry, in a number of different publications. Now, the plight of cask is actively being covered up"

For those that think the campaign for real ale has been won and that this failure is a card ripping up matter, (and I include my good friend Beers Manchester (https://beersmanchester.wordpress.com/2018/04/22/camra-so-long-and-thanks-for-all-the-fish-guts/#comments)here,) just look at what Pete has to say and I agree with him in spades about it. We can never be complacent about cask conditioned beer. With a live product, the battle will never be won. It just goes on with high points and low points. Are we at a high? Not at all. More choice has not brought better quality at point of dispense. There is much more still to do and maybe that is why some people had doubts. There is also a cadre that believe that we should not be supporting cider and perry as well as a few diehards, so maybe the result is a lot better than could reasonably have been expected. Please remember 72.6% of the 18,000 were in favour.

I also recommend that you look at Boak and Bailey (https://boakandbailey.com/2018/04/camra-members-vote-for-slow-difficult-gradual-change/). They have summed a lot of this up although I don't like the title which suggests the way forward will now be difficult. The door is certainly, while not fully open, pretty much ajar. Progress can now be made without SR6 and there is always next year.

Finally there are those that worry about the election of one traditionalist member to the Executive Committee. All I can say is until I read her manifesto, I'd never heard of her and in any case, is one traditionalist so bad to have as an opposing voice? You need different opinions on a committee, even when they are a minority of one.

This was a very progressive AGM and Conference. The Campaign has moved towards the future. Those on either side that tear up membership cards must of course suit themselves, but really could do with sitting down and looking at the evidence before doing so.

I'll finish with a quote by Martyn Cornell on Twitter.

Martyn Cornell‏ @zythophiliac (https://twitter.com/zythophiliac)










Replying to @RogerProtzBeer (https://twitter.com/RogerProtzBeer) @CAMRA_Official (https://twitter.com/CAMRA_Official) and

The call for change failed by about 900 votes. About 2,000 Camra members die every year.


Not a nice thought, but likely true enough. The Campaign will change further.One way or another.


I thought Coventry and the AGM venue were both places I would go a long way to avoid in the future.




More... (http://tandlemanbeerblog.blogspot.com/2018/04/the-curious-incident-of-dog-that-barked.html)