John Ferguson obituary published
A full obituary of John Ferguson MBE, honorary president and founding member of Parkhead Housing Association (PHA), has appeared in The Herald.
Described as a ‘man of action’ in the housing association movement, Mr Ferguson passed away at the age of 85 in June.
The obituary has been reproduced in full below:
John Ferguson, who has died aged 85, was a leading figure in the community-based housing association movement that began in the 1970s. He was honorary president and founding member of Parkhead Housing Association (PHA) and spent 50 years trying to make his own community, Parkhead in the east end of Glasgow, and Scotland a better place.
He was born in 1939 in Parkhead, where he lived all his life. Mr Ferguson was one of six children and the oldest son, becoming the “head of the family” when his father died in 1965.
His youngest brother, Gary, 69, said: “When we lost our father, I was 10 and John took over the reins. He kept me in check.”
John and his wife Rita, had a son, David, and after John’s national service he proudly became a volunteer in the Army reserves.
His day job was as a bus driver at Parkhead Depot, but he was also a founding member of his local housing association.
The community-based housing association movement began in Glasgow. The district council and the Scottish Office needed community-led bodies that could manage the complex rehabilitation and improvement of the tenemental housing stock.
Mr Ferguson grasped the opportunity for Parkhead and helped set it up in 1977. It now owns more than 1,700 homes and has 58 staff.
Jim Strang, a former chief executive of PHA, said: “John and a few others started with nothing but ambition, clarity of thought and a broken typewriter.”
A tireless advocate for social housing, Mr Ferguson dedicated more than 45 years to PHA, and served multiple terms as chairman, playing a pivotal role in the regeneration of the area.
PHA was involved in difficult and new problems to improve tenements that had commercial premises and multiple owners. Looking at Parkhead Cross today you can see it worked.
He was also involved with the community council, fought for the improvement of housing and healthcare and was still involved in local health issues up to his death.
His unwavering commitment to services to the housing association movement saw him awarded an MBE in 2000.
PHA chief executive Aileen Mcguire said: “We owe a debt of gratitude to John for his commitment to the association over his many years of service and his dedication to the Parkhead community. He was such a big character and such an important person in our history, he will be sorely missed.”
Mr Ferguson served on the executive committee of Employers in Voluntary Housing (EVH) and as a board member of the Scottish Federation of Housing Associations (SFHA). He attended the initial meeting and seconded the motion to form the Glasgow Federation of Community Based Housing Associations (which would become EVH) in 1978.
Mr Ferguson wanted to ensure each association offered its staff a good standard set of terms and conditions and ensure workers were adequately represented by a trade union.
He became a stalwart chairing the Joint Negotiating Committee for more than 30 years, was fully involved at critical stages in its development – from first staff being appointed, establishment of its unique health and safety service, and expansion beyond Glasgow and the west of Scotland to the whole of the country.
Part of his strength was his long experience as a trade union negotiator and activist on Strathclyde Buses. He brought that experience and an independent and fair-minded approach to issues before the negotiating committee. This was supplemented with his involvement until he was 70 as a Justice of the Peace sitting at the District Court in John Street, Glasgow.
It was typical that he fought his arbitrary retiral as a JP at 70, even to the extent of a petition and campaign to the Scottish Parliament.
Mr Ferguson was a one-off and it is unlikely there will be anyone whose commitment will be so long and effective. He dedicated his life to public service and over 50 years a lot changed, but he took it on. He could be a difficult man to lock horns with, but he never wavered from putting community interest first, over personal taste.
His son David summed him up: “I always think of him as this strong man but also a loving dad. He was a passionate family man, very dedicated and protective of his relatives. But he was also a powerful character. People who came across him liked and respected him.
“He was the kind of person that would take no nonsense. He was very honest; he would never lie. He was never unfair, judgmental, biased, or bigoted.
“He was also a man of action, determined to be active and make a difference in life.”
This obituary first appeared in The Herald