Daydream believer
Well-Known Member
What does Sybarite have to hide from, Robin's French experience is the model we should aspire to in the UK.
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Oh !!! not another one !!!
What have i done . ????????
What does Sybarite have to hide from, Robin's French experience is the model we should aspire to in the UK.
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Also need to bear in mind that they might not have sent a distress call or asked for a lifeboat themselves. I've certainly heard calls from vessels calmly asking whether anyone nearby would be willing to give them a tow, answered by the Coastguard saying "we have dispatched XYZ Lifeboat to your assistance".
Pete
There is no such thing as a "yacht calling out the Lifeboat". The decision is made by the CG, and frequently wrongly.
What does Sybarite have to hide from, Robin's French experience is the model we should aspire to in the UK.
Their system results in a nation of more resourceful, self-sufficient and robust sailors who are better than their British counterparts. Meanwhile in France they focus their national resources where it counts such as as developing a national power system that will not have to have to black out cities in the next decade.
The number of city level blackouts we experience in the future depends on whether the French take pity on our situation and build us new nuclear power stations.
Do you have any evidence to support the assertion that the CG "frequently" act wrongly in tasking the lifeboat? Or is it just based on your one experience?
but they nevertheless were able to spend £13.9m on lifeboats in 2015.
Pathetically misleading comment, but no doubt deliberately so.
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With the RNLI you pay in advance to such an extent that they build up to total funds of £745.3m but they nevertheless were able to spend £13.9m on lifeboats in 2015.
Since I started looking at their situation their reserves have increased by nearly 50%.
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Do you have any evidence to support the assertion that the CG "frequently" act wrongly in tasking the lifeboat? Or is it just based on your one experience?
Not sure you realise how ridiculous this statement and the quote of two completely unrelated figures are.
Since when does the size of reserves has anything to do with how much is spent on one item from the capital expenditure budget? It seems clear you have not got a clue what the "reserves" figure represents. Ifyou knew anything about how the RNLI operates you would know that purchase of new boats in any one year is a very small (but important) part of the expenditure. Indeed less than capital expenditure on other fixed assets, and much smaller than the amount spent on operational activities.
I think that I have a much clearer idea of the reserves figure than you do. Did you know for example that there was a change in accounting practice which added nearly £30m to the reserves figure?
If I had only taken one year in isolation then your remark "that purchase of new boats in any one year is a very small (but important) part of the expenditure" might have some relevance.
However it is not an isolated figure; it is part of a pattern that has gone on for at least the last 9 years where expenditure on boats has equalled 6.5% of the gross incoming ressources of the RNLI.
Anyway, I could not reconcile your figures with the 2014 accounts,
Normal; I was using the 2015 figures.
but in looking I happened to do a quick calculation showing the %age of fundraising costs compared with income from legacies and fundraising (something you are always banging on about without seemingly understanding the process). It is approx 15%.
Compared with 6.5% for boat spend....?
It might interest you to know that the ratios for two other charities with similar incomes from those sources are RSPCA 19% and Oxfam 23%. So would guess that the RNLI is a pretty cost effective fundraiser!
A meaningless comparison when you do not mention how much was spent on their core activities.
Always amazes me how some people can be so critical of the actions of others, even though they don't know exactly what went on or have no evidence to support their assertions. But I guess that is just what happens on a forum.
I hope you were looking in a mirror when you wrote this.
Amazing how he thinks just throwing random figures out without any context - .
Except that the SNSM relies on state funding, where the RNLI does not.
So it doesn't matter what the RNLI do, you don't have to pay for any part of it if you don't want to.
It's amazing how they got to total funds of £745.3m then isn't it? Nobody paid anything.....
Presumably because they wanted to, or do you believe otherwise?
Except that the SNSM relies on state funding, where the RNLI does not.
So it doesn't matter what the RNLI do, you don't have to pay for any part of it if you don't want to.
It's amazing how they got to total funds of £745.3m then isn't it? Nobody paid anything.....
Presumably because they wanted to, or do you believe otherwise?
Of course not; it's just to put into context the fact that the RNLI "doesn't charge for rescues". It's like insurance: the expense is collectivised and people pay in advance.
Because you do not understand the context is not the same as saying "without any context".
Obviously I don't have chapter and verse, but I do know of an Incident where a yacht landed on a rock near LW (not me), and the lady skipper informed the CG, just in case someone else reported it. She was very insistent that she was not in any trouble and needed no assistance, but the CG called out the Lifeboat to go and check. Again this was totally unnecessary, and a waste of resources. I think we've probably all heard occasions where a Lifeboat has been tasked, and have said, "Imagine calling out the Lifeboat for that".
Is it time for the RNLI=Angels / Beelzebub debate to be placed alongside global warming as a sticky.:sleeping:
I think that I have a much clearer idea of the reserves figure than you do. Did you know for example that there was a change in accounting practice which added nearly £30m to the reserves figure?
If I had only taken one year in isolation then your remark "that purchase of new boats in any one year is a very small (but important) part of the expenditure" might have some relevance.
However it is not an isolated figure; it is part of a pattern that has gone on for at least the last 9 years where expenditure on boats has equalled 6.5% of the gross incoming ressources of the RNLI.
Normal; I was using the 2015 figures.
Compared with 6.5% for boat spend....?
A meaningless comparison when you do not mention how much was spent on their core activities.
I hope you were looking in a mirror when you wrote this.
Wriggling again.
Reserves represent the assets the organisation has. It is not a pot of money to be spent. In this case it is the culmination of 150+ years of investment in its activities. It includes real estate, boats, plant, machinery, investments etc. All it means in this context is that the organisation is well established, has no debt and can finance its activities out of its own resources. Surely something to be celebrated, not a cause of criticism? How can a change in accounting practices that results in a change of the calculated figure make any difference to the operation of the service. Reserves is a calculated figure, and can clearly change if you change the basis on which it is calculated. Lesson number 1 of a basic accounting course which you obviously missed out on.
You fail to recognise that this organisation does many more things than just buy and operate boats. Its expenditure on new boats is a function of its operational requirements - the %age of any other figure is irrelevant. Whether the expenditure is 5% or 50% is meaningless on its own. Adequacy is judged by whether it is appropriate to its declared aims. Read what the capital expenditure strategy is and then judge if the actual is satisfactory or not. Consistency over 9 years is surely to be applauded as it might show that the organisation is clear where it is going with capital expenditure and matching it to its requirements.
You really should look at the tosh you write about capital expenditure on boats. One the one hand you claim it spends too much when you want to compare it with another organisation that spends less buying cheaper lower standard boats that would not meet the required requirements and then on the other you claim it spends to little. Make up your mind - neither are of course correct. It spends what it plans to spend, irrespective of what other organisations do.
It is completely irrelevant to compare expenditure on fund raising with expenditure on boats. RSPCA spend more on fundraising than it does on vehicles for its inspectors. So what? The only thing that matters with fundraising expenditure is that it is less than the funds raised. Therefore the %age of income raised is a valid ratio - and the RNLI is far better than other fundraising charities on this measure. Every £ spent on fundraising raises £6.66, compared with £5.26 for the RSPCA and £4.16 for Oxfam. Far more meaningful than any of your so called analysis. I would think that your mythical donor widow would be pleased that she is giving her money to such an efficient charity. Incidentally if you knew anything about the charity scene in the UK you would know that this particular aspect is currently a major issue with many charities (not the RNLI) being heavily criticised for excessive fundraising expenditure.
The last comment I made was not specifically aimed at you as it followed observations about the subject of the thread, not this drift from the topic. Perhaps I should have made it clearer by not putting it in the same post.
BTW I do not make assertions without evidence as you can see from the above. All I am doing is showing how meaningless most of your statements are.