There has been no Blacka Moor Advisory Group meeting since
October and no message to those on their advisory group mailing list. There has
been no word about their new management plan nor their Higher Level Stewardship.
Cattle grazing, their daft fixation was expected to continue from Spring but so
far no cows – and how thankful we are for that! Where are the managers? What
are they scheming? Important consultations were supposed to happen last year
and half way through this year have still not been mentioned. Flags should not
be waved yet nor street parties planned. Any idea that they may have decamped
like an itinerant community are sure to be just wishful thinking.
Management relies on keeping key information close to its chest. So the rule is: don’t tell the public until ready. Speculation is
pretty pointless but happens anyway. Are there serious staffing problems? Has
the funding dried up? Has word gone out from those higher up that the whole
strategy must be revised? Are they scared that they have been rumbled? Has the
rising tide of national questioning led to a secret defensive manoeuvre being hatched.
Would any of these surprise us?
We’ve mentioned here - many times - the activities of the
wildlife conservation industry with varying levels of bewilderment, annoyance and
even amusement. But maybe we should see it less as a 'Conservation Industry' than as a Management Industry
much as it is across the rest of national life and the economy. It’s hardly at
all about conservation less still about wildlife but a hell of a lot about
management. That is the only way to understand what we’re up against.
Management is their job, managing is their business: managing public
perception, damage limitation, financial matters and all that goes with it. They
are a group apart from the particular niche they are working in separable from
what we might think as the ‘core business’. It’s a desk job with a primary
focus on public relations run by people whose mission is to control
everything but most of all to control what the public thinks of them, hence the need to control the flow of information.
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