Funding Opportunities & News for Community Groups in Berkshire January 2023

Civic Power Fund – Community Action Fund

Grants are available to local not-for-profit groups that are building the power of their community and campaigning for long-term change in the UK.
Application deadline: 26 February 2023. For more information please click here.

BME Youth – Together Fund

Grants are available to local not-for-profit groups for the delivery of sports and physical activities to culturally diverse communities, disabled people, lower socioeconomic groups and people with long term health conditions to improve their health and wellbeing across England.
Application deadline: 31 March 2023. For further information click here.

Tesco Community Grants

Grants are available to non-profit making, constituted groups and organisations for local good causes that focus on supporting children and families in the UK
Application deadline: N/A For further information.

Newly Opened: Joseph Rowntree – Grassroots Movements Fund

Joseph Rowntree excited to be open for applications in our first ever funding round aimed at grassroots groups. We need to put more power into the hands of those working to address inequality and injustice, and create new systems that put equity, justice and peace first.

The Grassroots Movements Fund has around £1 million which they are aiming to redistribute over two funding rounds in 2023. The fund will make grants of between £10k and £70k to every successful application. Grants can cover up to a two-year period.

To apply, organisations must:

  1. Be based in the UK with work primarily focused in the UK
  2. Be a not-for-profit organisation
  3. Have systems for making decisions and managing money
  4. Be able to demonstrate they are part of a grassroots movement
  5. Be able to demonstrate they are working towards transformative change.

Deadline: 19th February 2023. For further information click here.

Newly Opened: Civil Power – Community Action Fund

The Community Action Fund exists to support grassroots campaigning and community organising in the UK. It will provide one-off grants between £2,500 and £20,000.
These grants are available to grassroots organisations that are building the power of their community and campaigning for long-term change.
All successful applicants will be offered support beyond funding. This will include the Civic Power Fund Governance Hub and optional, bespoke cohort and capacity building opportunities. Applications should be:

  1. Rooted in and accountable to their community.
  2. Hoping to achieve long-term change on issues affecting the lives of their community.
  3. Addressing injustice by building the power of their community. For example, through community organising, campaigning, or democratic engagement.
  4. Lacking the resources to take their vision to the next level.
  5. Seeking to build a larger us and resisting the politics of division
    The Community Action Fund prioritises organisations led by people with lived experience of the injustice they are trying to overcome.
    Community Action Fund (civicpower.org.uk)

Deadline: 26th February 2023. For further infromation please click here

National Lottery Community Fund – regular funding programmes

The National Lottery Community Fund (NLCF) has has three rolling funding programmes:
Awards for all (for applications under £10,000)
Reaching Communities (for applications over £10,000)
Partnerships (for applications over £10,000 for organisations that work together with a shared set of goals to help communities to thrive)
The aim of the programmes is to support communities to thrive by funding activities that:
* Build strong relationships in and across communities.
* Improve the places and spaces that matter to communities.
* Help more people to reach their potential, by supporting them at the earliest possible stage.
Organisations can apply for funding to:
* Continue to deliver activity – whether the community needs crisis response, recovery or business as usual activity.
* Change and adapt, becoming more resilient to respond to new and future challenges.
Applications for all three programmes are accepted on an ongoing basis and further information on these programmes and how to apply can be found through the links above. For further information please click here.

Children In Need: Core Costs and Project Grants

Not for Profit organisations can apply if they are:
• Working with children and young people aged 18 years and under
• Working in the heart of their communities, particularly in times of crisis
• Putting children and young people at the centre of everything they do, from design to delivery
• Addressing challenges faced by children and young people, building their skills and resilience
• Empowering children and young people, and extending their choices in life
• Keen to keep learning about and developing their work with children and young people
• Committed to making a difference in children and young people’s lives

.Further details can be found here.

Sport England – Small Grants

We welcome applications from a wide range of not-for-profit organisations, provided your organisation has a minimum of three unrelated/non-cohabiting trustees or directors. Eligible types of organisations are:
• a community amateur sports club (as registered with HMRC)
• an unregistered voluntary and community organisation with a not-for-profit constitution
• a registered charity
• a not-for-profit company (limited by guarantee without share capital or charitable incorporated organisation)
• a community interest company (CIC) or other social enterprise
• community benefit society
• a school using their facilities for wider community benefit.
• local authority bodies (including town, parish and community councils).
We want to support projects that bring communities together and provide sport and physical activities for people who may be less physically active. For further information please click here.

Alpkit Foundation

We make small awards to people, groups and schools that work to remove the barriers in getting outdoors and experience wild places.
Spending time outdoors is good for the mind, body and soul. But generally people are spending less time outdoors. That is a problem we’re helping to solve. We support grass-roots direct action projects that tackle issues such as diversity & inclusion in the outdoors, participation, education, conservation and protection of our natural environment and health & well-being. For further information please click here.

Platinum Jubilee Village Halls Fund
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: 20 January 2023. For more information click here.

Resilient Theatres: Resilient Communities Grant Programme
Capacity building grants are available to support the restoration, reopening or revitalising of community theatres on the Theatres Trust’s Theatres at Risk Register.
Application deadline: 10 February 2023 For more information please click here.

FCC Community Action Fund – England

About Us: The FCC Community Action Fund provides grants to not-for-profit organisations for amenity projects eligible under Object D and Object DA of the Landfill Communities Fund (LCF).
Criteria: Registered charities, churches, parish councils, local authorities and CASC registered sports clubs can apply for grants for the provision, maintenance or improvement of community facilities. This can include village halls and community centres, public play areas; publicly available multi use games areas, skate parks and BMX tracks; sport and recreation grounds including pavilions and clubhouses with full public access; churches – community spaces only; nature reserves; public gardens, parks, country parks and woodlands with at least dawn to dusk access; and Museums. Projects must be located within 10 miles of an eligible FCC Environment site.

Grant Size: £2,000 to £100,000
Deadline for applications: 5pm on the 8 March 2023. For further details click here.

Heathrow Community Trust – Communities Together Small programme

About Us: Funding for communities near Heathrow
Criteria:
The following themes apply for this programme:
• S1 Protecting and enhancing our local environment
• S2 Bringing communities together and increasing community cohesion
• S3 Improving quality of life through increasing social inclusion
• S4 Improving community facilities

Grant Size: up to £5,000
Deadline for applications: 28 February 2023

If you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact the team at hct@groundwork.org.uk

Find out more

Information contained in the article is source from Berkshire’s fantastic VCS’s – Wokingham & Bracknell Involve, Slough CVS, Reading Voluntary Action & West Berkshire Volunteer Centre.


Grant fund opens to support vital improvement works to village halls


Our national body Action with Communities in Rural England (ACRE) is managing the £3 million fund being made available by government to help restore and modernise rural community buildings across England.

Village halls across England are able to apply to the Platinum Jubilee Village Halls Fund for grants to improve buildings and facilities.

Announced by Defra to mark the occasion of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee in May 2022, the fund recognises the important role that village halls play in supporting rural communities.

According to research conducted by ACRE in 2020, there are over 10,000 village halls to be found across England, 60% of which are the only place where people can meet locally. Aside from hosting a wide range of social and recreational activities for residents, they also host vital services such as post offices, doctors’ surgeries and shops and support an estimated 50,000 livelihoods.

Following a competitive process, ACRE was appointed to manage the fund. The charity already provides specialist support and advice to the volunteers who run these important rural assets through its countrywide network of community support organisations.

James Blake, ACRE’s Chair said, “We are delighted to be administering this grant fund. Village halls are the beating heart of rural communities across England. They provide warm, welcoming spaces that bring people together, combat loneliness and support countless livelihoods which is especially important at a time when the cost-of-living crisis is bearing down on many. This investment, combined with the specialist support and advice of ACRE members will help modernise many of these important buildings so they can continue serving local communities.”

Lord Benyon, Minister for Rural Affairs said: “The Platinum Jubilee Village Halls Fund will create a national network of legacy projects to benefit rural communities. This will be a lasting tribute to the long, exceptional service of Her Late Majesty the Queen and will support village halls, many of which were built in commemoration of Her Majesty’s predecessors, Queen Victoria and King George V. Today, village halls remain a key community asset and efforts to modernise these spaces will ensure that they are used by generations to come.”

News of the grant fund opening comes at a time when many village halls are struggling with increase energy costs. In a survey conducted earlier this year, only 17% of management committees believed their hall was energy efficient and 57% agreed rising utility bills were creating financial difficulties.

Deborah Clarke, ACRE’s Village Halls manager said, “News that the Platinum Jubilee Fund is now open for applications will be welcomed by England’s village halls. We hope that many will use this opportunity to future proof their buildings, such as installing public broadband and investing in insulation and heating systems to make them more energy efficient”.

Groups responsible for village halls and working on projects that lead to a reduction in rural loneliness, have a positive impact on the local environment, support the rural economy and contribute to community life will be able to apply for grants between £7,500 and £75,000.

Initial applications to the fund can be made until midnight 20 January 2023. Another window for applications is expected mid-February but the duration of this will depend on the value of unallocated funds remaining.

Apply now by clicking here


How can CCB help improve rural health and wellbeing?

CCB invites anyone living in rural Berkshire to share their experiences of accessing local healthcare services. We want to hear your stories of how easy or otherwise it is to see a local dentist, register with a GP, have a prescription filled or attend an out-patient’s appointment. We don’t need to know the details of your medical history, only your experiences of accessing services.

Why are we interested in this?

The short answer…:

We would like to see rurality recognised as one of the wider determinants of health: a range of social, economic and environmental factors which impact on people’s health. This would bring a greater focus on the location of health services in relation to where people live and ensure that issues such as outreach, accessibility, digital inclusion and rural isolation are on the agenda of the local health authorities.

The slightly longer answer…:

Anyone doing a little research into rural health and social care will find many articles that highlight issues that need to be resolved. Organisations such as the Royal College of Nursing, the Rural Services Network, the British Medical Association and the Nuffield Trust have all recently published articles exploring rurality and its impact on health outcomes and service accessibility.

Some suggest a review of the funding formula is required to address the higher cost of delivering services in rural areas. Others advocate for investment in recruiting more staff in rural areas. These ideas, and others, may be effective solutions, but they are long-term and require action at a national level. What can be done at a more local level to improve rural health outcomes?

Most articles on the issue of rural healthcare sooner or later come across the issue of data availability that can help shed light on the nature of rural populations and the accessibility of the services they rely on. ‘Rural’ is quite hard to define and statistics are rarely available at a fine enough granularity to understand the specifics of sparsely populated areas. Most studies seem to conclude that a better understanding of the unique nature of need in different communities is necessary, and that different places require their own solution.

‘Integrated Care’ is the new structure for health services and replaces the old network of Clinical Commissioning Groups. Integrated Care Systems have been created, governed by Integrated Care Boards, each of which has established an Integrated Care Partnership that brings together healthcare professionals, service users, charities and local authorities to inform service delivery. There are 42 Boards in England, with Berkshire split between NHS Buckinghamshire, Oxfordshire and Berkshire West (West Berks, Wokingham and Reading) and NHS Frimley (Bracknell Forest, Slough and the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead).

Each Board is responsible for creating its own Integrated Care Strategy, and there is little evidence that the issue of rurality features within the emerging local strategies. If we are to have any success in changing this, we need to be able to tell the stories of people living in rural Berkshire: how our health and wellbeing outcomes could be improved by rural-proofing local strategies and improving access to healthcare in rural communities.  

We will soon publish how you can get involved with helping us understand this issue further. In the meantime, if you have any comments on this topic, please email us at admin@ccberks.org.uk


Crowthorne Late Night Shopping Event

The community of Crowthorne stepped out in force on the first Friday of December for the annual Crowthorne Late Night Shopping event.

The High Street was buzzing, with hundreds of shoppers enjoying the Christmas market stalls and starting their Christmas shopping at local independent and artisan shops, businesses and cafes.

The event was opened by the Mayor of Bracknell Forest Borough, Councillor Ankur Shiv Bhandari, who presented prizes to three local school children for their winning entries in the poster competition to advertise the event.

Activities included a Santa Grotto run by Crowthorne Library staff, Christmas carols and festive lights by Churches Together in Crowthorne, fire and road safety demonstrations by Crowthorne Fire Station crew, a visit by The Wayz youth minibus, charity stalls and fairground rides. Thank you to Crowthorne Parish Council, Bracknell Forest Council, Wokingham Without Parish Council and Churches Together in Crowthorne for contributing to the cost of the road closure which made the event safer for all, and to all the volunteer marshals who assisted with event logistics and stewarding.

Local shops and businesses reported their best day of pre-Christmas sales ‘ever’ and thanked the organisers for their work, and the residents for joining in with the festivities and supporting traders by shopping local!


Funding Opportunities December 2022

Comic Relief Community Fund

We are pleased to be managing this new fund on behalf of Comic Relief in England. It will provide grants of up to £10,000, supporting project delivery and organisational capacity building, helping organisations flourish.
The funding is split as follows:
• Up to £1,000 for capacity building
• Up to £9,000 for project delivery
We will fund applications from grass roots, community led organisations that can demonstrate how people with lived experience of the issues being tackled are involved in the organisation and the project.
Applications must sit within one of the four key themes:
A Safe Place To Be: Supporting people to rebuild their lives because of homelessness or forced migration.
Children Survive & Thrive: Supporting children up to the age of 11 to grow, play and learn
Gender Justice: Championing those who identify as women and girls, including initiatives tackling domestic violence, abuse or exploitation
Mental Health Matters: Supporting good mental health in communities and tackling stigma and discrimination. For more details please click here.

The Woodward Charitable Trust

The Woodward Charitable Trust only makes grants for core costs rather than specific projects as they recognise that smaller charities can find these hard to fund. They hope that this will have a more direct impact on the organisations that they choose to fund.

Applicants should take the time to read these guidelines in order to avoid submitting applications that are likely to be rejected. We know that preparing applications can be time consuming and we don’t want any organisation to expend that precious commodity unnecessarily.

Trustees only fund organisations that support at least one of the following three target groups and particularly look to fund projects that help families and young people and that are aiming to improve the life chances of their beneficiaries.

Please note that if your organisation also helps other groups outside our 3 priority areas you may still apply, however, it will be expected that the majority of your beneficiaries (more than 50%) are within at least one of these areas. If you do not give us details of how you help within our priority areas you will not be funded.
Trustees like projects that promote community cohesion and the development of skills that will change the outlook and outcomes for the users. Organisations that promote volunteering and involve both past and present users in their operations or management are encouraged. Trustees only consider applications for core costs and are looking for organisations which aim to achieve a positive impact in at least one of the following areas:
• Children and young people who are isolated, at risk of exclusion or involved in anti-social behaviour and projects to help those who have been in the care system. This also covers gang violence and knife crime, education and mentoring as well as projects that work to raise self-esteem and employment opportunities and encourage an active involvement in and contribution towards the local community;
• Disadvantaged families, this covers parenting support and guidance, mental health, food poverty, refuges and domestic violence projects. We understand that many organisations dealing with disadvantaged families may also work with other disadvantaged people, but please note that at least 50% of your service users must fall into our three priority groups in order to be considered for a grant. It is important to give us details as to how the work of your organisation fits within our guidelines;
• Prisoners and ex-offenders and specifically projects that maintain and develop contact with prisoners’ families and help with the rehabilitation and resettlement of prisoners and/or ex-offenders after their release.
The Trustees make two types of grants:
• Small grants – up to £3,000, but usually £1,000 or less;
• Large grants – Only a few large grants are awarded over £3,000 each year, and these are usually to charities known to the Trustees.
General Application Guidelines | The Woodward Charitable Trust

Deadline: The Trustees favour small-scale, locally based initiatives and most grants are only for one year. Trustees review grant applications twice a year, usually in March and October

Tesco Community Grants

Applications accepted on a rolling basis. Tesco Community Grants is open to charities and community organisations to apply for a grant of up to £1,500. Every three months,
three local good causes are selected to be in the blue token customer vote in Tesco stores throughout the UK. More info.

Community Energy Fund

Grants are available for not-for-profit organisations who can raise their initial funding through a crowdfunding campaign to support community projects committed to being environmentally conscious through ideas such as installing renewable technology or introducing energy efficiency measures in their endeavour to increase energy independence. Further info.

The Leathersellers’ Small Grants Programme


Grants up to £5,000 for charities registered and operating in the UK (including Charitable Incorporated Organisations (CIO) but not Community Interest Companies (CIC) that are working:

  • to provide assistance to vulnerable people in their community
  • in geographical areas of deprivation (within the UK) – they recognise all relative measures of deprivation as tracked by the Indices of Deprivation or similar tools. they ask who your work helps and why this is needed for that group or in that area so you can explain the need that exists there.
  • with an annual income of under £200,000 (secured for the coming year)

They meet monthly, and close each round after 45 bids received.

Read more

Screwfix Foundation

We are passionate about making a difference to communities across the UK. We are a grant giving charity with a clear purpose to support projects that improve, repair and maintain homes and community facilities used by those in need throughout the UK.
The Screwfix Foundation currently offers local registered charities and not for profit organisations funding up to the region of £5,000.
How do we raise money? We raise funds throughout the year to support causes that will change people’s lives. Look out for raffles and fundraising weeks held within Screwfix stores and you can also round up your pennies when shopping online at http://www.screwfix.com or on the Screwfix app.
As well as helping local charities and not for profit organisations, we also partner with Macmillan Cancer Support, donating funds towards their home improvement programme, which helps people suffering from cancer in financial need with minor home improvements.

Before applying for funding from The Screwfix Foundation, your organisation MUST:
• Be a registered charity or not for profit organisation.
• Help those in need. This could be by reason of financial hardship, sickness, distress or other disadvantages in the UK.
• Be looking for funding to support projects that relate to the repair, maintenance, improvement or construction of. homes, community buildings and other buildings.
Further details here.

Deadline: All applications are reviewed individually by our team on a quarterly basis, the review dates are in March, June, September and December.

National Lottery Community Fund – regular funding programmes

The National Lottery Community Fund (NLCF) has three rolling funding programmes:
* Awards for all (for applications under £10,000)
* Reaching Communities (for applications over £10,000)
* Partnerships (for applications over £10,000 for organisations that work together with a shared set of goals to help communities to thrive)
The aim of the programmes is to support communities to thrive by funding activities that:
* Build strong relationships in and across communities.
* Improve the places and spaces that matter to communities.
* Help more people to reach their potential, by supporting them at the earliest possible stage.
Organisations can apply for funding to:
* Continue to deliver activity – whether the community needs crisis response, recovery or business as usual activity.
* Change and adapt, becoming more resilient to respond to new and future challenges.
Applications for all three programmes are accepted on an ongoing basis and further information on these programmes and how to apply can be found through the links above.

Newly Opened: CLA Charitable Trust
The CLA Charitable Trust is dedicated to helping those who are disabled or disadvantaged to visit and participate in learning experiences about the countryside.
We support charitable organisations that access the benefits of the countryside to pursue the health and wellbeing of people and to provide opportunities for education about the countryside in England and Wales.
Priority areas – Children and young people, disadvantaged financially, physically, mentally, or from areas of deprivation.
Who can apply – Small and medium sized charities and not for profit organisations such as CIC’s with clear social purpose based in England and Wales, who have not been in receipt of a grant from CLACT in the previous three years and have a current safeguarding policy.
What we fund – Applications for running costs, project works and capital works. Evidence of need should be demonstrated.
Click here for details.

Deadline: Please apply by 6th February for your application to be considered at the March meeting; 26th April for the June meeting; and 31st August for the October meeting.

Julia and Hans Rausing Trust – Foodbank Fund

The Foodbank Fund has been established in response to the cost of living crisis and evidence that many foodbanks are facing the combined challenges of increasing need, escalating running costs, and food donations failing to keep up with demand.
The Fund is open to applications from foodbanks for funding to help meet costs such as the purchase of additional food items and increased running costs.
The definition of a foodbank for the purposes of this Fund is a venue which regularly gives out emergency food parcels at least once each week and has been running for six months or more.
• You must be a not-for-profit organisation established before 1 January 2020
• Your annual income is between £25,000 – £1,000,000
• Applications accepted until 6 December 2022
Foodbank Fund – The Julia and Hans Rausing Trust (juliahansrausingtrust.org)

Deadline: 1st January 2023

Barclays and Sported Community Football Fund

Sported has partnered with Barclays on the Barclays Community Football Fund, offering small grants, training, kit and exclusive ticketing offers to make football more accessible in communities across the UK.
Barclays believe in creating opportunities for all through access to football. Through the Barclays Community Football Fund, we want to grow participation in football at every level.
Grants of £500 are available for groups wishing to start offering football, to those keen to expand their existing provision to new audiences or those already delivering football to under-represented young people.
Alongside the grants, the programme offers training and support resources to groups to help reduce inequalities in the participation of football.
The programme has a particular focus on including girls and young people from lower socio-economic and under-represented groups – including racially diverse communities, people with disabilities, and people from the LGBTQ+ community. More details here.

Deadline: Rolling until 31st December 2024

Schroder Charitable Trust

The Schroder Charity Trust makes grants of up to £5,000 towards core and project costs to charities registered in the UK for work under the following categories:
• Arts, Culture and Heritage
• Education, Training and Employment
• Environment and Conservation
• Health and Wellbeing
• Strengthening Communities
The Trustees are particularly interested in applications which can demonstrate the following:
• Building strong communities and an understanding of how to engage with intended beneficiaries
• Replicable and sustainable work, rather than one off events
• Value for money
• Maximising the use of volunteers
• Support of older people
• Support for marginalised/vulnerable younger people
• The use of helplines and information services
• Sustainability of funding i.e. the charity will not be solely reliant on a grant from the Schroder Charity Trust for their work.
More details here. Deadline: Rolling

Home Instead Charities

About Us: Home Instead Charities were founded by Home Instead, the UK’s leading provider of home care. Our mission is to end loneliness for ageing adults. We exist to bring happiness and joy into the lives of our ageing population through peer support lunch clubs, art clubs and music therapy groups. 
Criteria: Small, local registered charities for projects that further the needs of our ageing adult population, through well-being activities and programmes to prevent social isolation and loneliness. Most of your group members must be over 55 years old or the project you are requesting funding for must benefit people aged over 55.
Grant Size: Up to £1,500
Deadline for applications: Rolling programme

Grants For Good
Applications close on Thurs 15th December.
Making a positive difference to communities, people and the environment, Grants for Good is theMatthew Good Foundation’s first fund that invites local charities, voluntary groups or social enterprises that have an average annual income of less than £50,000 to apply for funding. Every three months, they will share £10,000 between 5 shortlisted projects that have a positive impact on communities, people or the environment. The project that receives the most votes will receive a grant of £3,500, second place £2,500, third place £2,000 and fourth and fifth place will both receive £1,000. Further info.

Future Communities Fund
Applications close on Fri 23rd December.
This new fund will offer grants of up to £30,000 a year for five years to organisations helping diverse young people develop the skills to become future leaders and activists. We have a total of £1.5m to award from this round of funding. If your organisation has an annual turnover of £250k or less with young people’s voices from all backgrounds and abilities at the core of your delivery, you may be eligible to apply. Click here for further information.

Thank you to Berkshire’s fabulous CVS’s for the information contained in this article – Wokingham & Bracknell InVOLve, Volunteer Centre West Berkshire, Slough CVS & Reading Voluntary Action.