I'm running in to the sand here......
the options are
1. Continue as a Cheam and Morden ride. Except we can't because the issue of non-members rears its ugly head
http://www.ctc.org.u...mber_Groups.pdf
2. Make each ride a CTC event. That gets us off the non-member hook, but each ride to be advertised in Cycle and every rider has to sign a disclaimer for every ride - and it doesn't grant non-CTC members third party insurance
3. Become an affiliate of the CTC. Start-up cost £72. That's not entirely bad. I could insist that all non-CTC members pay their twelve quid to become members of the club. That's tough on LCC members and BC members and even those people who have pukka third party insurance through their house insurance.
http://www.ctc.org.u...-Affiliates.pdf Membership of the Club would be a quid, but non-CTC members would be charged £12. The real worry is that there is no way of knowing whether the helpers (TECs and Wayfinders) would be covered.
4. Go for event insurance through BC. That covers everything, but costs £60 per 100 riders - effectively £720 a year - that would have to be recouped by charging people - anything up to a quid a ride. I'd be forever collecting money.
5. Become a BC affiliated club. Pretty much the same as 3 above, but start-up cost £88 and non-BC members would be charged £24 each.
6. Become an LCC affiliate. My first choice, but eight months of phone calls and promises have resulted in precisely nothing - they simply haven't got it together on the affiliates thing. The low point is receiving e-mails saying that they wanted to double the membership. The other low point was being told before Christmas that two people employed by the LCC couldn't get together because of the snow....
7. Join the LCC and run it as an LCC ride. I'm still working on this one
In the long run it's got to become a stand-alone club with a modest membership fee and access to insurance, but it looks as if 2011 will be a sort of halfway station.