Briefings

New online resource for Edinburgh arts and crafts groups

April 18, 2007

<FONT face=Arial size=2>A new website for voluntary and community arts groups in the Edinburgh area is being launched. The site will be a great place to find out about venues for hire, what other groups are doing and for putting up your events and group information on the internet.</FONT>

 

Author: Voluntary Arts Scotland

New online resource for Edinburgh arts and crafts groups


18.04.07



A new website for voluntary and community arts groups in the Edinburgh area is being launched. The site will be a great place to find out about venues for hire, what other groups are doing and for putting up your events and group information on the internet.


Everyone involved in the voluntary arts scene in Edinburgh can have access to the site. And you won’t need internet access or an e-mail address yourself, as the site can easily be visited from local libraries or internet cafes.


To try a hands-on session, inputting your details on the site and viewing others, why not come along to one of three special sessions being held – drop in during the times and venues below:


Friday 20 April: 7-9pm
Leith Academy, 20 Academy Park. Edinburgh EH6 8JQ



Saturday 21 April: 10am -12.00pm
Fountainbridge Library, 137 Dundee Street, Edinburgh EH11 1BG



Saturday 21 April: 1.30-3.30pm
Drummond Community High School, 41 Bellevue Place, Edinburgh EH7 4BS



These drop in taster sessions will give you a chance to get ‘hands on’ with the web-site while help is at hand. There will always be someone available to guide you around the web-site and offer expert advice as how you can make the most of it to benefit your group. The sessions are suitable for everyone, no matter what level of computer literacy, and we will guide you through it one step at a time.


We have arranged to have computer suites to be available so you shouldn’t have to wait for the computer to be free to have a go!


Feedback will also be welcome during the sessions as this will help the designers refine the website so it meets your needs.


The Edinburgh Community Arts Website is a joint project between Common Force Community Theatre and Voluntary Arts Scotland. The website was originally designed following an initial consultation with groups in the Edinburgh area. If successful, the resource will hopefully be rolled out across the country.


For more information contact: Fiona Campbell. Voluntary Arts Scotland, fiona@vascotland.org.uk or tel: 0131 225 7355 or 0795 191 8366.

Briefings

‘No major barriers’ to community asset transfer

April 17, 2007

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">A government review into the community ownership and management of public assets will conclude that there are "no substantive barriers" to the transfer of public assets to community organisations, it has emerged. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN>

 

Author: Jamie Carpenter

‘No major barriers’ to community asset transfer 


 


Jamie Carpenter


Regeneration & Renewal


13.04.07


 


 


A government review into the community ownership and management of public assets will conclude that there are “no substantive barriers” to the transfer of public assets to community organisations, it emerged this week.


 


 


A briefing note on the progress of the review says the main barriers to the transfer of public assets to community organisations are “more cultural or based on inaccurate perceptions than substantive”.


 


The note, written by the review team, which is headed by Barry Quirk, chief executive of the London Borough of Lewisham, also says that the benefits of community ownership and management of public assets in appropriate circumstances outweigh the risks.


 


Steve Wyler, director of the Development Trusts Association, said: “It’s very helpful that Quirk, as a trusted senior local government leader, is saying that the benefits of asset transfer outweigh the risks.”


 


The briefing note says that the conclusions of the review team will form the basis for the recommendations in its final report, due to be published next month.


 


The review was launched by communities secretary Ruth Kelly last year to examine barriers to asset transfer and consider whether further powers are required to boost the transfer of public assets to community organisations (R&R, 22 September 2006, p3).


 


It was due to be published in March, but was delayed due to the purdah period for local government elections.


 


– Quirk Review Progress Update is available via www.regen.net/doc.


 


 

Briefings

Book building plans take a twist

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">Councillors have put a temporary halt on plans to create a £2.5m social enterprise near <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:place w_st="on">Dumfries</st1:place>. <SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">The development hinges on the council gifting the former TC Farries building to a non-profit organisation for £1. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN></SPAN>

 

Author: BBC

Book building plans take a twist 


 


BBC


16.04.07


 


 


Councillors have put a temporary halt on plans to create a £2.5m social enterprise near Dumfries.


 


The development hinges on the council gifting the former TC Farries building to a non-profit organisation for £1.


 


The planning and environment committee had agreed the transfer despite hearing the property could have fetched more than £600,000 on the open market.


 


However, 12 councillors have now signed a motion which will force the issue back to full council on 26 April.


 


‘Boost business’


 


It was hoped the enterprise plan would create a community-owned company to boost business in the area.


 


The plan was to provide a number of lettable workspaces in the building with surplus rental income being used to support new social economy projects and generate employment.


 


It was thought the project would provide an opportunity to lever in significant sums of cash to support neighbourhood renewal activities.


 


Now it faces a delay until at least the end of the month before it can progress.


 


 

Briefings

Enterprise plan for book building

April 10, 2007

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">Councillors have agreed to turn a former book supply building on the outskirts of <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:place w_st="on">Dumfries</st1:place> into a £2.5m social enterprise venture. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN>

 

Author: BBC

Enterprise plan for book building 


 


BBC


10.04.07


 


 


Councillors have agreed to turn a former book supply building on the outskirts of Dumfries into a £2.5m “social enterprise venture”.


 


Officials had recommended the former TC Farries building be transferred for £1 to a not-for-profit organisation.


 


Planning and environment committee members were told it could have fetched £600,000 on the open market.


 


However, they decided to proceed towards creating a community-owned company to boost business in the area.


 


Generate employment


 


The non-profit organisation will provide a number of lettable workspaces.


 


Surplus rental income will be used to support new social economy projects and generate employment.


 


It is believed the project provides an opportunity to lever in significant sums of cash to support neighbourhood renewal activities.


 


The local authority’s contribution is to transfer the ownership of the building for just £1.


 


 

Briefings

Springback partner in Edinburgh mattress recycling

April 3, 2007

<FONT face=Arial size=2>FEAT Enterprises Springback project will partner with Edinburgh City council in a one-year mattress recycling project funded by the Strategic Waste Fund.</FONT>

 

Author: By Per Fischer

Springback partner in Edinburgh mattress recycling


By Per Fischer
27.03.07



FEAT Enterprises Springback project will partner with Edinburgh City council in a one-year mattress recycling project funded by the Strategic Waste Fund.


The new project will start at 2 April 2007 at the council’s waste transfer station at Powderhall. Approximately 15,600 mattresses a year are delivered to Powderhall, which means that in the region of 360 tonnes of waste could be recycled during the pilot project.


Pauline Hinchion, Chief Executive of FEAT Enterprises said: “FEAT Enterprises is delighted to be working in partnership with The City of Edinburgh Council to divert mattresses from landfill. “Mattresses are a particularly difficult waste stream, which should not be landfilled. The City of Edinburgh Council recognises the environmental damage that landfilling of mattresses can do and are anxious, as we are, to make the pilot work successfully.”


Councillor Robert Cairns, the Executive Member for Environment and Streetscape, said: “I welcome this collaboration between SpringBack and the Council as a chance to help achieve the aims of the Waste Aware campaign by diverting waste from landfill.”


The total cost of the pilot project is £65,707. The Scottish Executive’s Strategic Waste Fund grant accounts for £44,065, while the Council has contributed £16,610 from landfill tax and gate fee savings, along with £5,032 from FEAT Enterprises.


FEAT Enterprises were awarded CRNS Member of the Year 2005, and aim to provide real job opportunities at a real wage for people who are disadvantaged in the labour market as a result of disabilities or other issues

Briefings

Community-owned ferry makes waves

April 2, 2007

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">A ferry service between the mainland and the <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:place w_st="on">Isle of Skye</st1:place> has made its first sailing since being taken over by a community group. </SPAN>

 

Author: BBC

Community-owned ferry makes waves 


 


BBC


02.04.07


 


 


A ferry service between the mainland and the Isle of Skye has made its first sailing since being taken over by a community group.


 


The purchase of the Glenahulish went ahead after the Big Lottery Fund awarded a grant of £60,000.


 


The Isle of Skye Ferry Community Interest Company had chartered the vessel to keep it going from Glenelg to Kylerhea last Easter.


 


It has made its first trip of the summer season.


 


The group had previously won £60,000-worth of funding from Highlands and Islands Enterprise (HIE) Skye and Wester Ross.


 


The link is the only crossing to Skye that is not subsidised.


 


Routes between Mallaig and Armadale, and between Uig and Tarbert and Lochmaddy, are run by the state-owned Caledonian MacBrayne.


 


The future of the service, which carries six cars as well as foot passengers, was thrown into doubt when ferryman Roddy MacLeod announced his retirement about three years ago.


 

Briefings

Lottery to manage £30m asset fund

March 30, 2007

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">Lottery good causes distributor the Big Lottery Fund will manage a new £30 million fund to help community-led organisations to own and run under-used local authority buildings, the Cabinet Office confirmed this week.</SPAN>

 

Author: Regeneration & Renewal

Lottery to manage £30m asset fund 


 


Regeneration & Renewal


30.03.07


 


 


Lottery good causes distributor the Big Lottery Fund will manage a new £30 million fund to help community-led organisations to own and run under-used local authority buildings, the Cabinet Office confirmed this week.


 


As predicted last week by Regeneration & Renewal, control of the new Community Assets Transfer Fund – proposed in last year’s local government white paper – will be handed to the BLF.


 


The Office of the Third Sector in the Cabinet Office told Regeneration & Renewal that it had decided to award the BLF control of the fund. It said the BLF will involve other partner bodies, such as the Adventure Capital Fund, which lends to community-led enterprises, in the delivery of the fund.


 


– Publication of the Quirk review of asset transfer, due this month, has been delayed until May.

Briefings

Voluntary group issues warning over creeping local authority control

March 20, 2007

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">Some local authorities are trying to gain control over the third sector to make it easier to meet their local area agreement targets, the vice chair of a collapsed voluntary group has claimed.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN>

 

Author: New Start magazine

Voluntary group issues warning over creeping local authority control


 


New Start magazine


14.03.07


 


 


Some local authorities are trying to gain control over the third sector to make it easier to meet their local area agreement targets, the vice chair of a collapsed voluntary group has claimed.


 


Ellie Lynall, of Voluntary Action Bolsover (VAB), a council for voluntary service in Derbyshire, said the deteriorating relationship between the organisation and its local strategic partnership (LSP) had led to it losing funds and being forced to close.


 


She said the organisation and the LSP had been in talks about merging voluntary infrastructure groups into a new organisation, Community Voluntary Partners, which would also support the community empowerment network.


 


VAB was thrown out of the LSP working group that was setting up the new organisation and the LSP stopped funding it, according to Ms Lynall. Subsequent bids to the Big Lottery Fund were either unsuccessful or had not been decided by the time VAB’s funding ran out.


 


‘There’s a severe misunderstanding of what the voluntary sector is, how it works and what its culture is,’ she said.


 


‘It is also perceived as being out of control because of its independence. As the local area agreement requirements bite locally there are advantages to the council and the LSP of extending [their] control as much as possible into areas that affect service delivery.


 


‘We know people are being told that VAB had a chance to join the process, but we did not. We wanted to be a part of it but were not given a legal way to do it.’


 


Two of the three community forums hosted by VAB could also close. The disability forum has called a dissolution meeting and the ethnic minority group is deciding whether or not to dissolve.


 


Mandy Chambers, chair of the local strategic partnership, said: ‘Following lengthy debate and discussions, Voluntary Action Bolsover took the decision to no longer participate in the process to form a new umbrella organisation.’


 


Five members of staff at VAB will lose their jobs because of the closure.


 


Elin Gudnadottir, deputy chief executive of third sector umbrella group Urban Forum, said: ‘The change from funding coming from central government to going through the local area agreement controlled by the local authority automatically gives them more power.’


 

Briefings

Drill Hall fired up by £400k award

March 16, 2007

<SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">A&nbsp;popular festival venue and community arts centre in Edinburgh&nbsp;is to undergo a major expansion and refurbishment after landing a funding boost of nearly £400,000. <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN>

 

Author: Brian Ferguson

Drill Hall fired up by £400k award


 


Brian Ferguson


Edinburgh Evening News


13.03.07


 


 


A POPULAR festival venue and community arts centre is to undergo a major expansion and refurbishment after landing a funding boost of nearly £400,000.


 


The money will allow the historic Drill Hall in Leith to undergo vital restoration work and double the number of artists’ studios and workshop space in its spectacular atrium. A former rifle range will also be turned into a sculpture garden.


 


The Big Lottery Fund and Historic Scotland have awarded £245,000 and £125,000 respectively for what is the final phase of an overhaul of the Dalmeny Street building.


 


The arts organisation Out of the Blue bought the building from the Army for £650,000 in 2003 and embarked on an initial refurbishment to allow more than 40 artists and organisations to move in.


 


A second phase, which is just about to be completed, has seen the creation of new offices and studios for another 30 groups in the atrium area, as well as a performance and rehearsal space in the heart of the building.


 


The group has been given the double funding news just weeks before opening the building to the general public, when a brand new licensed cafe will also be launched.


 


Rob Hoon, co-ordinator of Out of the Blue, said the £370,000 was a major step towards getting the final phase of the refurbishment under way, as well as securing the building’s long-term future.


 


He added: “The Drill Hall is a historically and architecturally significant building which we are transforming into an arts centre with a developing programme of exhibitions and cultural events alongside regular arts projects. The funding we’ve secured today will allow us to carry out a continual programme of repairs and refurbishment, and also allow us to press on with the final phase of studio and office space.


 


“We can now approach other funders for that project and it will hopefully help us attract commercial sponsors for it.”


 


The cash will not only be used to help pay for a major programme of repairs and restoration for the building, but is expected to kick- start work on the creation of a mezzanine level of office and studio space, as well as the sculpture garden.


 


Out of the Blue plans to transform a rundown park next to the building with an outdoor theatre, sculptures and a community garden.


 


Diggers have moved into the neglected green space at Dalmeny Street Park for the first phase of a £350,000 refurbishment expected to take more than three years to complete.


 


The Drill Hall scheme is the first urban project in the country to benefit from the Big Lottery Fund’s new “growing community assets” scheme.


 


Alison Magee, chair of the Scotland committee of the Big Lottery Fund, said: “I’m delighted to announce an award of £244,000 to Out of the Blue to refurbish and restore an old drill hall that will be transformed into a community asset, which will include studios and workspace for individuals and groups, educational spaces, a café and a creche.”


 


 


 

Briefings

Big Lottery Fund announces Scotland committee and pioneering urban grant

March 15, 2007

<P class=MsoNormal style="MARGIN: 0in 0in 0pt"><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">The Committee that will take devolved decisions on Big Lottery Fund grants in <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:country-region w_st="on">Scotland</st1:country-region> has been named, along with&nbsp;the&nbsp;</SPAN><SPAN lang=EN-GB style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; FONT-FAMILY: Arial">announcement of&nbsp;the first urban project to receive funding from the Big Lottery Fund’s Growing Community Assets scheme.<?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p></SPAN></P>

 

Author: Big Lottery Fund

Big Lottery Fund announces Scotland committee and pioneering urban grant


 


13.03.07


 


 


The Committee that will take devolved decisions on Big Lottery Fund grants in Scotland has been named at an event in Edinburgh tonight (Tuesday 13 March).


 


At the same event, Big Lottery Fund Scotland Committee Chair, Alison Magee, also announced the first urban project to receive funding from the Big Lottery Fund’s Growing Community Assets scheme.


 


“The people of Leith are now engaged in the same exciting process as the crofters of Gigha, Assynt and South Uist,” she said of the Out of the Blue Project, as it was awarded £244,000. “Community ownership is alive in Leith,” added Mrs Magee.


 


The outgoing leader of Highland Council will lead the Big Lottery Fund Scotland committee which for the first time will make all of the decisions on how Scotland’s Big Lottery Fund money is spent. The Big Lottery Fund has £257 million to invest in Scotland’s communities before 2009 through its Investing in Communities portfolio.


 


The committee will make awards for the next three years through a range of BIG programmes.


 


It will also be responsible for strategy, policy, planning and management of programmes in Scotland within an overall strategic and financial framework determined by BIG’s UK Board. The committee will monitor spend on programmes and report on the difference that Lottery funding had made to ensure outcomes are achieved.  BIG has given an undertaking that 60-70 per cent of its £2.3 billion good causes budget between 2006 and 2009 will go to voluntary and community organisations.


 


England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have their own country committees under a new BIG structure that devolves grant awarding and administration to countries.  BIG UK board members for countries chair each of the committees.


 


Mrs Magee was joined at the event at the National Trust for Scotland in Edinburgh by Patricia Ferguson, Minister for Tourism, Culture and Sport, and Sir Clive Booth, the Big Lottery Fund’s UK Chair, where she announced the Committee team. The Scotland Committee members are Tim Allan, Elizabeth Cameron, Helen Forsyth, David Green, Alistair Grimes, Maureen McGinn and Lucy McTernan.


 


Patricia Ferguson, Minister for Tourism, Culture and Sport, said: “I am pleased to welcome this dedicated team of talented individuals on board. They will draw on their vast and varied experiences to make informed decisions about which good causes in Scotland will receive Big Lottery funding.”


 


Mrs Magee, added: “Each week the Big Lottery Fund distributes £1 million pounds in Scotland alone. As the Scotland Committee, we therefore have a huge responsibility to make sure that this money goes to those projects and areas where it is needed most.


 


“I am delighted to be part of and to welcome this new team which will enable us to develop a distinct Scottish agenda and thinking as to how funding is spent here in Scotland.”


 


Mrs Magee also revealed details of the first Growing Community Assets grant to go to an urban project. She said: “I am delighted to announce tonight, an award of £244,000 to Out of the Blue in Leith, to refurbish and restore an old drill hall that will be transformed into a community asset.”


 


“This will include studios and workspace for individuals and groups, educational spaces, a café and a crèche.  Growing Community Assets builds on the success of the Scottish Land Fund. As many of you will know, the Scottish Land Fund gave communities in rural Scotland the means to bring local land and land assets into community ownership. Now with Growing Community Assets we can extend these benefits to urban communities. Out of the Blue are now engaged in the same exciting process as the crofters of Gigha, Assynt and South Uist.”


 


Out of the Blue Coordinator Rob Hoon, said: “The award from Growing Community Assets is a fantastic endorsement of the work we are doing to restore and refurbish the Out of the Blue Drill Hall as an asset for our community. The drill hall is a historically and architecturally significant building which we are transforming into an arts centre with a developing programme of exhibitions and cultural events alongside regular arts projects. For example, the ‘Park Life’ project is transforming a neglected local park through the engagement and enthusiasm of the local community. Additionally we are opening a community café as a further exciting resource and a training project for young people. We couldn’t be more delighted by the Big Lottery Fund’s decision to support us.”


 


 


Further information


 


Contact Landa Rolland at the Big Lottery Fund Scotland Press Office on 0141 242 1458 or 07789 033457


Public Enquiries Line: 08454 102030


Textphone:  0845 6021 659


Full details of the Big Lottery Fund programmes and grant awards are available at: www.biglotteryfund.org.uk


 


 


 


Biographies of the Scotland Committee



 


Chair, Alison Magee


Alison is the convener of Highland Council (2003-present) She has 20 years local government experience including four years as convener of Sutherland District Council. She has also served on Highland Health Board, was a member of the Scotland Office’s Commission on Boundary Differences and Voting Systems, and previously ran her own small business. She is a board member of Caithness and Sutherland Enterprise. Alison Magee is not a member of any political party and stands as an independent in her role as Convenor of Highland Council and she will not seek re: election in May 2007.


 


Tim Allen, Chair of Young Enterprise Scotland


Tim Allen has been on the Board of the charity Young Enterprise Scotland since 2003, and was appointed Deputy Chair in June 2005, and Chair in June 2006.  YES works with young people from extremely disadvantaged backgrounds – including care and prison – to provide routes into employment in business.  Tim was the youngest major in the Army in 1996, served with the UN in Cyprus, was Equerry to HRH the Duke of York, and has worked in the Diplomatic Service.  Since leaving the Army in 1998 he has pursued a career in banking, where he gained expertise in philanthropic investment, and has latterly moved into property development in Dundee.  He lives in Clackmannanshire.


 


Elizabeth Cameron, Director, Scottish Chambers of Commerce


Elizabeth Cameron has been Director of the Scottish Chambers of Commerce since 2004, and before that was Director of Renfrewshire Chamber of Commerce since 1996.  She established the Scottish Youth Investment Fund to help young people into business and is a Director of the Princes Scottish Youth Business Trust and has experience of social inclusion and regeneration having in the past chaired the Ferguslie Park Social Regeneration Company.  Liz represented the business community on the Scottish Parliament’s Ethic Minority and Labour Market Working Group.  She lives in Gourock.


 


David Green, retiring Chair of Crofters Commission


From his early career as a self-employed crofter running as small tourist industry and working as the driver of a snowplough in the 1980s, David Green rose to be Vice-Convener then Convener of The Highland Council.  Currently Chairman of the Crofter’s Commission and a Board Member of the Cairngorms National Park Authority, he has had a strong involvement in rural community life for many years.  David Green lines in Ross-shire. 


 


Alistair Grimes, Director, Rocket Science UK Ltd


Alistair Grimes has had a long association with the social economy.  From involvement in the 1980s and 1990s with the Wise Group, which provided for unemployed people to gain access to work in carrying out energy saving improvements to council houses and serving as Chief Executive of Community Enterprise in Strathclyde from 1997 to 2005, as well as serving as Chair of the Scottish Credit Union Partnership, the Scottish Urban Regeneration Forum, and Childcare Works, and well as a Committee Member of the Scottish Centre for Research into Social Justice and the McFadden Commission on Charity Law Reform. Based in Glasgow.


 


Helen Forsyth, Regeneration Director, Scotland, Places for People


Helen Forsyth was Chief Executive of Edinvar housing association from 1998 to 2004 at which point she took up her current post as Regeneration Director, Scotland, for Places for People. She has also served as a co-opted Board Member of Age Concern Scotland.  With extensive experience of tackling disadvantage throughout her career in health, care and housing, and a very strong commitment to achieving real change for poorer communities.  She lives in Duns in the Scottish Borders.


 


Maureen McGinn (Lady Elvidge), Chief Executive, Laidlaw Youth Project


A former senior civil servant running the Laidlaw Youth Project, which promotes partnership working between charities supporting children and vulnerable young people in Scotland, as well as being on the Board of Evaluation Support Scotland, Maureen McGinn has a track record of delivering policy solutions for complex social issues as well as experience of working with other funders.  She is based in  Edinburgh.


 


Lucy McTernan, Director of Corporate Affairs, Scottish Council for Voluntary Organisations


Lucy McTernan has been a dedicated advocate for communities throughout her career at the centre of the voluntary sector in Scotland.  She has been a driving force behind recent developments in charity law and changes in public sector funding practice as well as increasing links between Scotland and the international voluntary sector through bring the CIVICUS Assembly to Glasgow.  She is based in Edinburgh. 


 


Source: Big Lottery Fund