We know that the world feels a little uncertain right now and for many of our customers and users, there is significant unease about how they will be able to fund some of their services during this crisis and beyond.
So when we hear of a potential funding source we like to try and share that information with our customers and users. The Community fund has been around for a long time and is a tried and test source of funds for community organisations of all sizes.
They are prioritising funding for communities affected by COVID-19 with a new £200 million fund.
Prioritising projects and organisations supporting communities through the COVID-19 pandemic. To apply for funds click the links below:
If you know of other sources of funding that might be of benefit to our other TeamKinetic users and would be happy to share that information please feel free to get in touch and we will do our best to share that information.
More than £42m has been axed from councils’ sports and leisure budgets since 2010, a BBC survey has revealed.
Among the regions which saw the biggest losses were London and north-west England, which saw cuts of more than £12.3m.
Sports stars and charities said they were concerned cutting facilities was “short-termism” that could impact on communities’ health and fitness levels.
The government said it was investing in grassroots sport.
Some of the biggest cuts occurred in the North West, where Liverpool City Council closed Woolton Swimming Pool, saving more than £3m.
In the West Midlands, which saw £9.6m of cuts, the region’s only 50m pool – in Coventry – was among the facilities to face the axe.
And in London, where budgets were cut by £8.8m, Mornington Crescent Sports Centre in Camden was among the facilities to close.
In other regions, Sheffield lost the Don Valley Stadium, where Olympic heptathlon champion Jessica Ennis-Hill had trained, while Newcastle-upon-Tyne saw the closure of its City Pool in 2013.
David Moorcroft, the Commonwealth Games gold medallist and former chief executive of UK Athletics, said: “In times of cutbacks to public services, rightly or wrongly, sport and leisure is one of the first things to get cut.
“It’s really unfortunate because the health and happiness of the nation and communities is based around being able to access facilities that encourage people to take physical activity.
“Ultimately, if we are trying to reduce obesity among young people, you can’t really have clubs and volunteers doing all that work. Once a facility is lost, it’s gone forever. When you come out of recession, it’s very difficult to rebuild it.”
Emma Boggis, chief executive of the Sport and Recreation Alliance which represents sports governing bodies in the UK, said she had “some sympathy” with local authorities “and the extreme financial pressures they are under”
“But reducing investment in sport and in leisure facilities is storing up problems for the longer-term,” she said.
“Limiting access to leisure facilities will result in greater inactivity and bigger costs to the NHS in terms of tackling conditions like diabetes, cardiovascular disease and depression.”
Sports and leisure spending since 2010
North West
-£12,372,959
West Midlands
-£9,638,972
London
-£8,891,367
North East
-£7,147,948
East
-£5,114,871
East Midlands
-£5,038,980
South West
-£3,347,463
Yorkshire
-£3,209,581
South East
£12,340,287
Total
£42,421,854
The Department for Culture, Media and Sport said £1bn of public money had been invested into grassroots sport through Sport England.
David Sparks, who chairs the Local Government Association, said councils had had “little choice” but to squeeze budgets.
“The reality is that, within a few years, well over half of the council tax everyone pays will have to be spent on social care,” he said.
“With demand on these life and death services continuing to rise and funding from central government continuing to fall, councils will have little choice.”
More than 1,400 extra volunteers and coaches will be recruited and trained to help deliver the School Games, DfE announced today.
Children’s Minister Edward Timpson announced the volunteer leaders and coaches grant will be extended for a further year at £490,000. The grant aims to increase the quantity and quality of the volunteer workforce supporting and developing the School Games.
The Sainsbury’s School Games is a national programme that aims to motivate and inspire millions of young people across the country to take part in more competitive sport. More than half of primary and secondary schools took part in 2012.
The money will be distributed through Sport England to county sports partnerships, with each receiving £10,000 to recruit, train and deploy 20 volunteer leaders and coaches to support the games – a total of 1,470 across the country. The majority of these volunteers will be young people between the ages of 16 and 25, as evidence suggests younger volunteers are more likely to continue to volunteer over time, and this gives young people the opportunity to be involved in sport once they leave school.
The announcement comes after the launch of Moving More, Living More, a cross-government strategy to increase participation in physical activity to provide an Olympic and Paralympic legacy for the nation.
Children’s Minister Edward Timpson said:
I have seen just how much of a difference the School Games can make to young people and I’m delighted to announce this extension to help the programme go from strength to strength. I’m proud of this government’s work to secure the Olympic legacy and I’m determined to ensure all children have the chance to play sport and keep fit at school.
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