The Church of England is overspending on HR and “politicised roles” such as diversity, social justice, LGBT and Net Zero officers at the expense of parishes, a report has warned. The Telegraph has the story.
Research by the think-tank Civitas found that a “managerial turn” in the Anglican church in the past two decades had left ordinary parishes “struggling to survive”.
The report, released on Wednesday, said the Church’s 42 dioceses had taken on “large numbers of staff” since the turn of the millennium while merging parishes and reducing clergy numbers to cut costs.
These administrative positions include human resources jobs and a series of “politicised roles” such as diversity, social justice, LGBT and Net Zero officers, the report found.
It means that “dioceses across the country now employ so many people that, on average, there is one administrator to every three-and-a-half priests”.
In Truro, the diocese covering Cornwall, there are as many as 39 diocesan officers to 41 clerics.
Analysis conducted for the report went on to find that 21% of diocesan spending is on administrative costs, almost double that of large charities like Oxfam (10%) and the RNLI (12%).
A spokesman for the Church of England said that “we don’t recognise the picture painted by this report”.
Esmé Partridge, the author of the report, told the Telegraph that the Church of England spends “millions of pounds” on bureaucracy at the “expense of parish churches”.
“In dioceses across the country, numbers of parish clergy are being cut, and those who remain tend to be thinly spread across large areas,” she said.
“The result is the disappearing presence of the Church within each community and, potentially, the loss of local heritage, charity and welfare.
“Against the CofE’s claim that the traditional parish model is unsuited to ‘the networks of contemporary life’, this report argues that there has never been a better time to revive the parish as a source of tradition, sanctity and community solidarity.”
The report also found that significant funds are being directed by the Church to “strategic mission and ministry investment” schemes which often involve the merging of parishes.
It pointed to one project in Wigan, Lancs, where the Diocese of Liverpool was given £1.2 million to reorganise churches into seven “hubs” accompanied by “worship communities” in unconventional settings.
In a report later commissioned by the diocese, it was found that churchgoing in the town declined by 30% and donations from congregants fell by a third following the “pastoral reorganisation”.
Worth reading in full.
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No costly massive grid up-grade needed for the 24/7/365 coal-fired cathedrals of power, that up to 25 years ago were located in close proximity to centres of population and coal fields.
Transmission losses and costs minimised, fuel transportation costs minimised – an elegant and definitive solution available across all parts of the country.
Blown to smithereens by planet-saving energy philistines, in favour of a dog’s breakfast grid that burdens Britain with the highest unit electricity prices in the world.
Non-existent problem, reaction. non-solution. Go figure, Kommissar for Energy Insecurity, Edward Samuel Miliband.
The Kommissar Must Fall.
Exactly.
What Millibrain is doing is providing the blueprint for how to run a National power grid into the ground and provide societal upheaval as a supplementary topping.
It’s enough to make people like me believe that this is being deliberately orchestrated.
No, surely not.
It’s almost like it was all originally planned by expert engineers, who knew what they were doing and were thinking long term… fancy that
With coal, gas, nuclear supply could be planned to match anticipated demand, forecast from historic data of demand patterns round the Country dependent on time of day, season and weather. And, as you say, generation took place close to zones of high demand.
Intermittency. This cannot be done with wind and solar, which are situated where conditions are optimal, not where there is demand.
There is no solution to this, except the lunacy of paying to keep a second dispatchable system operational in parallel as back-up to plug the gaps.
So how does this work at the boundaries between zones?
Two houses in different postcodes supplied from the same substation charged different prices?
Yes. Intended to foster social cohesion. The boundaries will probably fall along sectarian lines because as we all know…
…diversity is our strength.


I think the zones would be based on Grid Connection Points; the demarcation from the (national) HV transmission network (“The Grid”) and the (local) Distribution Networks.
You are already assigned a grid number so that when the rolling blackouts start you will know when it is your turn to sit in the dark and freeze.
Net Zero moves in mysterious ways its wonders to perform.
When I seek a quote to change tariff, I’m always asked for my postcode, which to me implies that there’s already some kind of differential pricing from one area to another. Perhaps that’s for gas? Does anyone know?
So they can identify you?
So they know where to send the bill?
What, when you’re only comparing quotes on one of those price comparison websites?
So they can sell the additional ‘insight’ to their ‘partners’… everything has a value
That makes sense. Thanks.
Supporters say the change will cut household electricity bills overall by reducing the need for grid upgrades
The only viable explanation for this statement is that demand will reduce in the South due to a lack of affordability, as prices increase beyond the ability to pay. Yet more evil treatment of the lower income population. Also, the last time I visited the Kent coast, the sea was covered by his spinning follies, the same as the Cornish moors. The seas off East Anglia and the vast fen lands are covered by the bleeding things as well as across the whole of Wales. So the question must be asked, where is this South that doesn’t have these mechanical monstrosities, or is the reality that there are enough of them, it’s just the wind to spin them that is lacking?
Maybe the real intention is to empty London of its newly accumulated rubbish and spread it round the country.
There is NOT a “North/South” divide.
There IS a South East/Rest of the country divide
The rural South West has a lot of poverty
If this bastard treats us as this suggests, there are going to be a lot of freezing people in the winter.
Basically the UK is a Poor country strapped to a wealthy city called London. All the jobs and industry that used to be in England have been given to people in India, China, Phillipnes etc so that they can bulid all the things we used to with cheap energy, which our elites then buy back into this country, so that they can tick their little box of Net zero and those of us outside London can look on whilst our jobs and communities are destroyed in order to reduce the worlds C02 by less than 1%.
I’d rather be poor in rural Somerset than rich in London.
Where we live – a small rural village – we are resolutely monocultural (culture is by definition MONO, as it pertains to a specific group of people) and so we have to use that ghastly phrase (remember Hazel Blears?
) real community cohesion, fresh air, and superb food.
Hear hear.
I presume your village is safely distanced from Bristol
Down here in rural Dorset – resolutely monocultural when I moved here almost a decade ago – we are starting to be “enriched.”
Fortunately it’s some distance from the “heavily diversified” Bournemouth …. and the resulting violent crime-wave which has wrecked what used to be a genteel seaside town.
So the Southerners who are outside of London but south of the Midlands are mostly dyed in the wool Conservative voters, wheras the Midlands upwards is now a battle between Labour and Reform. So Labour have decided to buy its votes in the North at the expense of the Conservatives in the South. (i do not live in the South) I disagree with this Socialist approach. Better to dump Net Zero and Milliband and drill baby drill, that way we can all prosper.
Milliband poised? Distinctly unbalanced, I’d say.
Since HMG and their acolytes started interfering in the UK energy markets all that has happened, after a very long period of fairly steady energy prices, is that the cost of energy has risen much faster than inflation. They have literally achieved nothing else, no greater energy security, no greater source diversity, no new technology, nothing; just higher bills.
Absolutely right you are, and it extends to all previously nationalized industries and public utilities, including water and transport, after they were chopped up, privatised and sold to foreigners. It was a huge mistake on Margaret Thatcher’s part. A total disaster for the British People.
Anyone believe this will make our bills lower? Anyone?? No takers?? Thought not.
So the windmills in Scotland that oversupply to the few users they have will not receive any constraint payments – yeah that will go down well. And then in the South East where there is a lack of supply so that we rely on the interconnectors – what then?
I think the Daily Sceptic ought to win a prize for funniest pictures of Ed Millipede.
If zonal pricing is introduced then every MPs’ house should be automatically rated as if it were in the top price zone, even after they leave Parliament and do not get re-imbursed.
Share the pain.
The real scam is that 100% of energy cost is based on the most expensive (back up to support so-called cheap renewables) which inevitably is the ever-more expensive imported gas!
The con is becoming ever-more transparent, yet even more unacceptable.
Perhaps an analogy:
You need to buy 12 bottles of prosecco @ £5 each
The shop has 11 bottles, so you add a bottle of champagne @ £50
In our dystopian world, you will be charged the price for 12 bottles of champagne!
It really is a con.
More lunacy from the Department for Energy Lunacy.
However, on the plus side it will wipe out the Labour Party from everywhere in the south, including London, where it won’t be long before we have Muslim Party MPs being elected.
Miliband is a blithering idiot, but a very dangerous blithering idiot. The idiot goes from ridiculous to absurd then back again and it almost as if he gets off on being a complete moron. You cannot run Industrial Society on the wind and sun, and as we add more and more wind the cost can only go one way —-UP. You will realise this is true by looking at your electric bills back to 2008 when the moron gave us the climate change act, and you should also realise it is true because whatever the imbecile says, the opposite will be true. So when he says bills will fall, you will know that the very opposite is what is going to happen. Miliband actually knows this as well, but he is a climate change grifter so is trying to deceive you for Political and Ideological reasons. ——So as you use more and more renewables you reach the boundaries of the energy reserve margin and we are all going to have a huge price to pay once the temporary government subsidies inevitably have to stop. We will also be suffering blackouts and the astronomical cost of storage, which will be many times more than the cost of the actual energy itself. —–This what you get when you put a UN lackey moron like Miliband anywhere near energy policy.
Another source of unfairness
How does charging me more because I live in the South where power used to be generated, lower my bills. Fxxxxxg lunatics, also in other news the Government has approved experiments to block out the Sun Mr Burns style, just as Billy no mates wanted. So we will be installing Endless Solar arrays and blocking out the sun simultaneously.
It doesn’t make sense.
How can charging more for something encourage increased demand for it?
The whole problem is there is an oversupply of electricity from wind installations that cannot be sold because either the oversupply occurs when overall demand is low, and/or cannot be sold locally.
The solution would be to lower prices everywhere to encourage use of the excess wind power in high demand areas, charging higher rates in those areas is counter-productive.
But there are technical problems. The oversupply cannot be fed into sectors of low demand to transmit to areas of high demand. Hence the recently proposed building of new HT transmission lines direct from remote wind installations to high demand areas – costly. Even then it won’t be possible to plan supply to match demand.
It is an intractable problem because of intermittency which cannot be solved by trying to defy physics and economics.
Claims it will overall reduce bills everywhere cannot possibly be true.