Conversely, bureaucratic outlook and preoccupation with procedure and policy amongst some of the remaining EAN directors may, arguably, have played a role in hampering its development.
The EAN directors have only created those legal and financial structures that helped the working groups within the EAN to develop. Classic case: Treebourne, rightly highlighted in this paper as a success, was able to secure large grants and funds, and to manage its finances, because of the legal and financial infrastructure provided for it by the directors. So the claim that the EAN directors hampered local eco-action is simply unfounded and represents a harmful distortion of the history of the EAN. A certain amount of bureaucracy is inevitable in a CIC, but the operating procedures set up by the EAN directors allowed working groups like Treebourne to focus purely on creating projects and fundraising for them without having to worry about the basic bureaucratic stuff.