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Organisation
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Contact
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Information
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| Prince's Trust |
www.princes-trust.org.uk
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| The Football Foundation |
www.footballfoundation.org |
Seeking Funding
Facilities Scheme mainly
supports organisations that want to build, develop or improve
facilities to maintain or increase involvement in grass roots
football.
Types of facilities we fund include:
•
grass pitches drainage/improvements
•
pavilions, clubhouses and changing rooms
•
artificial turf pitches and multi-use games
areas
•
fixed floodlights for artificial pitches.
We also provide funding to deliver football development
associated with the new facility e.g. coaching, football
development officer etc.
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The Grant-makers
Youth Opportunity Fund
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Brent Youth Service
Bridge Park, Brent Field, Harrow
Road, Stonebridge NW10
0RG TEL: 020 8937
3680 |
Youth opportunity fund and Youth
Capital fund is money for young people coming into Brent. You have
to be within the ages of 13 and 19 to be able to apply for this
money.The money is to stop adults always making up the
rules for young people. There is £332,412 for this year and the
same again for next year. The money is for projects and some of the
money can be spent on goods and for maintenance of
buildings.
The grant makers are a group of young people, part of
Brent Youth Matters 2, who have been trained by Youth Bank UK who
will give out money to young people. They will decide how much to
give and whether they think young people will spend the money in
the best way to help themselves and their community.
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Young Roots
Heritage Lottery Fund
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7 Holbein
PlaceLondon SW1W 8NRTEL: 020
7591 6000 |
Young Roots offers grants
of between £5,000 and £25,000. The scheme aims to involve
13-20 year-olds (up to 25 for those with special needs) in finding
out about their heritage, developing skills, building confidence
and promoting community involvement. Young Roots projects stem
directly from young peoples' interests and ideas, harnessing their
creativity and energy and helping them work with others in their
local community. |
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LDA Opportunities Fund
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Devon
House58 – 60 Katharine’s
wayLondon E1W 1JXTEL: 020
7680 2000http://www.lda.gov.uk/server/show/ConWebDoc.1591 |
The London Development Agency's Opportunities Fund has
been designed to encourage and support locally delivered projects
which make a real impact on London's economic development. It
supports a range of innovative projects designed to help regenerate
pockets of deprivation across London. Many of the projects break
down barriers to employment for disadvantaged groups and are led by
community and voluntary organisations which have both the ambition
and local knowledge to make both a significant and sustainable
impact. The application process for the fund is an annual event,
although the grants may be awarded over a period of up to three
years.
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Princes Trust
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Call us
free on
0800 842 842, click here to fill
out on online form or get in touch with your
local Prince’s Trust
office. |
A new basket ball court, a music
studio, a youth club, sex workshops in schools, a youth advisory
board, even a local magazine. Something that will add value to life
in your local community.Anyone between 14-25 who is
either:
- Unemployed – out of work, or working less than 16 hours a
week
- Offenders or ex-offenders – if you hold a criminal
record, have been or are currently on probation
- Care leavers – if you’re in or have recently left care;
or
- Educational underachiever – if you got less than five
GCSEs.
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| Big Boost
Funding |
For more
information:
Tel: 0845 4 10 20 30
Email: info@thebigboost.org.uk |
For young people aged 11-
25 years old to run local projects The Big Boost gives awards of
between £250 and £5,000 to young people, to help them get their
ideas off the ground. |
|
Learning and Skills Council -
London
|
Application details are
available at http://www.londono3.ecotec.co.uk/panlondon2/olympics/
or by calling the programme managers, ECOTEC, on 020 7089
1976. |
A special bidding round has been
launched as part of the London ESF Olympics Programme.
Unfortunately, despite the scheme’s name, these are not awards for
the greatest heights scaled in application jargon, or the longest
stretch of imagination in output planning, but grants to support
employment training to deal with the employment issues posed by the
London 2012 Olympic Games. |
| John Pitman Charitable
Trust |
Apply in writing to:
Neil Winckless,
The John Pitman Charitable Trust,
Sloane Winckless & Co, Britannia Chambers, 181–185 High
Street,
New Malden, Surrey
KT3 4BH.
| Co-operative Group
Community Dividend |
For more information, to get the
application form or to discuss your project idea, call 0161 827
5879.
Closing date: Applications will be accepted throughout
2006. You need to allow four months for your application
to be processed. |
This scheme covers all local
community groups (not just rural ones) that are within range of a
Co-operative business outlet. Indeed, once checked for basic
eligibility all applications are passed on to your local
Co-operative Group area committee for
comment. There are 50 such committees within the UK.
Over £1 million a year is given through this scheme, and grants can
run to £5000.
You don’t have to be a charity, but if you are applying for more
than £500 you will need to show evidence of the formal nature of
your organisation and that you will be able to properly manage any
money you will be given. Local branches of national
charities can apply. Grants must be spent on one-off activities
rather than running costs. Support will not be given to projects
where there is a statutory responsibility for delivery of the
service. Preference is given to activities that are in line with
co-operative values, that show innovation or imagination, and which
target specific groups or areas of need
within disadvantaged communities. |
| Four Acre
Trust |
The application form is at
www.fouracretrust.org.uk/application.html
You can also e-mail info@fouracretrust.org.uk
The contact address is:
Four Acre Trust
P.O. Box 48
Wotton-under-Edge
GL12 7WZ
Closing date: Applications are dealt with as received and the
Trustees need them
by the middle of the month preceding their meetings in April, June,
August,
October and December 2006. |
Since its formation 10 years
ago, the Four Acre Trust has consistently built its capital as well
as increased its grants expenditure. The founder, John Bothamley,
has now decided that he wants to cash in the capital and wind down
the Trust over the next eight years, and he has embarked on a
‘spend out’ policy that should see an extra £2.5 million a year or
so available for grants. The Trust will concentrate its new
spending
power on building long-term relationships with charitable
organisations that prevent problems rather than simply cure them.
It is likely that a third of grants will go to international
projects, and the Trustees wish in particular to benefit charities
working with young people. Grants will range from £3000 to £300,000
and can support core costs and occasional capital costs.
The new spending power is likely to see changes to what the Trust
funds in the coming months. At present the funding criteria
published on the Trust’s Web site identify:
• Respite Care and Holidays, covering subsidised holidays,
provision of refuges, and respite care for carers (young ones in
particular);
• Relief of Health and Disability, with: health centre, nursing
salaries and teaching costs covered for rehabilitation back into
society; mobility improvement projects leading to personal
independence; and low cost cataract operations;
• Vocational Guidance and Education, covering training for work,
work schemes for people with learning difficulties, and adventure
centres that build confidence. We suggest you check for the latest
position, and the Trust welcomes phone calls on 01453 844129 much
more than it welcomes time-wasting applications for something it
doesn’t support. |
| Report Calls for Major
Regeneration Funding Shake-up
(London) |
http://www.alg.gov.uk/doc.asp?doc=16686&cat=937 |
The Commission on London
Governance has published its final report 'A new settlement for
London' which calls for a major shake-up of the way the capital is
governed and the way that regeneration funding is administered. The
recommendations include the streamlining of current regeneration
funding, devolving the management of funds to a more local (borough
wide) level and the release of post 16 education and skills
development funding from the Learning and Skills Councils in order
to achieve a more integrated social and economic regeneration
framework. |
| Mustard Seed
Programme |
For further information on both
funds download a Grants Manual which contains full eligibility
details by visiting the website at: www.cuf.org.uk/cuf.asp.comFor
questions relating to the Mustard Seed Programme contact Brian
Reehl at brian.reehl@cuf.org.uk
or by telephone on 020 7898 1649 |
This small grants fund is part
of the Church Urban Fund and aimed at churches and faith based
organisations. Its aim is to help them engage in social action
through supporting them initiate, develop and formulate ideas and
opportunities in preparation for undertaking larger pieces of
work.
Funding of up to £5,000 is available for a period of 12 months for
specific activities but not for on-going expenditure. The
application process has been simplified to encourage new groups
that have new ideas they really want to test and try out.
The Church Urban Fund also offers a main grants Programme which
offers funding of between £5,000 and £30,000 which will fund
capital and revenue costs. Again, this grant is intended to be a
first-funder. |
Nationwide
Foundation - Small Grants Programme (Domestic
Violence)
|
Contact
Details
Applications are only available via the website
at:
www.nationwidefoundation.org.uk/funding2.asp
or telephone 01793 655 113 for more information. |
The theme this programme
supports is Domestic Violence which the Government defines
as:
"Any incident of threatening behaviour, violence or abuse
(psychological,
physical, sexual, financial or emotional) between adults who
are or have been
intimate partners or family members, regardless of gender or
sexuality."
The focus is on funding work which offers ways of preventing
domestic violence at the outset or preventing its reoccurrence, and
that which helps those affected by domestic violence
issues.
Preference will be given to work which focuses on volunteers,
black and minority ethnic (BME) groups, preventative measures e.g.
research programmes, courses, workshops, seminars; young people 0 -
18 years, mediation, peer support, local projects, collaborative
projects and advocacy.
In order to qualify for a grant your organisation must be a
registered charity and not have an income exceeding £250,000 in
your last financial year.
Grants will be made up to a maximum of £1,500. There is no
deadline but
applications must be received by post and decisions will take
four months to make. |
| The Baring
Foundation |
Please re-visit this web-site in
March 2006 for more information.
http://www.baringfoundation.org.uk/ |
The Strengthening The Voluntary
Sector programme 2006
The main features of the new programme will be: grants of £20,000
to £100,000 over up to five years; an open application process
through a single annual round; no geographical restrictions, any
constituted not-for-profit voluntary organisation in England,
Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland will be able to apply. The
grants programme will continue to fund work that will bring about a
significant and lasting change in the effectiveness of an
organisation. There will be a theme to focus the grants programme.
This theme is currently under discussion. |
| Art Plus 07 Open for
Bids |
For full details of how to apply
and past winners see www.artscouncil.org.uk/artplusawards |
Art Plus is an award scheme for creative ideas.
Organisations (for example community or arts organisations, local
authorities, private sector partners, education providers, health
trusts and environmental groups) and artists in the south east
stand to benefit from funding and support totalling
over £250,000 for the 2007 Awards. Art Plus offers
development awards of up to £5,000 for individual artists and
£10,000 to organisations. Final awards can be made up to £50,000
for organisations and £5,000 for individuals. Art Plus aims to be
inclusive and welcomes applications from black and minority ethnic
or disabled people and organisations.
|
| Sport
England |
http://www.sportengland.org/index/get_funding/how_funding_works/
london_regions_priorities_for_funding.htm |
This year Sport England has £2
million to distribute to projects in London. Projects must
contribute to overall aim of the London Plan – increasing
participation in sport and physical activity in London by 1% per
annum. |
| Bridge House
Trust |
www.bridgehousetrust.org.uk |
Bridge House Trust aims to
address disadvantage by supporting charitable activity across
Greater London through quality grant making and related activities
, within clearly defined priorities. |
| Esmee Fairbairn
Funding for East
England |
For further information, please
contact Patrick Webb at: p.webboffice@onetel.net |
The Esmee Fairbairn Foundation
has recently highlighted the lack of applications from the East of
England to its main grant programmes. In particular, the
Foundation’s education programme is under-subscribed, further
details of which can be found on: http://www.esmeefairbairn.org.uk/programmes/edu.html
The Foundation would be very pleased to hear from any Eastern
region organisations that might be interested in applying for a
grant. |
| Report on VCS
funding |
Read the full report at the link
below. http://digbig.com/4fsgm |
Amicus, the trade union which
represents some voluntary sector workers, has recently produced a
report entitled 'Short Term Funding, Short Term Thinking'. The
report looks at the issues raised by short-term funding cycles in
the voluntary and community sector. |
New Big Lottery Fund Grant
|
0845 410 20
30 you can also obtain a Reaching Communities
pack and guidance notes. For more visit http://www.biglotteryfund.org.uk. |
The three-year programme,
launched on 7 December 2005, will make up to £100 million available
in 2006-07, with future budgets being set annually. Reaching
Communities will give grants of more than £10,000 and up to
£500,000, including a maximum of £50,000 for capital grants. We
have set a maximum overall project size of £750,000 and £200,000
for the total capital element within a project. We will fund
projects for up to five years. |
|
Up to £2,500 for Christians,
carers, disabled & isolated. If your charity supports housing,
infrastructure, health care, community facilities or Anglican
churches, you can apply for this for capital or revenue grants up
to 3 years. |
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Bog Lottery Fund – Community Buildings
|
0845 4 10 20 30 or
email enquiries.lon@biglotteryfund.org.uk 1
Plough
PlaceLondonEC4A
1DE |
They fund
economically, socially and environmentally sustainable
buildings (includes
community centres, village halls &
other community buildings
supporting local communities). You can apply for grants of
over £50,000 and up to £500,000 to improve, replace or
create community facilities. If your
project costs more than £250,000, you will need to find match
funding. Development grants of up to £25,000 are
available. |
| Children's
Play |
Further information on this
process will be available in the new year. For more visit:
http://www.biglotteryfund.org |
This programme will open to
applications in March 2006 and first grants will be announced in
autumn 2006. There will be four deadlines for the submission of
applications: July 2006, November 2006, March 2007 and September
2007. In addition to the £124 million for local authority areas a
further £31 million of funding is available. This will be used to
fund a regional support and development infrastructure and to
commit to projects under a programme for innovation in children’s
play. This innovation programme will also open to applications in
March 2006 but the funding will be available through a different
process to that described for the Children’s Play programme. It
will be open to the voluntary, community and social enterprise
sector, and applications will be accepted at any time up to
2008. |
| Cadbury Schweppes
Foundation |
Anna Lucuk
Cadbury Schweppes PlC
25 Berkeley Square London W1J 6HB
Telephone: 020 7830 5197 Fax: 0207 830 5137 |
Up to £70,000 is available for
projects supporting education, enterprise or employment,
particularly if working with ‘at risk’ or ‘socially excluded’
groups. |
| eWell-Being
awards |
Closing date is 2 December.
SustainIT
UK CEED
Priestgate House
3/7 Priestgate
Peterborough
PE1 1JN
UK
Tel 01733 312286
Fax 01733 312782 |
The eWell-Being Awards are open
to local authorities, businesses and voluntary sector organisations
using ICT to deliver real benefits to society.
|
| Awards for
All |
Awards for All London, Big
Lottery Fund, 1st Floor, 1 Plough Place, London, EC4A 1DE http://www.awardsforall.org |
The London region of Awards for
All is seeking more applications to fund community projects that
either benefit the disabled or their carers or increase
accessibility for the disabled to community activities.
The Awards for all programme is able to provide grants of £ 500 to
£ 5000 that will enable or improve disabled access to a wide range
of organisation types and activities i.e.: wheelchair ramps,
disabled toilets, sign language interpreters, Braille, IT such as
talking books, sharing information, awareness raising,
etc. |
| CAFOD’s development
education
fund |
CAFOD Romero Close Stockwell SW6
6TY
Tel: 0207 066 0084
Email: mmcneil@cafod.org.uk
See www.cafod.org.uk |
Youth groups and projects with a
global justice focus can apply to CAFOD for funding upto a maximum
of £3000. Applications highlighting specific themes for young
people (between 13 and 25) and including them in the planning,
delivery and evaluation of activities are most welcome. Application
Deadline:9th December 2005 |
| Edward Harvist Trust
Fund 06/07 |
Dipti
BhattVoluntary Sector Team6th Floor,
Mahatma Gandhi House34 Wembley Hill
RoadWembley, Middx HA9
8ADTelephone No: 020 8937 3671 or email
dipti.bhatt@brent.gov.uk or voluntaryservice@brent.gov.uk |
The Voluntary Sector Team
(Housing & Community Care) are inviting applications from Brent
based voluntary organisations and community groups for a one-off
small grant. The Edward Harvist Trust Fund is a
bi-annual grant awarded to local organisations assisting with one
off projects, events, equipment, activities (e.g. summer play
schemes) that will benefit residents in the Borough.
Funding of up to £5,000 is available for each project.
Organisations that are approved for funding will be notified by 1
December 2006. |
| Save the Children and
British Gas - Here to HELP Awards -Deadline: 20 October
2006 |
For further info please go to
http://www.helpyourselves.org.uk/index.jsp
|
The ‘Here to HELP’ Awards are
designed to get young people in Great Britain more involved in
their communities through speaking out on issues which affect them
and get them more involved with local decision making.
Over three years Save the Children and British Gas want to
fund 300 projects across Britain. Groups of young people can apply
for up to £1000 to start a project that they feel will address a
need in their community. |
| Trusthouse Charitable
foundation |
Richard HopgoodThe
Trusthouse Charitable FoundationTel: 020
73206996 |
Small grants (capital and
revenue) between £500 and £10,000 and large grants (capital only)
ranging from £10,000 to £50,000. |
| Comic Relief Small
Grants |
www.comicrelief.com Tel:
020 7820 5555 |
Comic Relief Small Grants are
provided towards the running costs for user-led mental
health groups. You can apply for a small grant in the
following three programmes only.• Disadvantaged
Communities• Older People• Mental
HealthComic Relief offers £5,000 to help people with
mental health problems to get voices heard. If
you are a group with less than £150,000 income then you
can apply for a grant They usually make grants
for between one to three years. They are likely to make some large
grants, and a range of smaller grants of between
£15,000 and £30,000 each year. |
| Foyle
Foundation |
020 7430 9119 or
www.foylefoundation.org.uk |
This trust supports learning,
arts & health projects for registered charities. They prefer
learning (libraries, museums, special educational needs &
learning difficulties);performing & visual arts
(new audiences, tours, arts education, emerging artists); and
health (active contribution to improved health care
& smaller charities) under revenue & capital. |
|
Health Foundation
Shared Leadership
|
To register your interest
in the scheme, please email BME@health.org.uk
and they should contact you with further
information as soon as it is available. If you
are too passionate about your project call 020 7257 8000 or
www.health.org.uk |
This scheme will seek to not
only improve healthcare for people from BME populations, but also
enhance their experience of the healthcare system. It will do this
by offering leadership development and support for up to six teams,
drawn from different organisations and working at a
local level: heart disease (particularly affects
Pakistani, Bangladeshi, Indian, Mixed White & Asian groups),
diabetes (higher than average impact on Asian, Black Caribbean
& Black Other); stroke (Black Caribbean &
Indian men at higher risk); severe mental illness
(disproportionately high numbers of Black Caribbean men diagnosed
with schizophrenia).They will be particularly
interested in receiving applications from those projects that
involve partnership working across the primary care, social care,
acute services and the voluntary sectors. |
|
Unltd - Refugee Initiative
for Social Entrepreneurs
|
For more information please
call 020 7566 1100 or see www.unltd.org.uk |
RISE – UnLtd’s Refugee
Initiative for Social Entrepreneurs - has been set up with the Home
Office and the European Refugee Fund to
encourage refugees in England to set up projects that will make
their communities a healthier, happier, safer and more just place.
UnLtd will be giving awards of between £500 and £5,000 to help
individuals and small groups of refugees from anywhere in England
turn their ideas into reality. UnLtd will provide dedicated support
including; training opportunities, tools and resources to help
refugees develop their skills and initiatives. The scheme
will fund and support more than 75
refugees over two years and will benefit over 2,000 people in
the community. |
| Switched On
Communities |
For an app. form and more
information please go to http://www.dsgiplc.com/ |
The aim of the programme, which
is being managed through the DSG International Foundation is to
tackle the Digital Divide which excludes disadvantaged
communities from online resources.Grants are available for
community-based projects that improve local
social, economic and environmental conditions in and around DSG
International sites, and in areas where the Group’s presence is
most closely felt. The programme also aims to provide information
technology to disadvantaged groups; supporting training initiatives
to help bridge the digital divide; and local projects to promote
the inclusion of young people into mainstream education and
society.Examples could include a primary school in a
deprived area that needs a new cooker to provide healthy food for
its students, an project teaching elderly people IT skills or a
youth centre wishing to run courses in
multimedia.Grants range up £500 (normally in the form
of vouchers). You can apply by Application Form
downloadable from the Website – applications take 4-6 weeks
to be processed. |
| Football Foundation |
For information on football's biggest supporter go
to: http://www.footballfoundation.org.uk/welcome |
The Football Foundation is a unique partnership funded
by The F.A. Premier League, The FA and the Government. The
Foundation is the UK’s largest sports charity.
The Foundation plays a key role in revitalising
grass roots sport, investing in our parks, schools and playing
fields and harnessing the power of the game within our communities,
to promote education and social inclusion. Their mission
is to improve facilities, create
opportunities and build
communities.
|
If you work for an organisation that provides funding and
your organisation’s details are not on here please email your
details to dawnbutlermp@parliament.uk
with the heading: For the attention of Aisha
Hoda
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