NAVCA report shows a small surplus for the first time since 2013

23 Oct 2020 News

NAVCA has balanced its books and ended the financial year reporting a small surplus, for the first time since 2013.

In the financial year ending March 2020, the membership organisation for local infrastructure's spending was £377,431, while total income was £397,778. This amounted to a surplus of about £20,000.

NAVCA had expected to close the year with an operational deficit of £34,653 as a result of the immediate impact of the Covid-19 crisis. But after receiving emergency unrestricted grant funding, it ended the financial year with a surplus of £20,347.

Its annual review and financial statements state: “Emergency unrestricted grant funding totalling £55,000 received from Lloyds Bank Foundation and the Barrow Cadbury Trust in late March 2020 enabled us to close the year with a small surplus for the first time in nearly a decade.”

Along with further emergency grant funding from the Tudor Trust, the Paul Hamlyn Foundation, and the National Lottery Community Fund, it will be able to cover its core costs for the full year in 2020-21.

The report recognises that there will be upcoming challenges as a result of Covid-19. But NAVCA is “optimistic that we will be able to refocus our income generating activities and, in the medium to longer term, regain the advantages achieved in recent years to ensure a sustainable financial position”.

Judy Robinson, chair of NAVCA, said: “The annual report this year shows an organisation that has delivered and adapted to dramatically changing circumstances but has kept a firm fix on its core mission to support voluntary sector infrastructure.  

“Improving NAVCA’s financial stability has been one of the board’s aims. Towards the end of the year, the picture improved considerably and we will want to build on this for future sustainability.” 

Previous membership numbers ‘slightly misreported’

For the third consecutive year, NAVCA has gained more new members than it has lost. During the year, seven new members joined, while six did not renew.

Nonetheless, a data exercise has shown that in previous years the total number of members was “slightly misreported”. 

The figure which was previously given for 2018-2019 was 183, while the figure for 2019-2020 is 174.

NAVCA offers free membership to any eligible organisation with an income of less than £100,000 per year. 

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