Opening Times: Monday – Friday: 9am-9pm | Saturday: 9am-1pm | Sunday: 1pm-5pm 

Opening Times: Monday – Friday: 9am-9pm | Saturday: 9am-1pm | Sunday: 1pm-5pm 

Church of England Survivor Representative Vacancy

Safe Spaces Advisory Committee Member 

Church of England Survivor Representative 

Aims and Objectives 

The Safe Spaces Advisory Committee (SSAC) is a group that brings together key stakeholder representatives from the Church of England and the Catholic Church in England and Wales to provide operational advice in connection with the day to day activities of SSEW (Safe Spaces England and Wales), which the directors may factor into their decision making.  

The SSAC will: 

  • Provide an opinion on whether the contractual provisions of the contract have been met, with any suggestions for improvement.
  • Provide a view to the directors on service provider performance against key performance indicators and the required deliverables of the service.
  • Input on potential service developments.

Roles and Responsibilities 

The role of the Safe Spaces Advisory Committee is to: 

  • Attend meetings and contribute their experience and expertise to the discussion related to the review of the service outcomes reports submitted by the service provider and the Independent Evaluator.
  • Ensure that the directors are aware of the voice of survivors of Church-related abuse
  • Act as a ‘sounding board’ for the directors of SSEW in particular in relation to the more complex elements of the project that are relevant to their area(s) of expertise or experience.
  • Provide assistance in connection with a quality control mechanism to ensure that outcome reports submitted by the service provider and Independent Evaluators are of high quality, fit for purpose and useful in deciding the future of the pilot project.

Survivor Representative Responsibilities in SSAC

  • Considering and representing a survivor view of the impact of church-related abuse 
  • Contributing experience and expertise to the discussion related to the review of the service outcomes reports submitted by the service provider and the Independent Evaluator.
  • Reviewing evaluation reports from the Independent Evaluation Service and service provider from a survivor perspective, giving feedback as to whether  they sufficiently show survivor feedback and engagement.
  • To reflect survivor voices based on both lived experience as well as consideration of the diversity of survivor experience, as far as is possible.)
  • Give advice and suggestions as to how better to reflect voices of survivors within Safe Spaces.
  • Raising risks and issues relevant to the monitoring and evaluation of the Safe Spaces service.
  • Attendance of all meetings and for any meetings that are missed, to provide a feedback on relevant documents in advance.
  • Representing survivors by participating in recruitment interviews for keys posts and contracts.
  • Provide advice and support to a range of decisions to be made by the Board, whilst not having a formal vote – important input which is valued.

Person Specification 

Essential criteria

We are looking for a Survivor Representative who: 

  • Is a victim/survivor of church-related abuse within the Church of England.
  • Is committed to working ecumenically, assisting the Church of England and the Catholic Church in England and Wales to fulfil its safeguarding mission through the provision of the Safe Spaces service.
  • Has strong inter-personal skills, an ability to listen, engage effectively and work collaboratively.
  • Can communicate effectively by expressing their own views; work with differing opinions; challenge appropriately.
  • Can review documents and provide verbal and/or written feedback.
  • Can work appropriately with confidential information.
  • Can commit sufficient time to conduct the role well.

This post may involve discussing potentially distressing issues, applicants will need to demonstrate they have the emotional resilience and capacity to manage this. 

You will receive an honorarium of £125 per meeting + reasonable expenses will be paid in accordance with the Church of England’s NCI  expenses policy.

There will be approximately 6 board meetings per year. Meetings are expected to take place during usual business hours.  

Terms 

The representative would be appointed for three years. The term can be renewable once. 

 

Appointment 

The post will be subject to the safer recruitment processes. 

Closing date: May 10th 2025

Interviews: Online via MS Teams or Zoom on Wednesday 4th June 2025, timings to be confirmed.

** Please note that this will redirect you to the Church of England Pathways website.
(https://pathways.churchofengland.org/en/jobs/safe-spaces-advisory-committee-member-church-of-england-survivor-representative/2257)

 

Newsletter March 2024

Safe Spaces Newsletter

Quarterly Updates – Issue 2

March 2024

Welcome to Safe Spaces quarterly newsletter!

Thank you for signing up to receive our news! If you have been forwarded this document but want to receive it directly, you can sign up yourself at www.safespacesenglandandwales.org.uk

 This is just our second update since First Light took on responsibility for Safe Spaces in January, but we’ll be making it regular to keep you informed, and give you a chance to have your say about how things are going!

Contact us…

We are available Mon-Friday 0900-2100, Sat 0900-1300 and Sun 1300-1700

By phone: 0300 303 1056

Email: safespaces@firstlight.org.uk

Website and Livechat: www.safespacesenglandandwales.org.uk

Safe Spaces is open, and there are no waiting lists for support.

You do not have to have reported the incident to the Church authorities or the Police in order to access support.

You do not need to be a current active member of the Church in order to access support.

The Rocket Science Report

Towards the end of last year, a contract was signed with Safe Spaces and Rocket Science, who are a market research company, to assess the performance of Safe Spaces since January 2023, when First Light took on the service. You might be aware that Rocket Science did the same thing regarding the initial 2-year pilot scheme and made some recommendations that have formed the core of our approach as we’ve tried to progress the service.

We sent out a questionnaire to everyone who uses Safe Spaces for whom we have an email address on in our records, and Rocket Science also interviewed 8 survivors early this year, and all the staff, including the manager and First Light’s CEO Lyn Gooding to ask our opinions on how the last 12 months or so have gone, what’s been good, what’s been tougher than expected, and lesson to learn for the future.

Having now seen the final draft of the report, we’re pleased with the content, and looking forward to being able to share it soon. There’s still lots to learn and changes we can make, but the feedback of survivors is vital for this, and we’re very grateful. If you’d like to provide feedback for the ongoing Rocket Science research, just get in touch and let us know!

Some further Safe Spaces updates…

Training – Over the last 12 months or so since we took on the Safe Spaces contract, First Light and the staff have all been searching far and wide for additional training to help us all understand the wider picture of abuse within the church, both from church bodies that we have regular contact with, and secular organisations too. This has included training on spiritual abuse, congregation ‘shunning’, LGBTQIA+ awareness including so called ‘conversion therapy’, and very shortly we shall be undertaking training designed to help us support survivors of abuse who also have criminal records or convictions for sexual offenses themselves, so we can work more safely and keep others safer through the work we continue to do.

Peer Support – As per the recommendations in the Rocket Science report for the 2 year pilot operation of Safe Spaces, we’ve started to make plans for peer support spaces provided by Safe Spaces. This isn’t a straightforward process, and we want to get it right and operate it safely, so we started by sending a questionnaire out to our service users, and the results were clear – you want peer support! We’ve now moved onto step 2, which is discussing with a few survivors in a steering group to make sure what we produce meets the needs of survivors, and does so safely. We’ve started to make enquiries too to get staff trained in peer support facilitation, so we can maintain a safe and supportive environment when we do launch the peer support service. We are really excited, and can’t wait to get the service up and running to add another string to our bow, and another way in which you can receive support and share your stories.

Engagement – Now that we’re fully staffed and up to speed with our knowledge and skillsets, we’re pushing on with our plans to further our outreach and engagement work. We’ve looked at our first year’s data and analysed it, to see if there are groups of people who are under-represented in Safe Spaces’ clientele. As such, we’ve seen that young people feature very rarely in our contact and support, and people who identify as coming from non-white British backgrounds. We can’t say too much, but we’ve identified ways we can begin to reach out to these communities, including increasing awareness of Safe Spaces in university and learning areas to appeal to younger people in particular, often living away from home for the first time and thinking about their faith and upbringing. We’ve got other plans afoot too, so watch this space!

Amplifying Survivor’s Voices

Feedback

“In my experience, you’re amazing and I’m more than happy to tell them that you’re instrumental in my healing. The other team members e.g. ***** have been helpful when involved too. You have all been wonderful and supportive.”

 

 “Your help / support is showing me I am a human being worth listening to.”

 

 “Sometimes my thoughts about certain emotions surrounding what has taken place in life change because I am healing / recovering. The biggest change in my mind is because of you.”

Survivor Contributions

We’re really keen to give survivors a Safe Space to express themselves and contribute to the recovery and wellbeing of other survivors as well as themselves.

With this in mind, in the future we’d like to dedicate this space to showcasing the insight, musings and myriad talents of the survivors we support.

We’d love to receive poetry, prose, photos of artwork or any other creative endeavours, and any suggestions or helpful tips to help others recover and thrive as you have done. Email anything relevant to safespaces@firstlight.org.uk or directly to your Survivor Advocate and we’ll gladly and proudly share it here.

Closing thoughts from the Safe Spaces manager

Thank you, once again, for your continued interest, feedback and support of Safe Spaces. Our staff work very hard to help people, and every little bit of feedback and encouragement we receive to remind us it’s appreciated goes a very long way.

Thank you also to those of you who completed the Rocket Science questionnaire and who provided more detailed feedback if you were asked. We look forward to asking more of you to participate in the second year of the project.

Thank you also to our partner agencies and commissioners for your help and guidance, and I hope you’re all having as good a start to 2024 as has been possible, in spit of the incessant rain!

Sincerely, Martin Christmas-Nelson

Newsletter November2023

Safe Spaces Newsletter

Quarterly Updates – Issue 1

November 2023

Welcome to Safe Spaces quarterly newsletter!

Thank you for signing up to receive our news! If you have been forwarded this document but want to receive it directly, you can sign up yourself at www.safespacesenglandandwales.org.uk

This is our first update since First Light took on responsibility for Safe Spaces in January, but we’ll be making it regular to keep you informed, and give you a chance to have your say about how things are going!

Contact us…

We are available Mon-Friday 0900-2100, Sat 0900-1300 and Sun 1300-1700

By phone: 0300 303 1056

Email: safespaces@firstlight.org.uk

Website and Livechat: www.safespacesenglandandwales.org.uk

Safe Spaces is open, and there are no waiting lists for support.

You do not have to have reported the incident to the Church authorities or the Police in order to access support.

You do not need to be a current active member of the Church in order to access support.

Some good news…

Since January, we’ve been aware that the Safe Spaces website is outdated, confusing and unclear. It has been an ongoing task to overhaul it and bring it into the 21st century and we’ve finally managed it!

The new website design has incorporated user feedback, input from other professionals, and a lot of hard work from First Light’s Communications Officer, and as a result features more concise and accurate information, a clearer layout, and much faster access to the resources that you might need, both inside and outside of our working hours.

Most importantly, it now features an online referral form, making it easier for survivors, professionals and anyone else to submit a referral to Safe Spaces, and for us to make sure all the information we need is clearly and accurately recorded, helping us to improve the quality of our support.

We hope you’re as happy with it as we are, but if you have any comments     or suggestions to improve it,                 let us know by emailing safespaces@firstlight.org.uk and we’ll do what we can!

Some further Safe Spaces updates…

Staffing – Since we took on the Safe Spaces contract in January, our staffing numbers have been steadily increasing to deal with demand. We’re delighted to say that we now have a full complement of staff working full time for Safe Spaces, consisting of a manager, 2 Support Advisors to operate the helpline, webchat and triage our new contacts, and 3 Survivor Advocates who provide longer term support to survivors. Thanks is due to all the survivors who offered to help during recruitment processes, from writing questions to sitting on interview panels. It’s wonderful to be able to use survivor voices to shape the service.  Information and bios for our staff are now available on the website. All staff continue to receive specialist training from secular and non-secular sources to further their understanding of church-related abuse. In addition, we have a pool of experienced staff who work on our out of hours helpline service.

 

Demand – Our service has steadily grown since January, reflecting the increase in demand and growing awareness of Safe Spaces. When our contract began, we inherited 43 survivor cases, and that number has now grown to 90 open cases being supported. We’re very proud of this growth, but also acutely aware that this is still just a drop in the ocean when considering the number of people who would benefit from our support, so we’re determined to grow further in the future.

 

Growth – As a combination of our successful recruitment and increased demand, we’ve now formulated a structured plan to further extend our reach and awareness of Safe Spaces, in particular within non-religious institutions so that we can reach those affected by abuse who no longer have a connection to the church. All our staff are now busy contacting a wide range of agencies including the police, Department for Work and Pensions, social care, Local Authorities, other charities and not-for-profit organisations, as well as strengthening our understanding and cooperation with Diocesan and Cathedral Safeguarding teams within the Church  of England, Church in Wales and Catholic Church in England and Wales. This has created opportunities to deliver talks, seminars and training sessions to raise awareness of church-related abuse and its impact, as well as the important role Safe Spaces can play in providing support to people who have been abused.

Amplifying Survivor’s Voices

Feedback

“Thank you for checking in and all the support you and Safe Spaces are giving me. I don’t think I’d be able to do this without you.”

“Thanks to the support of Safe Spaces, I feel lifted, my energy is coming back and I’m finding my voice again.”

“Thank you, Safe Spaces! I had a completely LIFE CHANGING call yesterday on the out of hours helpline. All of you are doing such an amazing job.  
I can’t thank you all enough.”

“I had felt like I was being prideful and arrogant for expressing anger and wanting vengeance toward the perpetrator. My Safe Spaces advocate helping me understand that this was my right to receive justice helped me move forward and feel”

Survivor Contributions

We’re really keen to give survivors a Safe Space to express themselves and contribute to the recovery and wellbeing of other survivors as well as themselves.

With this in mind, in the future we’d like to dedicate this space to showcasing the insight, musings and myriad talents of the survivors we support.

We’d love to receive poetry, prose, photos of artwork or any other creative endeavours, and any suggestions or helpful tips to help others recover and thrive as you have done. Email anything relevant to safespaces@firstlight.org.uk or directly to your Survivor Advocate and we’ll gladly and proudly share it here.

Closing thoughts from the Safe Spaces manager

Firstly, I’d like to thank you all for your continuing support and belief in Safe spaces as a force for good. It’s been a steep learning curve for First Light and for myself since we took on Safe Spaces in January, and I feel like we’re on the right track and making improvements as we learn and grow. The continued input and belief from survivors makes this much easier, and I’m eternally grateful for the help we’ve had along the way from you!

It’s been an honour and privilege to have the opportunity to help such a wonderful and diverse survivor group, and I look forward to working closely with many survivors in the future to continue to grow and develop our service to help even more people.

Sincerely,

Martin Christmas-Nelson (Safe Spaces manager)