Tribunal upholds Commission's merger decision but orders changes
24 May 2012
The Charity Tribunal has upheld the Charity Commission’s decision to allow two independent schools in...
Minister for civil society Nick Hurd has written an open letter to the sector that seeks to explain the “strategic framework” underpinning the government’s recent policy initiatives.
In it, he states that the government believes its efforts to grow giving and social investment will enable charities and social enterprises to “access significantly more resource”.
The letter, which mentions the “Big Society vision” as soon as the second paragraph, is effectively a reiteration of all the actions taken by the government recently to pursue the agenda and expands on the thinking behind them.
These include increasing giving, cutting red tape, National Citizen Service and Community Organisers and Community First.
Hurd goes on to say that the Big Society agenda contains “three major long-term opportunities for civil society” – the opportunity to deliver more public services; the opportunity to shape local priorities, and the opportunity to “access significantly more resource”.
The government will facilitate these opportunities, he says, by making it easier to run a charity or social enterprise, making it easier to work with the state, and getting more resources into the sector.
At the end, however, he reminds readers that “this agenda of opportunity has to be reconciled with the urgent need to reduce government borrowing”.
“What is at stake is an economic recovery which the social sector needs to see as much as everyone else. A sector which receives £13bn of taxpayers’ money a year cannot be immune from the painful but necessary process of reducing government expenditure.”
Stephen Lulsley
Independent commentator and consultant
12 Oct 2011
So yet another iteration of what we already know. Less from government, more to be magicked from the already fast emptying pockets of Joe and Jane Public.
While we apparently have to suffer cuts from a 13 billion annual budget, of which a good slice is gift aid from the taxpayer anyway, it's still good to go to spend hundreds of millions bombing Libya and Afghanistan. So thats OK then, we can all be happy our government has the right priorities ... NOT!
24 May 2012
The Charity Tribunal has upheld the Charity Commission’s decision to allow two independent schools in...
24 May 2012
The Department for Education has issued an invitation to tender for delivery of the National Citizen Service...
24 May 2012
The Charity Law Association has recommended trustees are given the legal freedom to invest on a total...
25 May 2012
The Higher Education Funding Council for England has hinted at the possibility of collaboration with the...
25 May 2012
The Esmée Fairbairn Foundation is surprised not to have been inundated with applications for funding...
24 May 2012
Charities are being urged to abandon balloon releases in a Twitter a campaign.
25 May 2012
From tomorrow the Information Commissioner’s Office will enforce the law requiring all websites to inform...
24 May 2012
Charities are being urged to abandon balloon releases in a Twitter a campaign.
24 May 2012
Missing People is hoping to track down missing children using Twitter.

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Graham Hackett
Project Director
Church Links
12 Oct 2011
Once again we see the Tory underlying trends and the Politicians total disregard for the suffering of the ordinary people of the UK. The Voluntary Sector are expected to pick up the pieces for an ever decreasing income! How do they expect a small Charity to be able to survive trying to compete for Local Service Contracts against a large Private Company. Frances Maude has had to admit it can't be a level playing field!! BIG SOCIETY PAH!! BIG CON!!
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