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The Case of Bradford St. Swithins



         This is a pseudonym for a well-to-do parish in the moderately

affluent suburbs of the metropolitan area. Its congregation will be

drawn largely from that group of professional classes which is probably

most able to handle routine business affairs, and to generate and act

upon sensible initiatives, supplying both the finance and the skills

necessary to carry them to fruition. It is also blessed - if that is

the right word - with a particularly lofty church, so lofty that it

occurred to someone to insert a mezzanine floor about half-way up,

thus reducing the expense of heating the main body of the church when

used for services, and providing a separate upper room which could be

used as a venue for social functions. The proposal was given prelimi-

nary approval by the Parochial Church Council, a surveyor was consulted

to see if it was technically possible, and his opinion being favourable,

an architect also to prepare for the necessary works. All was proceeding

nicely until the financial aspects were studied in some detail - and the

result rapidly stopped everything. It was obvious that the financial

outlay would exceed the parish's financial resources, notwithstanding

how large those might be, and that the potential savings on heating

would be insignificant by comparison. Had the parish really been able

to stop at that point they might well have come out sadder and wiser

but no worse in pocket, but unfortunately they were already committed

to the architect's bill in order to meet which they had to exhaust

their reserves, and were consequently unable to pay their parish share

for that year - a matter of considerable embarrassment all round. The

failure to undertake adequate capital investment appraisal was both

costly and on the face of it inexcusable - why then was it not done?

A chance remark made by the Diocesan Secretary may give an indication:

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