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Broadway Market Residents and Traders Association’s budget for the financial year 2007–2008

This is the budget that was presented to the Executive Committee meeting of 16 April 2008. This budget supersedes the interim accounts presented at the Association’s 21 February 2008 annual general meeting.

Bmtra’s budget for the financial year 2007–2008
Yearly
Item In Out
(£s) (£s)
Total income/expenditure 79,149.00 83,772.65
Income stall fees 73,959.00
Theft/loss 2,090.00
Traders fund 3,569.00 1,380.00
Fees collected on behalf of LBH 855.00 855.00
Build and breakdown, day staff 32,000.00
Stall maintenance 9,601.32
Office space 4,950.00
Storage container rental 1,408.06
Manager’s fee 19,870.00
Administration/market support 1 (38 weeks) 5,320.00
Administration/market support 2 (4 weeks) 1,895.90
Professional fees 200.00
Bmtra membership 266.00
Donations 500.00 891.97
Insurance 1,342.62
Other 4,057.78
Opening balance 6 April 2007 7,953.68
Closing balance 3,330.03

Get lost

We hope that Broadway Market’s Time Out nomination for Best place to lose yourself for an afternoon is not a reference to the Dove’s lavatories.
And even if you simply hate the street (or the Dove’s lavatories), you might like to vote for Black Truffle, shortlisted as Best shoe shop.
Talking of getting lost, the Council is trying to raise the charges for some of the things that have won Broadway Market a place in the Time Out shortlist: chairs and tables outside pubs and cafes. Proposed increases in fees for shopfront trading mean places like the Dove face a whopping 1,000 pc increase.
BMTRA is fighting these increases and those aimed at Saturday market traders (see below). We think they are misguided. They threaten the enormous amount of work that everyone on the street has done to regenerate the neighbourhood.
We have suggested that it would make more sense for the council to take the opposite tack: drop all shop front charges and encourage businesses to set out tables and chairs for free. This will encourage visitors and increase trade.
If you think Hackney Council has lost the plot, you might like to email the Mayor.

Andrew Veitch, Chair, BMTRA

Vote for Broadway

Broadway Market has been nominated as best place to lose yourself for an afternoon in a Timeout poll on shopping in London. The poll closes on 12 May so please vote soon, unless you were intending to vote for Camden Passage, in which case you might as well wait till 13 May.

Birthday bash update - village idiocy

Could the market ever become a village idyll? We think not. But for one day only, we shall try.

The theme for our birthday bash on May 10 will be: “All things spring - rural and ancient”. That means, well, whatever tickles your buds, but it might be flowery hats and low-cut frocks for the ladies; tight pants for the men with leg o’ mutton shirts (see-through when wet). Spring chickens and bunny rabbits will be especially welcome.

There will be prizes for the best-costumed stallholders: two weeks free rent for the winner, one week for the runner-up.

A tug o’ war will be held on the green next to Welshpool House. Volunteers, please, to James Ó Nuanáin (secretary@bmtra.org.uk) until he finds someone else to organise the chaos.

Performing live on the street will be one of the funniest theatre groups in the country: the Dog-Eared Collective. You may have seen their surreal Morris dancing and mummery on the market previously and in London clubs and pubs.

And the BBC has unintentionally presented us with a glorious birthday present: an essay by the former East London writer, Patrick Wright, which exactly describes what we’re all about. It was written for an Arts Council programme and has just been published.

Andrew Veitch,
Chair, BMTRA.

Money: why we need to raise the rent

The Saturday market has become a phenomenal success. We now need to put the organisation on a firmer footing. This costs money. We also need to repair and replace many of the stalls:  the extreme weather has made this an urgent necessity, we can expect more of the same next winter. And we need a little extra to kickstart our plastic bag-free campaign - it will soon be self-financing.

All this and more means we need to raise the stall rent from £20 to £25 a week. More than half the extra £5 will pay for our new part-time administrator James Ó Nuanáin. His title is Market Manager and he also acts as unpaid Secretary of BMTRA. The accounts occupy much of his time. Among many other things he also deputises for Louise Brewood, our Market Director.

A summary of our accounts is being published on this blog: we are keeping our collective head above water, but with little leeway, and we need to develop the market and its role in the community. We are setting up a new social enterprise, a community interest company with its assets tied to BMTRA. This too costs money, but it means we will be able to apply for development funding not available to a community group.

When we put this to traders back in February, their first response was that we should use the increase to encourage regular traders and to discourage no-shows. Traders hate empty stalls, so do customers, so do we. The biggest problem is people who phone on Friday night to say they won’t be here in the morning - or just fail to turn up on the day. This costs us money, because we pay for the stalls to be erected, whether traders turn up or not.

The solution, suggested by traders, was that we charge £25 for those willing to pay a month in advance with a two-week notice period for no-shows and refunds to cover emergencies. Those wishing to pay on the day would be charged £30. This was our initial proposal.

It was interpreted by some as a 50% rise. That is not the intention. A £5 increase and a full market is clearly in everyone’s best interests. Some of the smaller stallholders who do turn out every week have told us they cannot afford to pay four weeks in advance.

So this is Plan B: we propose to raise the rent to £25, cash on the day, from May 3. Over the following few weeks we will ask traders to move towards paying one week in advance. People who fail to tell us one week in advance that they will not be turning out will forfeit their week’s payment - again with a refund to cover emergencies. We hope this will be enough to discourage no-shows.

We would still urge traders to pay in advance by standing order if they possibly can: cash is dangerous, our collectors have already been robbed at knifepoint.

Andrew Veitch,
Chair, BMTRA.