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Inclusive Sport Fund

Inclusive Sport Fund. Lindsay Games / Carol Fraser. About Sport England. We are investing over £1 billion of National Lottery and Exchequer funding between 2012 and 2017 in organisations and projects that will : Help more people have a sporting habit for life

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Inclusive Sport Fund

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  1. Inclusive Sport Fund Lindsay Games / Carol Fraser

  2. About Sport England We are investing over £1 billion of National Lottery and Exchequer funding between 2012 and 2017 in organisations and projects that will: • Help more people have a sporting habit for life • Create more opportunities for young people to play sport • Nurture and develop talent • Provide the right facilities in the right places • Support local authorities and unlock local funding • Ensure real opportunities for communities

  3. Only one in six disabled adults play sport once a week No limiting disability / illness April 2013 13.6m Once a week participation in sport Limiting disability / illness April 2013 1.7m Creating a sporting habit for life

  4. There are considerable variations in participation levels Creating a sporting habit for life

  5. £10.2 million invested in Round 1 • 44 projects • Good coverage – geographically and by impairment type Round 2 • Continue to build on the 2012 legacy • £7 million of National Lottery funding

  6. The Inclusive Sport Fund • Led by the needs of disabled people • Bring together experts from both sport and disability sectors • Participation by all disabled people • Inclusive and dedicated opportunities • Opportunities that are not just accessible but are friendly, welcoming, and effectively staffed • Innovative, scalable and replicable projects • Taking sport to places disabled people already inhabit.

  7. What we fund • Bona fide and legitimate organisations with a written constitution • Demonstrate good financial health and governance • Revenue grants of £10,001+ • Target disabled people aged 14+ with a recognised sporting activity /physical activities that lead to recognised sport • Activities that have not yet begun • Sustainable projects What we won’t fund • Capital awards/facility development • Equipment-only • Projects focused solely on physical activity, such as walking or gardening • General running costs e.g. on-going staff costs, council tax, gas, electricity or water bills, facility costs for office base • One off events • Items that only benefit an individual • Foreign trips Creating a sporting habit for life

  8. www.interactive.uk.net

  9. Overview of Interactive • Interactive is a charity creating disability equality in sport with a vision of an inclusive and active society • A leading strategic sports body with a focus on both disability equality and sport • Uniquely positioned to connect the disability, sport, health and education sectors at a strategic and political level • By influencing from policy to delivery, Interactive ensures sport and physical activity become equally accessible for all people meaning disabled people are equally valued • English Federation of Disability Sport strategic partner for London

  10. Our mission: To create a culture where disabled people view being active as a viable lifestyle choice for life and disabled people are central to the sports and physical activity sector.

  11. How? • Inclusive and Active 2 • - Network of 104 adopted organisations receiving advice and support to achieve organisational specific targets linked to their bespoke Inclusive and Active 2 action plan • - 731 relationships brokered across the Inclusive and Active Network • - Approximately 25,000 disabled people provided with access to opportunities to be more active • Be Inclusive and Active – Online Disability Equality Training • - 11,338 people provided with access to online disability equality training. • Interactive Products and Services

  12. Your Project … Is there demand for what you want to provide? Is your offer what disabled people want to do? How are you going to ensure disabled people are aware of your opportunity?

  13. How can Interactive help you? Support for your Successful Project During the Application Process • In kind support for Inclusive and Active 2 adopted organisations • Other Services • Consortia Collaboration • Project Development • In kind support for Inclusive and Active 2 adopted organisations. • Other Services • Training – Be Inclusive and Active / Inclusive and Active Workshop • Project Development • Hot Desk at Interactive • Inclusive Event Implementation

  14. Contact us … • Information and Resources - www.interactive.uk.net/ 0207 717 1699 • laura.davies@interactive.uk.net / 07872 380508

  15. County Sport Partnership Support • It is worth contacting your relevant PRO-ACTIVE Partnership (County Sports Partnership) when developing your application. They will be able to offer advice and support. • The lead contact for each partnership is as follows • PRO-ACTIVE West London: Jemima Morris -- jemima.morris@brunel.ac.uk • PRO-ACTIVE East London: Gabby Williams-- g.l.williams@uel.ac.uk • PRO-ACTIVE North London: Matthew Eames -- m.eames@mdx.ac.uk • PRO-ACTIVE South London: David George - davidgeorge@pro-activesouthlondon.org • PRO-ACTIVE Central London: Dedicated funding support officer XanderBeck can provide free one-to-one support on your application. Contact - aos-funding@lsbu.ac.uk

  16. Assessing your application 1 • Consultation and insight 2 • Delivery and impact 3 • Partnership and feedback 4 • Sustainability

  17. We need to know: • How you have consultedwith disabled people. Your project should be responding to their views, motivations and expectations. • What the barriers to participation in sport are there for the disabled people who will benefit from your proposed activity. • How you have used feedback and learning from projects that have been delivered successfully in the past. 1 • Consultation and insight

  18. • Clear who would benefit from the project • Understood what sporting activities would appeal • Addressed how barriers would be overcome • Explained information sources 1 • Consultation and insight  • Funding would be used for initial consultation • No local evidence • Did not understand barriers or how to address these • No mention of good practice

  19. We need to know: • How your proposals will address the needs of the disabled people they are designed to benefit and the barriers they face to participating in sport. • How your proposals will enhance existing local provision, potentially reaching new audiences. • How many people you expect to take part in the project and the types of environmentsin which it will take place. 2 • Delivery and impact

  20. • Clear vision of how the project would be delivered • Provided detailed delivery plans (e.g. number of sessions, resources required) • Linked delivery plans to needs outlined in section 1 2 • Delivery and impact  • Unrealistic estimates of impact • Did not demonstrate additionality – no evidence the project would enhance existing provision or reach a new audience

  21. We need to know: • What consultation you have carried out with sports and non-sports organisations. • Whowill be involved in supporting the delivery of this project, either through strategic support or financial backing - cash or in-kind. • How you will share learning from your project to enable successful approaches to be replicated. 3 • Partnership and feedback

  22. Identified good range of partners • Clear roles for each partner • Demonstrated how monitoring and evaluation would take place regularly • Clear outcomes and feedback mechanisms   • Unclear who partners were or their roles • Did not address how learning from the project would be shared • Had not adequately consulted or considered the potential across both sport and non-sport partners 3 • Partnership and feedback

  23. We will fund projects for up to 3 years, but we need to know: • How Inclusive Sport funding will create a sustainablelocal community sports project after the funding is finished. • How your project will lead to sustained participation in regular sporting activity. 4 • Sustainability

  24. • Explained how the project would be sustainable • Addressed the future role of partners • Reasonable income and expenditure forecasts  • Was unclear how the project would continue after the end of Inclusive Sport funding • No evidence of future income generation 4 • Sustainability

  25. Round 1 experiences [Here was shown a presentation from a successful Inclusive Sport Round 1 applicant from the local area covering: • Experience of application process • Consultation undertaken • Project offered • Partnerships created as a result • Thoughts around sustainability]

  26. How to apply • September • Workshops held and prospectus available • October 7th • Online application process opens • 5pm December 2nd • Application deadline • February 2014 • Notification of decisions

  27. Who makes the decisions? • 5pm December 2nd • Application deadline • Sport England assess the applications • Our Project Committee, under delegated authority from the Sport England Main Board, will make funding decisions on all applications received to the Inclusive Sport Fund. • February 2014 • Notification of decisions

  28. Further support • Telephone: 08458 508 508 • 8am-9pm Monday • 8am-6pm Tuesday to Thursday • 8am-5pm on Fridays • Email: funding@sportengland.org • Prospects and FAQ documents online at www.sportengland.org/inclusivesport

  29. Questions?

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