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The Big Lottery Fund (BIG) will open £50m of investment to the voluntary and community sector in England this week to help organisations cope with funding cuts.
Some £17m of the funding will provide support to an additional 650 charitable and community projects, while the remaining £33m will help existing projects within BIG’s portfolio.
The funding available to new projects will be distributed through BIG’s current Reaching Communities and Awards for All programmes. Reaching Communities currently provides grants of between £10,000 to £500,000 for new or existing community projects helping those in the most need. Awards for All offers small grants of between £300 and £10,000 to community projects.
Uniquely, grants of up to £10,000 will be made available to almost 1,000 existing grantholders within the last 18 months of their projects to allow them to review their projects, and a number of projects evidenced to be having a particularly significant impact will also receive an additional year’s funding.
Dharmendra Kanani, England director for BIG (pictured) told civilsociety.co.uk that this funding will provide a welcome opportunity for voluntary and community sector organisations to consider their futures:
“I think you’ll find that most voluntary and community sector organisations will welcome this funding as quite unique and distinct from funders across the board. I’m not sure I’ve come across this kind of opportunity being made available... and not just in these current circumstances, but I think historically.”
The new funding programme is something Kanani has been planning since he joined the lottery distributer last year, he said. Working with NCVO, Navca and other umbrella organisations, BIG has been using its regional structure to undertake a year’s worth of analysis of what is happening at ground level.
“Rather than jump in with cash and say, well here is some support, it’s actually trying to understand how we can add value as a lottery distributer to circumstances and experiences of the voluntary and community sector in England, in this very dynamically changing, turbulent circumstance that we find ourselves in,” he said.
“How do you support voluntary and community sector organisations to adapt and respond to the changing nature of the environment they find themselves in, and do that in a way that has no strings attached to it. To do that in a way that’s actually meaningful, and provide respite, breathing space. It’s giving organisations thinking time to the vortex of what they are doing, to think about how do I respond, do I need to change my business model, do I need to collaborate, do I need to think very differently about how I’m doing things, or, actually, is this the end of the road, and how can I safely, securely close down this operation without having a negative impact on those we serve?”
NCVO research estimates that voluntary and community groups will face a reduction in public funding of over £900m by 2016 and a total loss of £2.8bn in that period.
Sir Stuart Etherington, NCVO chief executive said: “This funding will provide some welcome relief for the sector during these challenging times, and help voluntary organisations to continue providing vital services.
The new funds will open for applications this week. Projects currently within the grants programme which are eligible to apply will receive an email, a BIG spokesperson advised.
Ranu Mehta-Radia
Fundraiser & Services Coordinator
Larches Community
26 Oct 2011
Great news, esp today being Diwali when supposedly Goddess of Wealth, Laxmi goes round blessing all homes and businesses, May She shower her generosity on the whole Charity Sector so we can continue supporting some of the most disadvantaged in our communities.
Lorraine Walker
Manager
Bliss Mediation
26 Oct 2011
The new funding will be a good help to struggling organisations. Please will some of this funding go to front line delivery, we are facing a huge lack of funding and while trying to develop other areas to create sustainability, it has a big effect on the service. There is more demand from public and less staff to deliver work.
Hope this will be available as soon as possible before many small and medium sized organisation close down, there is more work done by the small and medium front line in the community, but still the funding is going to large national third sector companies. They have bid writers, finance, workers, we have to do all the work with few staff. How can we compete, tv advertising, door knocking, all these costs out of finance before delivery. Sorry to sound negative as we have had support from the lottery in the past, but I agree now there is a urgent need for support to develop sustainability, not by offering us training we are trained out.
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Raymond Witherley
secretary b.a.a
bankfields allotments association
25 Dec 2011
the news of this funding is great it comes at a time when small voluntary
organisations are struggling to complete there projects we hope some of this funding will come to the eston area of cleveland.
best wishers in 2012
ray witherley b.a.a
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