Security Institute Chairman Mike Bluestone reported an excellent year of progress for the organisation at its Annual General Meeting in London on 4th March. With Security Institute President Lord Carlile QC in attendance, plus many of the directors and members of the organisation, Mike delivered his report which included twelve new initiatives for the organisation, including the growth of its admin team and launch of student membership, the mentoring programme and system for continuous professional development.
Later in the
afternoon, the election of Directors saw Mike Bluestone, David Gill and Emma
Shaw being returned for a second term in office, plus Mike O’Neill, Jerry Woods
and Simon Dilloway joining the Board as elected directors. The AGM was followed
by a number of presentations, including an update on Counter-Terrorism from DCI
Richard Jack (City of London Police), the security challenge of the 2010 World
Cup (South African Institute of Security), professional personal development,
Institute qualifications, Institute recruitment and retention, and the Royal
Charter process. The afternoon meeting was followed by the Annual Dinner
celebration, attended by 75 members and guests, and sponsored by IFSEC.
Chairman’s
Report
“I would like
to firstly express my gratitude to Lord Alex for taking time out of his
pressured diary to chair this meeting. Your support Lord Alex is truly
invaluable, and in you this Institute has found a great and loyal friend and
supporter. I would also like to express a special welcome to some friends of
this Institute who have travelled a long way to be with us today. Terry Scallan
is Chairman of the Board of the South African Institute of Security and a SyI
Fellow, while Steve Conradie is the Chairman of the South African SIA. We also
have with us one of our newest Fellows, Rinus Meelis and Member Henk
Neddermeijer who have flown in from the Netherlands for this meeting.
A special
thank you too to our amazing and truly dedicated Head Office Team, led by our
human dynamo, Di Thomas, who is supported by Paula Stanbridge, Carly Huckle and
since Monday Karen Newman, all of whom work so hard for the membership on a
daily basis, and who have worked especially hard to arrange and plan this
meeting, as well as this evening’s dinner. I also take this opportunity to
publically acknowledge the major contribution made to the life of this Institute
by my equally hard working and dedicated fellow Board directors, several of whom
are here today, including my loyal Vice Chairman for Business, David Gill. I
thank you all. A special ‘thank you’ to my co-director, and SyI Company
Secretary, Nigel Churton for his efficient handling of the formal part of
today’s AGM. I thank all of you, our fantastic membership, who volunteer your
time over and over again, for our unique and much admired Validation Board, led
by Emma Shaw; the members of our Academic Board, led by Mark Button, and the
many working/focus groups whose individual and collective contribution to the
daily life of this Institute has made SyI the envy of other professional bodies.
Thank you all, and thank you for being here today!"
"I don’t mind
admitting that my pride at being elected to the Chair of your Institute just
under twelve months just ago, was coupled with some trepidation. I felt an
enormous sense of responsibility in becoming the leader of this great Institute,
a task which had been carried out and managed so effectively by my immediate
predecessor Bill Wyllie, and by Geoff Whitfield before him. At this point, I
wish to acknowledge the vision, enterprise and commitment of that group of
security practitioners who were the founders of this Institute eleven years ago.
Without their foresight, and their boldness, this Institute would simply not
exist. I am proud to have been an early ‘convert’ to SyI and to have been
admitted back in 2000 as member Number 20! I remember the wise but not so old
Bill Wyllie saying to me upon my appointment, that if during my term in office I
continued to do everything the way he had done, or did everything that he agreed
with, then there would be no point in change. He was of course right. Change
can be a positive thing, and so your new Board set about creating a new
strategy, new objectives and new challenges. One of my first moves on becoming
Chairman was to take a fresh look at the way the Board was structured. I
concluded that as in any other business or organisation, our directors needed to
be focussed on specific tasks and areas of responsibility. I decided therefore
to devolve to each director a specific portfolio, thereby empowering them to get
on with their roles, and maintaining overall control over their specialist
areas. The changes have also led to the doubling of our hard-working admin team
to deal with this significant increase in workload. It is no secret that
included within the new Board’s objectives were both growing the
membership, and enhancing the value of membership."
So what have
we all achieved together, over the past twelve months? How far have we come?
"Taking
firstly, the growth in membership, we have maintained our membership at just on
1,000 and most importantly, the rate of new applications is now around 20 most
months. No easy achievement, especially during a severe economic recession.
Especially satisfying, has been the launch of the
Student
membership programme, which has seen recruitment to the Institute of 18 new
student members. The fact that young people are aspiring to make professional
security practice a career of first choice, and are choosing the Institute as
their professional ‘home’, must be a good thing for all of us. We are hopeful
that the “Bridging the Gap” initiative,
the Steering Group
of which is chaired by Institute Director David Greer,
may also encourage college tutors and graduates to join.
Closely allied
to the student membership programme, is the SyI
Wilf Knight
Award, which was launched last year and saw the first recipient, SyI member
Danie Adendorff, receive his award at the prestigious Security Excellence
Awards. Also helping to attract new student members is the ongoing success of
our Mentoring
programme. This programme is not just for newcomers to the security sector,
and several mature members are successfully taking advantage of this valuable
member benefit. This past year has also seen our SyI
Diploma and
Certificate programmes, delivered by Perpetuity Training, achieve BTEC
accreditation respectively with Edexcel at levels 5 and 3, something which we
can all be very proud of. The development of both qualifications to be
assessment based opens the door to many more possibilities, which will be an
exciting time in 2010. We also saw the launch of our new
Master Class
programme, where delegates can make a detailed study of particular aspects
of security. The first one last week focussed on security around mass gatherings
and events, and the team of Institute members at NaCTSO will be presenting the
next one at the Victory Services Club later this month."
"We have also
been keen supporters of
Professor
Martin Gill’s SRI initiative, and significantly, it was at a SyI event last
year, that Martin launched the new Strategy Tool Kit. We will be continuing our
support for this superb initiative this year. Your new Board also resolved to
become more deeply engaged with other industry and sector wide bodies, in
combined efforts to help
raise
standards in security. In this regard, we have taken part in a number of
high level initiatives with the SIA, the BSIA, SASIG, and Skills for Security.
These initiatives have included taking part in seminars and conferences, and
debating topics such as regulation as we did at last September’s SyI two-day
conference. Only last month, we hosted Bill Muskin of the BSIA and Andrew
Shephard of the SIA at a Members’ evening, when a passionate debate took place
about the merits of the BSIA’s initiative to create new benchmarks in the
guarding sector, which go beyond the voluntary ACS programme. Let me make it
very clear that your Board will not shy away from controversial and difficult
topics. How can we? We represent an eclectic membership many of whom, for
example, are themselves owners or senior managers of guarding companies or
consultancies. We will engage with the Regulator and with HMG, but we will
not tow any party line, and I call upon members to keep contacting me whenever a
matter close to your hearts pops up, and you feel that SyI could present your
views to the Regulator or whoever. If we are convinced by your case, then we
will lobby for you. Our relationship with the SIA is an open, honest and
friendly one, but we will speak up when we think that decisions are working
against the best interests of the profession, or indeed the public at large. We
have also continued to build upon the excellent relationships with the
organisers of IFSEC and Counter-Terror Expo, and this April’s Counter-Terror
Expo will see several Board members take part in chairing sessions at that
important event. We are also grateful to both organisations for their generous
sponsorship of SyI events."
"Indeed, let
me take this opportunity to thank all of our sponsors over the past twelve
months for their generous sponsorship. They are too numerous to mention them all
now, but to all of our sponsors I say that your support is invaluable, and we
salute you all! The convening of interesting and varied members events has been
another feature of the past twelve months. From a packed diary of over 2 dozen
events, memorable ones include last September’s key educational event, namely
our two-day annual conference at Bucks New University, Great Missenden. How can
we forget either, our inaugural
Remembrance
Lecture held at Nomura Bank at which Brigadier Ed Butler delivered such a
poignant and moving talk on the heroic work of our armed forces in Afghanistan.
Let us also acknowledge the several and growing number of regional events held
last year in Bristol, Coventry, Leicester, Belfast and Glasgow. I also have fond
memories of an evening event at the height of the British Summer at the Railway
Tavern in the City of London, at which over 60 members braved a very rainy
evening to hear our friend Ian Mansfield of City Police speak about Project
Griffin 2. We may meet in local hostelries and ‘watering holes’, but our members
events are not just networking or social events, as you would have noted from
last year’s diary. Indeed, I see no problem at all in members enjoying
themselves too! Now these events don’t just happen, and I want to pay tribute
to all of our members who volunteer their time to arrange events supported as
always by Di and Carly. Well done to you all! Please also note in your diaries,
a dedicated SyI Presentation Day scheduled for the 22 June 2010, when we will
have the pleasure of presenting the George van Schwalkwyk and John Aplin awards,
and also our awards to our successful qualification students. The second Wilf
Knight Award, will be presented at this year’s Security Excellence Awards
ceremony."
"Another key
initiative that has come to fruition is our
CPD programme,
which has commenced with a purely voluntary pilot programme, with expectations
of it becoming mandatory at some future stage. CPD is an essential part of any
serious professional Institute, and as the member also of a legal professional
Institute, I can vouch for the fact that CPD is a normal expected requirement of
professional life. CPD will also be a pre-requisite for obtaining chartered
status. I urge members to embrace CPD. Please do not fear it. We are all
engaging on a daily basis in activities of various kinds, which enable every one
of us to satisfy CPD requirements. I commend co-director Maria Cox and GM, Di
Thomas, for their joint efforts in building this excellent and professional
programme. Of course, we are human, and not everything that we planned has
happened on time. The launch of our new series of
Good Practice
Guides, now being driven by Jerry Woods, has been slightly delayed, with the
first one going to print in April. Members can be assured though, that this year
will see the launch of at least two or possibly three new GPGs . Last year also
saw the launch of our free legal advice line, in cooperation with leading law
firm,
Brachers. We are most grateful to Brachers for their support and commitment
to the Institute. Also launched last year, was our first
Information
Security Group led by co-director Azeem Aleem of Portsmouth University. We
look forward to hearing positive outcomes from this important initiative. And if
all of this wasn’t enough, your Board established last Autumn a
Chartered
Status Steering Group to research and ultimately implement our long held
aspiration and goal of achieving Chartered Status for this Institute. This is
not an easy thing to make happen. It is a complex process, and there are some
hurdles to overcome, but we are confident. I can also assure you all that no
application will be submitted the Privy Council without a majority vote of
support from the membership. We are blessed with having the expert guidance of a
leading authority on such matters in the form of Keith Lawrey of the Foundation
of Science and Technology, and we enjoy the fraternal support of our friends and
colleagues in the WCoSP. Here I want to pause and pay tribute to SyI Fellow,
Peter French MBE, who has been quietly helping us behind the scenes with this
project, and sharing with us the experiences which enabled the WCoSP to achieve
their own distinct charter as a City livery company. And wasn’t it great to see
Peter receive the MBE last year for his sterling efforts over many years in his
work with the police and Crimestoppers? All in all ladies and gentlemen, we have
kick-stared during the past twelve months, twelve new initiatives!"
"Finally,
ladies and gentlemen, a word about the
International
scene. The international dimension of this Institute is important to us.
This is of course evidenced by our close cooperation with the SAIS, and Terry’s
presence here today. In addition, to our cooperation with our South African
friends, we have a opened up a dialogue with local security practitioners in
India, and in recent weeks we have been approached by the Australasian Security
Institute to explore areas of common interest and concern. We also continue our
cooperation with the Caribbean Institute of Security, whose Chairman, Clairmont
Featherstone has recently applied for membership of SyI. As for the remainder of
this year, we remain committed to consolidating and developing all of the
initiatives which I have highlighted today, and with particular emphasis and
effort on advancing our proposed application for a Royal Charter. As to the
future, allow me to vent my own thoughts on the road ahead: You know, this
really is a time for strong nerves. As an Institute, we have exploited the
economic recession, and expanded, and whilst we are not yet cash rich, our
finances are sound. Our reputation is good and growing, and most importantly, we
are listened to, which means that every one of your own opinions and concerns
has a value and can also be listened to. But you have to tell us, and share your
thoughts with us. We will always work hard to fly your flag on an issue of
concern, but we need be made aware of your concerns. We may not always be able
to help, but we will try our best. This is your Institute! As for the
Security World which we all inhabit, it is changing. Regulation and the economic
downturn have led to greater consolidation of security companies, in all sectors
of the industry. There will be fewer security companies – in all branches of
security – but those that remain will be more professional. The buying public,
your clients, your customers, your end users, call them what you will, are all
demanding increased professionalism, and higher standards. They don’t
always want to pay for it, but they demand it nevertheless! Terrorism,
single-issue extremism, and crime are the catalysts for that. More and more
people are turning to the private security world to help keep them safe and
secure."
"My friends,
this is a call to arms. This is the moment for the professional arm of the
security sector to grasp the nettle and say to the world: ‘We are professionals,
we are as professional as your other professional advisers, your lawyers, your
accountants, your surveyors, or whoever. We do study our subject matter.
We do engage in continuing learning and development. We practice CPD. We
continue to train. Security is not some hazy ‘wishy washy’ art . We truly are
professionals!’It is my fervent belief that we are now on the threshold of a
major breakthrough in recognition of our collective skills, knowledge and
experience. By achieving chartered status for this Institute, we would have
proved that recognition beyond doubt. I call upon each and every one of you here
today, and indeed upon every member of this great Institute to get behind your
Board, help us to achieve chartered status, help us to raise funds, help us grow
the membership, help us make a difference. We know that you are there for the
Institute - and we are here for you.”
Security Institute Website
Posted by Tracy Loans
08 March 2010
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