1 / 15

Whitemoss Community Fund

Whitemoss Community Fund. West Lancashire CVS Annual General Meeting Liz Payne liz.payne@grantscape.org.uk 27 February 2018. The presentation. 1. GrantScape 2. Whitemoss Community Fund – Background 3. The Landfill Communities Fund (LCF) 4. Fund Details 5. Projects supported

eschmidt
Download Presentation

Whitemoss Community Fund

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Whitemoss Community Fund West Lancashire CVS Annual General Meeting Liz Payne liz.payne@grantscape.org.uk 27 February 2018

  2. The presentation 1. GrantScape 2. Whitemoss Community Fund – Background 3. The Landfill Communities Fund (LCF) 4. Fund Details 5. Projects supported 6. Application process

  3. GrantScape • A Grant-making charity specialising in Community Fund administration • We work with: Waste Management Companies Local Authorities Offshore / Onshore Wind Farm Developers Solar Farm Developers Other Trusts and Foundations • Awarded over £90 million since 1997 • Head office in Milton Keynes – operate throughout England and Wales • www.grantscape.org.uk

  4. Whitemoss Community Fund • Whitemoss Landfill Limited - Whitemoss landfill site in Skelmersdale • Sep 2010 joined forces with GrantScape to launch the Whitemoss Community Fund • Fund distributes all available funding generated from the site under the LCF • Approximately £60,000 available each year

  5. The Landfill Communities Fund • 1996: Landfill Tax introduced • Landfill Communities Fund established to help mitigate the effects of landfill on local communities • Regulated by ENTRUST and overseen by HM Revenue & Customs • Over £1.6 billion donated – over 64,000 projects

  6. LCF - What can be funded? • Projects to reclaim land which cannot be used due to some previous activity (LCF Object A) • Projects that reduce or prevent pollution on land (LCF Object B) • Projects that provide, maintain or improve public amenities or parks (LCF Object D)* • Projects to conserve or promote biodiversity, involving species and habitats (LCF Object DA)* • Projects to restore or repair buildings for religious worship, or of architectural or historical interest (LCF Object E)* *within 10 miles of a landfill site

  7. Object D – project requirements • Amenity should directly benefit the general public • The most generous arrangements for opening, suitable for the amenity, are encouraged • Typically, minimum public access requirement is 2 days or 4 evenings per week, or 104 days per year • Project should be set up on a not-for-profit basis and be looking to work on a single amenity • LCF funding must relate to actual improvement, maintenance or provision of the amenity, not management / administration

  8. Object DA – project requirements • Must look to protect identifiable species or habitats • Each project must be for a single, identifiable site • Project activities must take place where the species or habitats would naturally occur • Costs eligible for funding are: • direct project works solely attributable to delivery of the project • acceptable project management costs and other costs not resulting in physical work (max.10% of grant) • Public access is not a requirement of the Object

  9. Object E – project requirements • Works must be to maintain, repair or restore a building or structure. No ‘new’ works • Building or structure must be a place of religious worship or of historical or architectural interest (listed status) • Projects must be open to the public for an appropriate amount of time as expected from similar buildings or structures • Typically, minimum public access requirement is 2 days or 4 evenings per week, or 104 days per year • LCF funding must directly relate to direct maintenance, repair or restoration works, not management or administration

  10. Who can benefit from LCF grants? • Voluntary Community Groups • Charities • Parochial Church Councils (PCC’s) • Parish and Town Councils • Wildlife Organisations • Local Authorities • Not for profit organisations

  11. Who is not entitled to LCF grant support? • Profit-making organisations that distribute dividends to shareholders • Organisations with projects more than 10 miles from a licensed landfill site (Objects D, DA & E) • Individuals • Membership-only (single user) sports groups, e.g. golf and bowls clubs, unless membership is open to the general public without undue restriction • Groups seeking retrospective support, or funding for statutory requirements

  12. Fund Details • Grants £5,000 - £20,000 • Single round each year • Capital projects • Specific Fund criteria • Funding ‘zone’

  13. Projects Supported • £415,000 in grants awarded • 34 projects benefitted

  14. Application process • On-line application form • Projects assessed by Grant Manager • Projects presented to Advisory Group for review and recommendations • Grant awards made by GrantScape’s Board • 2018 deadline – 28th March (June decisions)

  15. What is the Fund looking for? Main judging criteria: • Level of community support for and involvement in the project • Community benefit (social, economic and environmental) Other factors: • Ability of applicant to deliver the project • Project sustainability and legacy • Overall value for money

More Related