Rural Energy Resilience

The ‘Rural Energy Resilience’ project, part of the V2X Innovation Programme, is funded by the Department for Energy Security & Net Zero and delivered by Innovate UK. V2X is part of the up to £65m Flexibility the £1 billion DESNZ Net Zero Innovation Portfolio.

This project is currently exploring new vehicle to grid and energy management technologies. It has the aims to reduce energy bills, offer energy resilience to community buildings and improve mobility for rural residents.

There are endless possibilities for rural communities as they embrace the shift towards Net-Zero to not only enhance their energy resilience but also improve their mobility options. The Rural Energy Resilience project is building on previous IUK projects to connect rural car clubs, community buildings, local renewable energy sources, and Distribution Network Operators (DNOs).


Funding Opportunities this summer (August)

McCarthy Stone Foundation – Community Grants Programme

The foundation runs several grant programmes throughout the year for organisations supporting people over 65.
Core Cost Funding: The Foundation awards unrestricted core funding to grassroots charitable organisations with people over 65 at the heart of their work.
Unrestricted funding is only available to registered charities and community groups. We do not fund unrestricted Community Interest Companies.
Organisations demonstrating a strong alignment with our charitable aims are invited to apply for unrestricted funding, currently up to £7500.
We know that many small organisations don’t have the resources for complex or extensive grant applications and monitoring, so we will do our best to work with you to make the process simple, transparent, and fair. We will also work with you to help report on the impact the grant will have.
Project Funding
We also invite applications for Project Funding. This funding is open to registered charities, community groups, and community interest companies limited by guarantee. This funding is to support a new, or existing, programme dedicated to supporting people over 65 within an organisation.
Although this will typically be restricted, we encourage all organisations submitting an application for project funding to do so on a cost-recovery basis.

Berkshire Community Foundation’s – Vital for Berkshire fund now open for applications

Berkshire Community Foundation’s Vital for Berkshire fund aims to support charities, community groups and projects that work to tackle the most salient and pressing issues within Berkshire’s communities at any given time.

Applications are now open for the fund, and grants up to a maximum of £5000 will be considered, subject to funding availability.

Does your charity, community group or project support vital needs in Berkshire?

This can include but not limited to:
• physical and mental health
• supporting young and vulnerable people
• combating isolation
• tackling poverty and disadvantage
• offering equal opportunities for all
and more.

Applications are also invited to enable groups to fund their essential resources in order to secure services for their beneficiaries in the current cost of living crisis.

Application deadline: Thursday 22nd August (10am)

Music for All – Community Project Funding

Grants are available to UK-based community groups that aim to bring musical projects to their local communities.

Application deadline: 30th September 2024 (8am)

Greenham Trust Planting Project

Applications are now open for free trees and hedging plants for local councils, schools and charitable organisations. Since 2021 we have provided nearly 7000 plants to over
100 different organisations.

Plants will be indigenous to the United Kingdom and supplied as either small trees and hedging (60 to 80 cm), or large trees and hedging (over 90 cm).

They will be bare-rooted and delivered in the Autumn with spirals and canes ready for prompt planting.

Elise Pilkington Trust – Elderly Grants

About Us: We provide funding for UK-registered elderly charities.
Criteria: Our Trustees seek grant applications for projects which meet our funding criteria which should be for capital projects or time limited specific projects. For this round we will be focusing support to projects dedicated to addressing the needs of older people with advanced dementia and their carers in domestic, community and formal care settings.
Grant Size: Not stated Deadline for applications: 23 August 2024

Rewilding Innovation Fund

Applications close on Friday 30th August.
This exciting fund helps to foster the scale and ambition of rewilding projects, enabling largescale restoration of ecosystems. We want to remove barriers to rewilding across Britain. Whether your site or project is in the early planning stages or looking to try out a new approach, you can apply.
We choose the projects we consider will have the highest impact on people and nature, on land and sea, with opportunities for shared learning with the Rewilding Network. Funding of up £15,000 is available for projects engaging young people which are based in Britain covering cover at least 40 hectares of contiguous land.

National Lottery Community Fund (NLCF) – UK Fund

About Us: The UK Fund offers larger amounts of funding for existing projects. We’ll fund projects that help bring diverse communities together. From July 2024 we’ll also fund projects that help children and young people use their voice to influence change.


Criteria:All projects must:
• benefit communities across the UK (by working in different places, or by sharing learning between countries)
• scale up their impact by expanding their work (by helping more people, or doing more for people they already work with)
• support people experiencing poverty, disadvantage and discrimination
• help make significant changes to services or systems that affect people’s everyday lives.

And meet one of these aims:
• improve relationships between people with different life experiences
• help people and communities who find it difficult to meet face-to-face to make meaningful connections online
• help people from all backgrounds to influence the future of their communities
• help children and young people facing specific challenges change the systems that affect them
• help more organisations to involve and listen to children and young people.
Grant Size: £500,000 to £5 million. Funding is available for 2 to 10 years. We expect to fund around 20 projects a year.
Deadline for applications: Ongoing

Barclays Community Football Fund

About Us: Barclays believe in creating opportunities for all through access to football. That’s why, in partnership with Sported, the Barclays Community Football Fund is providing grants, training, and exclusive ticketing offers to make football more accessible in communities across the UK.
Criteria: The Barclays Community Football Fund is helping to reduce inequalities in football by supporting community sports groups who need it most. The programme focuses on groups operating in areas of high deprivation and supporting young people from the following underrepresented groups: women and girls, racially diverse communities, young people with disabilities, from the LGBTQ+ community, and from lower socio-economic areas.
Grant Size: £1,000
Deadline for applications: 15 September 2024

Metal for Good

Metal For Good fund incredible community groups and projects that use music and the values of the rock and metal community to help create an equal society.

We are delighted to invite applications from community groups, charities and non-profit organisations to apply for up to £3000 to deliver community projects that use music as a tool for change.

Successful projects will be shortlisted in September, and the final amount they receive will be determined by Metal For Good’s loyal supporters.

Up to six projects will be awarded funding, broken down by:

1 x £3000
2 x £2000
3 X £1000
Deadline: Applications will close on the 22nd August 2024 at 5pm

B&Q Foundation

Providing grants for a wide range of charities who are looking for funding to improve or develop spaces that benefit their local communities.

We know that charities are pushed for time and that is why we work with the team at Neighbourly to make the application process as easy as possible. Applications are reviewed and awarded based on the strength of application. We look specifically at the below three areas:

  • How much the charity and this project is reaching and helping those most in need
  • How much the project is improving a space where people can feel at home – creating somewhere that is comfortable, safe, and welcoming
  • The difference that the project will make – e.g. no. of people reached, longevity, impact

We award grants of up to £10,000 for building or indoor projects, and up to £5,000 for garden projects. We want to provide funding that covers the full cost for the completion of the project, so please include an estimated value of staff time required.

Deadline: The next application deadline to submit a complete application us: Friday 16 August 2024

Grants for historic church interiors and churchyard structures – Church of England

The Church of England give grants for the conservation of historic church interiors and churchyard structures in partnership with the Pilgrim Trust, the Radcliffe Trust, the Oswald Allen Bequest, the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths, and the Anglican Parish Churches Fund. Grant categories are as follows:

Bells and bell frames – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 31 March 2025.
Books and manuscripts – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 14 October 2024.
Church plate repairs – deadline for applications 14 October 2024.
Churchyard structures – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 14 October 2024.
Clocks – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 7 April 2025.
Monumental brasses and decorative metalwork – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 14 October 2024.
Monuments – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 14 October 2024.
Organs – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 7 October 2024.
Paintings and wall paintings – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 27 January 2025 TBC.
Stained glass – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 12 August 2024.
Textiles – grants up to £8,000, deadline for applications 14 October 2024.
Wooden objects – grants up to £10,000, deadline for applications 14 October 2024.

Community support small grants – Trusthouse Charitable Foundation

Single year grants between £2,000 and £10,000 are available to charities and not for profit organisations for core costs, salaries, running and project costs. Projects must have a focus on Community Support and address urban and rural deprivation in the UK.

if you are located in a rural area, you must be in the bottom 50% most deprived areas according to the Index of Multiple Deprivation. Your annual income must not exceed £250,000 and you can secure 50% of the total project costs.

This is a rolling programme with no deadlines.

Branching Out Fund – Tree Council

This Tree Council grant is for community groups, schools, small registered charities, and Tree Warden Networks seeking to establish trees, hedgerows, and orchards.

Branching Out supports applications ranging in value from £250 to £2,500, with specific criteria for those under £500, and those above £500.

The deadline for applications is 1 December 2024.

Memorial Grants Scheme – Department for Culture, Media & Sport

The Memorial Grant Scheme gives grants towards VAT on the construction, repair and maintenance of public memorial structures, for work which took place on or after 16 March 2005.

This is a UK-wide grant, available for memorials in any part of the UK (or overseas memorials in some circumstances). The grant scheme is managed by East Midlands Business Ltd on behalf of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS).

If you are a registered charity or a faith group ‘excepted’ from registering as a charity, this grant can help you with the cost of works like repairing and cleaning public memorials or installing a new memorial.

There are conditions on the types of memorial which are eligible, and what the funding can be used for. If your project meets these conditions, you can apply for funding towards the VAT cost of the works. The maximum grant available is the full rate of VAT (20% of project costs).

The deadline for applications is 30 September 2024.

Instrument funding – Music for All

Music for All is dedicated to changing lives across the UK by improving access to music making. They are “a passionate, focused and ambitious UK charity helping disadvantaged music makers experience the joys and far-reaching benefits of making music.”

In 2024 they are offering an instrument-only funding round to community projects and individuals, offering instruments such as drumkits with drumsticks, keyboards, ukulele bundle, pbuzz instruments, electric guitars as well as Arturia Analog Lab V controller software. Successful applicants will also receive access to The Maestro Online Masterclasses for these instruments.

Alongside this instrument-only funding round, they are also hosting their annual Harris Foundation Award which is open to schools looking to deepen their music provision and support/or continue to support groups of music makers within their school.

The deadline for applications is 30 September 2024.

Project Viability & Project Development Grants – the Architectural Heritage Fund


The Fund is offering grants of up to £15,000 to help assess the viability of historic building projects, and up to £20,000 towards development work to progress plans for historic buildings.

Project Viability Grants: These grants should help you to establish whether a project is viable. Work will probably focus on understanding the condition of the building, how it might be used, and whether that intended use is appropriate for the building and likely to be sustainable.
Project Development Grants: Project Development Grants can cover some of the costs of developing and co-ordinating your project and taking it towards the start of work on site. To qualify, an organisation must have established that the end use of the project is likely to be viable and have decided to take the project forward.
Applications are assessed at monthly grant decision meetings. This grant programme is supported by funding from Historic England.

Energy Resilience Fund – Power to Change

The Energy Resilience Fund is an initiative assisting community businesses in retrofitting their buildings with energy-saving measures. The programme is funded by Power to Change and delivered by Key Fund.

Investment amounts are available from £10,000 to £150,000. Up to 40% of the total is available as grant, where justifiable to support cost stabilisation or reduction. The minimum loan term for the remainder is 12 months, with a maximum of 7 years.

Energy Audit Grants are also available between £500 and £2,500 where these have not been completed.

Neighbourhood Planning Grant Funding – Locality

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities (DLUHC) have extended support for Neighbourhood Planning for a seventh year (2024/2025). The Neighbourhood Planning Support Programme will continue to offer grants and Technical Support packages and is currently open for applications. As follows:

If you’re working on a neighbourhood plan or neighbourhood development order, you can apply for grant funding of up to £10,000. Further grant funding is available to groups meeting certain criteria.
If you’re facing complex issues such as allocating sites for development, you can apply for Technical Support where a specialist advisor will support you with specific issues or assessments.

The Movement Fund – Sport England

Launched in April 2024, the Movement Fund offers crowdfunding pledges, grants and resources to improve physical activity opportunities for the people and communities who need it the most.

If your project aligns with Sport England priorities, they can fund a wide range of costs and items up to £15,000.

Their focus is to support projects that match their goal of getting more people active, reducing the number of inactive people and tackling inequalities.

Projects providing opportunities for groups facing barriers to activity are of particular interest, such as:

people living on low incomes
disabled people or those with long-term health conditions
older people
people from culturally diverse communities
pregnant women and parents with very young children
girls aged 5-16
LGBTQ+ people
people who are in foster care
people who provide care without pay.

Utilita Giving – Small Grants

Utilita Giving supports people out of fuel and food poverty. We provide small grants to organisations registered with the Charity Commission and/or Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator.

These organisations must meet all of our essential eligibility criteria as follows:
• 100% of the beneficiaries are suffering hardship caused by fuel and/or food poverty.
• The project will provide long term support which then results in lasting benefits for people.
• The public will be more aware about fuel and food poverty.
• The project will be sustained beyond the grant timeframe.
• The results of the project will be captured and shared with Utilita Giving.
• Funding will be spent within a 12-month period of the funding being awarded.
Grants of up to £10,000 are available.

West Berkshire Council: Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) funds

West Berkshire Council is launching its Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) for community groups. The Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) money is a charge they receive from new developments to go towards infrastructure. The council has decided to allocate some of this for community projects.

To date, they’ve approved over £1 million in community grants ranging from £10k to £100k. These include the renovation of village halls, scout huts and improvements to sports and playground facilities.

They are now allocating a further £500k of capital funding from their budget and are inviting bids from community groups, Town and Parish Councils and organisations wanting to deliver infrastructure to benefit residents and local businesses.

Application deadline: 16th September 2024 (5pm)

Sovereign Network Group

The housing association SNG launched a Thriving Communities fund in Jul 24. Grants from £1,000 up to £5,000 for a range of themes, including youth, health and well-being, ageing well, social inclusion and isolation (including equality, diversity and inclusion), environment and place, customer voice, employment support, food insecurity, digital inclusion and skills, money matters and debt advice. The fund will cover six distinct regions across the South of England where they operate. The fund works on a rolling basis, with a review of applications on a six-week cycle.

SSEN Resilience Funding

Scottish and Southern Electricity Networks (SSEN), the Distribution Network Operator for central southern England and the north of Scotland, is now welcoming applications to its new Powering Communities to Net Zero fund.

The new Powering Communities to Net Zero (PCNZ) fund is a successor to the previous Resilient Communities Fund, which has awarded over £5m to around 700 projects in the past nine years. The new fund will run annually from now, concluding in Spring 2028. More than £3m in grants will be awarded during this time. This fund will support communities during prolonged power interruptions caused by storms, aid their ability to cope in periods of severe weather, and will now also support the adoption of new low-carbon technologies by non-profit organisations.

The new fund explained:

The fund is split into two categories; community-led physical and environmental resilience, and Low Carbon Technology (LCTs).

The new community-led physical and environmental resilience grants.
• Half of the £3m funding will be available over the next four years to enable communities to apply for grants that will bolster physical and environmental resilience measures. Further details of the criteria are found in the fund guidance and in the application form. Grants of up to £15,000 will be awarded to successful applicants in this category.

The new low-carbon technology grants.
• The other half of the funding being made available over the next four years will also be available for non-profit organisations to apply for grants to go towards the purchase of new Low-Carbon Technology. For example, a successful grant application could result in a social housing scheme or community centre being awarded funding to contribute to the cost of EV chargers, solar panels, battery storage or backup, low carbon heating systems, smart heating controls, or other general energy efficiency measures. Grants of up to £20,000 will be awarded to successful applicants in this category.

The deadline for applications to both categories is 5pm on Saturday 31st August 2024, and applicants are asked to consider the criteria in the fund guidelines. The application documents can be downloaded on our website http://www.ssen.co.uk/pcnz. This gives full details of what can be supported by the fund as well as guidance on which projects will be prioritised.

The PCNZ Fund Panel, will review applications and determine which projects should receive funding, with the successful applications announced in late October.

Our sources and thanks go to the following organisations; Rural Services Network, Volunteer Centre West Berkshire, Wokingham & Bracknell InVOLve and Slough CVS.


2023-2024 Impact Report

We proudly present our 2023-2024 Impact Report, highlighting our continued commitment to supporting rural communities across Berkshire.

In the last year, we’ve made significant strides in several key areas;

  • We have provided crucial assistance to families facing challenges with their utility bills, ensuring they have the support and advice they need during difficult times.
  • Our training programs for adult community learners in West Berkshire have empowered individuals and helped build stronger communities.
  • Our Activating Village Halls project has ensured that exercise classes that are accessible to all have been supported to be set up in rural areas.
  • The 21st Century Community Halls project is helping make our community spaces more inclusive and sustainable for future generations.
  • Through our membership service, we have continued to offer extensive guidance to volunteers and committees managing Berkshire’s village halls ensuring these vital community assets remain well-supported.
  • In 2023-24 we were also excited to introduce our new rural housing project, addressing the pressing need for affordable housing in our rural communities.

Do please take a read by clicking here.


Meet our newest team member!

David Jennings joined our team at the beginning of the month (July 24) as our new Project Development Officer (taking over from Maria who recently switched roles to Rural Housing Enabler).

David’s work will focus on developing new projects and initiatives that support implementing action plans created through the 21st Century Community Halls programme. Here we ask David to introduce himself and tell us more about his background.

Can you tell us what made you interested in the role of Project Development Officer at CCB?

I admire the purpose of CCB to inspire community action and to deliver projects and services to improve rural health and wellbeing, reduce rural poverty and disadvantage and increase rural digital inclusion and social connectedness. I am already one of the recipients of these as a member of CCB for both Chaddleworth and Great Shefford village halls. As a customer, I have benefited from the 21st Century Community Halls programme so I was excited to be able to use my own professional skills to support and develop the project for CCB.

What are you hoping to achieve in your first six months in the post?
That’s what I’m working out at the moment…only in day three of the role!

What are you most excited about in your new position?
I am passionate about improving quality in local Berkshire communities: to improve our communication, resolve the issues we are facing, increase our collaboration and to get stuff done.

What do you enjoying doing outside of work?
I like to walk the dog, cycle and garden. I have also recently started paragliding again. I am a trustee for four Berkshire charities as their treasurer (Chaddleworth Village Hall, GreatShefford Village Hall, Chaddleworth and Shefford Schools PTFA, The Bakers Trustcovering fuel poverty), I edit the Chaddleworth News parish newsletter and I am the Clerk and Responsible Finance Office for Chaddleworth Parish Council.

If you could have any superpower, what would it be and why?
I would like to provoke and reward people’s empathy towards each other and for our ‘pale blue dot’ (Carl Sagan). ‘When we have the wisdom to use mercy and compassion instead of force…we human creatures will finally be on the right path’ (Leslie Thompkins, DC Comics).


Funding Opportunities in July

Lloyds Bank Foundation – Deaf and Disabled People’s Organisations

This programme is for small and local charities and CICs with an income between £25,000 to £500,000 that are led by and working with Deaf and Disabled people who are experiencing poverty. Organisations can apply for a three-year unrestricted grant of £75,000.We support a wide and diverse range of health charities. In partnership with our grant holders, we contribute to lasting positive change in our society.
This programme is aimed at registered charities and CICs which are led by and working for Deaf and Disabled people. Your organisation will work directly with Deaf and Disabled people over the long term to support them to have more choice and control over their lives, access their rights and entitlements and challenge the barriers they face.

Your work will be based on a social model of disability and you will be able to show how this understanding shapes the work that you do, and enables people to have their voices heard.

Successful applicants will receive a grant of £75,000, over three years (£25,000 per year). The grant will be unrestricted, so organisations awarded funding will be able to use the grant to support any costs that further your organisation’s social purpose.

Deadline: The deadline for applications is 5pm on Wednesday, 28 August 2024.

Motability Community Transport Grants

We launched this grant programme in April 2022, which aims to help charities and organisations to make an immediate impact for disabled people, by awarding funding to develop, expand and improve community transport options. We are focussing our grant making for this programme on:
• Funding support for staff or volunteer training and costs.
• Funding to increase the number of vehicles available in the community to help organisations support disabled people.
• Funding local, regional, or national initiatives to increase awareness of community transport and influence its inclusion in transport strategy and policy.
• Funding to schemes, programmes and initiatives that already exist, and which provide best practice solutions, but need further support to remain operational or scale up the service they can provide to help more disabled people.
If any of the above are relevant to your charity or organisation, please take some time to read this information and review the documents included within our guidance for applicants.

Using a wide range of research including insight from Motability Foundation grantees, other disabled people and representative organisations, community transport has been identified as a priority area for support.

Disabled people make 38% fewer journeys than non-disabled people every year – a figure that has not changed in a decade.

To help address this problem now, charities and organisations working in the Community Transport sector can apply for grants from £100,000 to £4 million at any point before March 2025 to improve the impact of community transport for disabled people.

Deadline: March 2025.

Money Saving Expert (MSE) Charity

About Us: The MSE Charity gives grants to UK not for profit organisations that deliver activities which make a lasting impact on how people think, behave and manage their money.
Criteria: UK not for profit organisations
Grant Size: up to £10,000
Deadline for applications: A new two-stage application process is being introduced with outline proposals accepted from 19 June up to 31 July 2024, or sooner depending on the number of proposals received.

Warm Spaces in Slough

If you run a Warm Space in Slough, where people are welcome to come for a chat and a cuppa, you may be able to get new supplies. SSE has donated £500 for items such as tea bags, coffee, sugar, biscuits, squash and hot chocolate for visitors to enjoy.

Those in charge of operating a Warm Space can contact Mark Clements at office@communitycafe.uk to request items and he can also supply Warm Space posters if needed for display purposes.

The Screwfix Foundation

Grants are available to UK-registered charities and not-for-profit organisations for projects that improve, fix, and repair buildings, homes and facilities specifically used by people in need across the UK.

Matthew Good Foundation – Grants for Good Fund

A small number of grants are available for local community groups, charities, voluntary groups and social enterprises in the UK for projects that have a positive impact on communities, people, or the environment.

Application deadline: 15th September 2024

2024 Platinum Jubilee Village Halls Fund (Main Grants)

Capital grants are available for village halls in rural areas across England to enhance, upgrade, extend, improve, and construct halls so that, as a result, new activities can take place bringing communities together.

Application deadline: N/A

Sport England – Movement Fund (with crowdfunding)

Grants are available for formally constituted not-for-profit organisations in England who can raise their initial funding through a crowdfunding campaign for projects that improve physical activity for people and communities who need it most with particular interest in opportunities for groups facing barriers to activity.

Application deadline: N/A

The True Colours Trust

The True Colours Trust provides grants to help support families, children and young people in the UK with complex disabilities and/or life-limiting and life-threatening conditions. The Trust seeks to bring about better lives for children and their families through a broad mix of research, advocacy, service delivery and innovation.

Their grant-making is focused on the following areas:

Improving service delivery and support offered to children with complex disabilities, their families and siblings in the UK.
Strengthening palliative care services for children and their families in the UK.

National Lottery Heritage Grants

Applications accepted on a rolling basis.
Heritage can be anything from the past that you value and want to pass on to future generations. We fund projects that connect people and communities to the national, regional and local heritage of the UK. Grants between £10,000 to £250,000 are available for non-profit organisations looking to care for and sustain heritage with projects which will run for no more than five years. Our priorities are promoting inclusion, boosting local economies, encouraging
skills development / job creation, supporting wellbeing, creating better places to live, work and visit, and/or improving heritage organisation’s resilience / sustainability.

The Archer Trust

Applications accepted on a rolling basis.
We are a UK charitable grant-making trust based on Christian values, which give funding to a small UK charities. If your organisation, in one way or another, provides aid or support to a defined group of disadvantaged or marginalised people, and if a grant of between £1,000 and £5,000 will make a big difference to support your work, you may meet our funding criteria. We prefer to support organisations working in areas of high unemployment and deprivation and we favour charities which make good use of volunteers. Find out more and how to apply.

Music & Heritage Funding

Applications close on Weds 31st July.
Funding is available for UK charities, not-for-profit and exempt organisations working in the areas of music, especially chamber music, composition and music education, or in heritage and crafts. The application form will request information about your organisation, the project and your finances, so please ensure that you have gathered this information in sufficient time to submit the application before the deadline.

Baily Thomas Charitable Fund

Applications close on Thursday 1st August.
Grants are available to voluntary organisations, charities and schools in the UK to assist with the care and relief of children, young people and adults with learning disabilities. We also support those undertaking research into learning disability. We offer small grants below £9000 and general grants above this.


Electricals Recycling Fund

Applications are accepted on a rolling basis.
This fund aims to grow existing methods or test new creative and practical ones for recycling small household electricals. We fund two types of projects; those seeking to grow or develop existing household collection services for small household electricals (up to £100,000), and those seeking to innovate new collection methods (up to £50,000). If you have a project that would make it easier for the public to repair, reuse or recycle their electricals, apply for funding.

West Berkshire Veolia’s Sustainability Fund

is back this year offering up to £1,000 worth of funding to help support people across West Berkshire to improve the environment!
Veolia’s Sustainability Fund will support inspirational ideas that aim to make a positive change towards their local communities.
The purpose of the fund is to support non-profit organisations, community groups or individuals that help transform their local community through enhancing biodiversity, promoting sustainable waste behaviours, protecting or preserving resources and the environment, or using recycled, reused or reclaimed materials.
If you have an idea to help improve your local community, apply before 30 September. Find out how you can bring your ideas to life by clicking on the title above.

Newly Opened: Morrisons Foundation – Community Spaces Fund

In celebration of Morrisons 125th Anniversary, the Foundation is delighted to have created the ‘Community Spaces Fund’.

This exciting new fund will see 125 charities receive a share of £1 million with grants of up to £8,000 each to enhance their community space facilities, making a difference for many more years to come.

We know how important it is for communities to have a place to meet, socialise, learn and provide care to others. We also know that funding new equipment, making renovations or creating new spaces can be difficult for local charities.

That’s why we’ve created this new fund and are asking Community Champions in all of our stores to look for opportunities to help charities who provide a community space and will be able to make a real difference with a cash boost of from the Morrisons Foundation.
1. From 17th June to 14th July, Morrisons Community Champions will identify charities that provide a community space that benefits their local area
2. Recommended charities will receive an invite from their Community Champion to complete an online form which must be completed no later than 14th July 2024. The form is for recommendation purposes only and does not guarantee that a grant can or will be awarded
3. Recommendations are verified and reviewed by the Morrisons Foundation from 15th to 31st July 2024
4. Throughout August 2024, together, Morrisons colleagues, Community Champions and the Morrisons Foundation will choose up to 125 charities to receive a grant
5. Successful charities will be notified via email. At this point charities should provide a recent bank statement and letter to confirm the bank details via email to the Morrisons Foundation within 14 days to enable payment by BACS
6. A presentation of the grant will take place at the Morrisons store/site that recommended the successful charity
To be considered, organisations must:
– Be recommended by their local Community Champion
– Be registered with the Charity Commission in England and Wales (CCEW) or the Office of Scottish Charity Regulator in Scotland (OSCR)
– Have submitted their accounts on time to the CCEW or OSCR within the past three years
– Be applying for a grant of no more than £8,000 to fund a project which enhances a space that will have a lasting impact in the local community
– Submit the online recommendation form provided by their local Community Champion by 14th July 2024
– Be applying for a project that will be completed by the end of 2024

Deadline: 14th July

Abri Community Fund

We believe the best ideas often come from the people who know and live in our communities. And we’re committed to supporting and investing in our communities. Which is why we have a £90,000 Community Fund available to help make your community a better place to live.
You can apply for up to £3,000 to support a project in one of our communities across the south of England (find out more about where we operate here). The rising cost of living is having a big impact on our customers and communities, so we will be prioritising applications that consider the health and wellbeing of our communities.
Although we are keen to support projects that help everyone in the community, it’s important for applicants to demonstrate how you’ll specifically be able to support customers living in Abri homes.
We recommend you submit your application as early as possible along with all the supporting documents.
Applications will be considered by our funding panel, which is made up of customers and those living in our communities. And we’ll share whether you’ve been successful within four weeks of the window closing. For successful applicants we will aim to make payment eight weeks after the window closes, subject to all supporting documentation being received and due diligence checks being completed.

Community Funding (abri.co.uk)

Deadline: Opening1st-21st July

Leeds Building Society Foundation

About Us: Our focus is to support those in need of a safe and secure home.
Criteria: Grants are only for capital expenditure. Grants to registered charities with a turnover of less than £1 million for projects which address one or more of the following themes:
• Financial stress – projects that help with bills or debt stress.
• Security and refuge – projects that support emergency accommodation.
• Quality and suitability of housing.
• Health and wellbeing support for those experiencing homelessness.
Grant Size: Between £250 and £1,000
Deadline for applications: 9 September 2024

Greenham Trust’s Planting Programme 2024

Local schools, councils, charities and community organisations are invited to apply for free trees and hedging plants for planting in the autumn.

Applications are now open for Greenham Trust’s Planting Project, and will close on 31st July 2024.

Click below for full details of the project and how to apply.

Activity for All

Grants of £1,000 are available to help children stay healthy and active this summer.

Applicants must be a sports or holiday club with a priority on supporting children with access to physical activity, providing more equipment and opportunities and/or providing healthy, nutritious food to keep active.

Tesco Stronger Starts

If you are a school, registered charity or not-for-profit organisation, you can apply for up to £1,500 to fund projects that provide food and support to young people across the UK.

Every three months, three local good causes are selected to be in the blue token customer vote in Tesco stores throughout the UK.

Thank you to Wokingham & Bracknell InVOLve, West Berkshire Volunteer Centre and Slough CVS for the information contained in this article.