Archive for the Fund Category

Disability Links

Wheelchair Users …The Irish Association for Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus Home page of the Irish Association for Spina Bifida and Hydrocephalus

Other Disabilities.

 National Organisations .

 Visually Impaired

Hearing Problems

  • British Deaf Association
    The BDA is the UK’s largest national organisation run by Deaf people, for Deaf people. They represent the Deaf community.
  • Deaf 24/7 - resource for all British Sign Language and deafness related information
  •  Deaf Broadcasting Council
    The DBC monitors access to TV and video for deaf, deafened and hard of hearing people.
  • DeafPlus
    DeafPlus works to encourage integration and equality between deaf and hearing people in all areas of life.
  •  Disability Rights Commission
    The Disability Rights Commission (DRC) is an independent body that works to eliminate discrimination against disabled people and promote equality of opportunity.
  • Hearing Concern
    Hearing Concern is a national charity dedicated to improving the quality of life of those who are hard of hearing.
  •  Hearing Dogs for Deaf People
    Hearing Dogs for Deaf People is a registered charity that trains dogs to alert severely and profoundly deaf people to sounds they cannot hear such as the alarm clock, baby cry, smoke alarm and many others.
  •  Jewish Deaf Association
    The JDA offers support, information and a range of social, cultural and educational programmes for its d/Deaf members, people with all levels of hearing loss, tinnitus sufferers, and hearing people living or working with deaf and hard of hearing people.
  • The LINK Centre for Deafened People
    National UK organisation for deafened people that helps them adjust to deafness in everyday living through rehabilitation and life skills programmes, trains health care professionals in acquired deafness, and conducts research that will advance the understanding of this type of deafness.
  • * National Association of Deafened People
    The NADP provides information and support for deafened people who have lost all or most of their useful hearing, and for their families and friends, to help enable them to regain their independence and enjoy the best quality of life.
  • National Deaf Children’s Society (NDCS)
    NDCS is an organisation of parents, families and carers which exists to support parents in enabling their child to maximise their skills and abilities; and works to facilitate this process by every means possible.
  •  Royal Association for Deaf People (RAD)
    RAD strives to meet the individual needs of Deaf children and adults and deafblind people through the provision of services and the use of RAD Centres for Deaf People.
  • Royal National Institute for Deaf People (RNID)
    RNID is the largest charity representing the 9 million deaf and hard of hearing people in the UK. They offer a range of services, and provide information and support on all aspects of deafness, hearing loss, and tinnitus.
  • Scottish Council on Deafness
    National co-ordinating body for voluntary and statutory organisations which cater for a wide range of needs of Deaf Sign Language users, deafened, deafblind and hard of hearing people, their families, carers and professionals working with them.
  • UK Council on Deafness (UKCoD)
    The UK Council on Deafness works with and for deaf organisations in the UK by providing information, advice and support.

National Organisations .

Other Disabilities.

  • Directgov - comprehensive directory of public services for people with disabilities

Eddy Jackson
info@cyrene.co.uk
www.cyrene.co.uk
www.communincationuk.com

Phone: 0780 9233 688
SkypeIn: 0161 408 6880
Skype: cyrene-consulting
Facilitating insights and solutions
for individuals, teams and organisations.

Community Funding Agencies

Abbey National Charitable Trust Ltd

Grants of up to £2,500 are available for local regeneration projects which encourage cross community partnerships. To meet this priority different parts of the community need to work together to help regenerate their local area. The aim is to encourage community networks, partnerships and shared resources. This would include intergenerational work, inclusion of disadvantaged people, cross community projects, encouraging diversity or networks of people from different ethnic groups to work together. Grants are available for one year only and cannot be for salaries or core costs. Charitable Trust Secretary, Abbey Charitable Trust Ltd.,

PO Box 911, Central Milton Keynes MK9 1AD
Tel: 0870 608 0104
Email: communitypartnership@abbey.com
Website: www.abbeynational.com/home/comm_inv/comm_inv-trust.htm

Adventure Capital Fund

The Adventure Capital Fund was launched in December 2002 in order to create new forms of investment in community organisations. The fund aims to strengthen local communities by investing in organisations that work in and for their communities. By helping organisations to become stronger and more self-sufficient through enterprise, the fund aims to help each group become sustainable in the long term and better able to control their own destinies by becoming less reliant upon short-term grants. Adventure Capital Fund, c/o Local Investment Fund, 7th Floor, Ibex House, 42-47 Minories, London EC3N 1DY
Tel: 0207 680 1028
Email: info@adventurecapitalfund.org.uk
Website: www.adventurecapitalfund.org.uk

Awards for All

Provides grants between £500 and £5,000 to help small groups. Awards for All South East, 3 rd Floor, Dominion House, Woodbridge Road, Guildford, Surrey GU1 4BN
Tel: 01483 462943 Fax:01483 569893
Email: south.east@awardsforall.org.uk
Website: www.awardsforall.org.uk

B&Q You Can Do It Awards

£5,000 worth of B&Q prodcts are available for local community projects. The scheme is launched in January. Tel: 0845 300 1001
Website: www.diy.com/awards

Barclays Local Hero Award

This scheme awards volunteers who have demonstrated great commitment and support to their club or organisation. Each winner is presented with a special medal and a cheque for £1000 for the club or charity of their choice. Website: www.barclays.co.uk/spacesforsports

Biffaward

Biffaward is a landfill tax credit funded scheme and so projects must be within 10 miles of a Biffa operation (a postcode search is available on the website). Varying levels of funding are available for flagship projects (up to £500,000), small grants projects (up to £5,000) and biodiveristy projects (discretionary). The aim of the scheme is to: Provide and improve public amenities; Create, Restore and Manage areas specifically to increase biodiversity; Enable smaller groups to access funding more easily; and Support community led regeneration schemes of regional or national significance. Tel: 0870 036 1000
Email: grants@rswt.org
Website: www.biffaward.org/welcome.php

The Big Lottery Fund

Big Lottery Fund is responsible for giving out half the money for good causes raised by the National Lottery, giving a budget of about £630 million a year. Funding covers health, education, environment and charitable purposes. They are committed to bringing real improvements to communities and the lives of people most in need.3rd Floor Dominion House,

Woodbridge Road,
Guildford, Surrey GU1 4BN
Tel: 01468 462900
Email: enquiries.se@biglotteryfund.org.uk
Website: www.biglotteryfund.org.uk

CAF Grantmaking

This programme aims to build the capacity of small to medium-sized charities. Grants are available from 1 May 2005 until 31 January 2006. The total grant budget for this period is £1.2 million. Kings Hill, West Malling, Kent ME19 4TA
Tel: 01732 520 334 Fax: 01732 520 159
Email: grants@cafonline.org
Website: www.cafonline.org/grants

Capacity Builders (from April 2006)

This scheme offered by the Home Office aims to support those groups in the voluntary and community sector that should be in the driving seat in delivering high quality, collaborative and sustainable sector support services and representation. Website: Capacity Builders

Charles Hayward Foundation

This foundation offers grants of between £1,000 and £20,000 to support projects providing community facilities, including funding the capital costs of community centres and village halls and community facilities provided by churches and faith groups. Hayward House, 45 Harrington Gardens,

London,

SW7 4JU.
Tel: 020 7370 7063 or 020 7370 7067
Website: www.charleshaywardfoundation.org.uk

Church Urban Fund

Grants are awarded to projects tackling poverty and marginalisation in the urban areas of England. The fund aims to benefit people who are socially, culturally, spiritually, environmentally and financially disadvantaged. Grants of up to £30,000 are awarded and can be either capital or revenue funding. Church Urban Fund, 1 Millbank, London SW1P 3JZ
Email: enquiries@cuf.org.uk
Website: www.cuf.org.uk/home.htm

Colyer-Fergusson Charitable Trust

Makes grants to charities and churches in Kent aiming to improve quality of life, tackle poverty, social isolation or exclusion and protect the natural resources and heritage of the local areas for their inhabitants. Colyer-Fergusson Charitable Trust
2 Friars Lane Ricmond Surrey TW9 1NL
Tel 0208 288 9101
Email admin@cfct.org.uk
Website:www.cfct.org.uk

David Knightly - Pride of Place Awards

Provides grants to local communities for schemes that will help make the local area a better place to live and work. To determine whether applications are currently being received, please contact the trust. Gillian Binks, David Knightly Charitable Trust, Pride of Place Awards, 22 Ferndene Road, Withington, Manchester, M20 4TT, Tel: 0161 445 6452

Esmee Fairbairn Foundation

Gives grants for charitable purposes in four Programme areas: Arts and Heritage; Education; Environment; and Social Development. There is no maximum grant size.
11 Park Place , London

SW1A 1LPTel: 020 7297 4700 Fax: 020 7297 4701
Email: info@esmeefairbairn.org.uk
Website: www.esmeefairbairn.org.uk

Futurebuilders

Investment fund for the voluntary and community sector. Investments will be made in the form of loans, grants and capacity building. The reasoning behind the fund is that not enough capital investment is made in the voluntary and community sector and this is an innovative way of introducing this money. Voluntary and community groups must be prepared to take a loan and it is intended that it should be repaid through the secural of an agreement with a public sector agency for the delivery of services. There are five areas of service delivery that are applicable for funding: community cohesion; crime; education and learning; health and social care; and support for children and young people. The minimum level of investment is £30,000 and the maximum limit ois £10million. Development grants are available. Tel: 0191 261 5200
Email: info@futurebuilders-england.org.uk
Website: www.futurebuilders-england.org.uk

The Gerald Micklem Trust

This is a general charitable trust. The Trustees have no restrictions on them as to the kinds of project or the areas they can support, and are generally prepared to consider any field. Mrs. S.J. Shone, Bolinge Hill Farm, Buriton, Petersfield, Hampshire GU31 4NN
Email: ghmicklem.charitabletrust@btinternet.com
Website: www.peter.shone.btinternet.co.uk/GHMCT1.htm

Help Yourselves

A new fund created by Save the Children and British Gas, Help Yourselves funds projects up to £1000 that give young people the chance to improve their communities. Save the Children, 5th Floor, Hawthorns House, Halfords Lane, Smethwick,

B66 1BB
Email: helpyourselves@savethechildren.org.uk Website: www.helpyourselves.org.uk

Henry Smith Charity

Large grants of up to £60,000 over three years and a small grant scheme of up to £10,000 is available for projects that support communities in areas of deprivation. The Director, Henry Smith’s Charity, 5 Chancery Lane, Clifford’s

Inn, London EC4A 1BU
Tel: 020 7320 6884
Website: www.henrysmithcharity.org.uk

Heritage Lottery Fund

Aims to support work designed to care for the heritage and to help people to experience it. They also support activities that will increase people’s understanding and enjoyment of our heritage. There are two main funding strands, grants for between £5,000 and £50,000 and grants of over £50,000. There is also a grant programme for the repair of places of worship and for townscape heritage. Heritage Lottery Fund, South East Team, 7 Holbein Place , London

SW1W 8NR Tel: 020 7591 6184
Email: enquire@hlf.org.uk
Website: www.hlf.org.uk

Ladbrokes in the Community Charitable Trust

The trust aims to work with a wide range of charities and good causes, helping raise funds and tailoring initiatives to meet the demands of local communities. Projects supported include those helping children, hospices and sports. Address: Ms Ros Barker, Ladbroke Racing Ltd, Imperial House, Imperial Drive, Harrow,

Middlesex,

HA2 7JW Tel: 0208 515 586

LankellyChase Foundation

The Lankelly Foundation and Chase Charity have merged to form the Lankelly Chase Foundation. Its main priorities include: arts, breaking the cycle of abuse and deprivation, developing communities, mental health issues, heritage, offenders; society; and children’s playschemes. There is also a short term programmme for asylum seekers/refugees. The LankellyChase Foundation, 2 The Court, High Street, Harwell, Didcot, Oxon OX11 0EY
Tel: 01235 820044
Website: http://www.lankelly-foundation.org.uk

Lloyds TSB Foundation

The Trustees’ policy is to support underfunded charities so people, especially disadvantaged or disabled people, can play a fuller role in the community. They support a wide range of activities which fall within the broad areas of Social and Community Needs, and Education and Training. The scheme operates on a national basis but there are also regional priorities:
To target funds at those areas in the region with the greatest need, including areas where there is deprivation and no government initiatives *
To support BME voluntary groups *
To support people returning to the community.
Address: South East Regional Office, Lloyds TSB Bank, 4 West Street, Havant PO9 1PE
Email: john.paton@lloydstsbfoundations.org.uk
Tel: 023 9248 0774 Fax: 023 9248 0796
Website: www.lloydstsbfoundations.org.uk/guidelines.html
www.lloydstsbfoundations.org.uk/regions/s_east.html

The Tudor Trust

Grants under Community Priority to renew the Social Fabric. The majority of Tudor’s grant-giving lies between £10,000 and £100,000. 7 Ladbroke Grove, London W11 3BD
Tel: 020 7727 8522 Fax: 020 7221 8522
Website: www.tudortrust.org.uk/index.htm

Unltd Millennium Award

Unltd Millennium Awards are cash awards plus support to help make ideas a reality. They provide advice, training, mentoring and other support services. Level 1 awards, from £500 to £5,000 to help make ideas become real projects. They are aimed at individuals or informal groups of people who want to set up new projects in their spare time. Level 2 awards, from £5,000 to £15,000, support projects that are already developed.
123 Whitecross Street, Islington, London EC1Y 8JJ
Tel: 0845 850 1122 Fax: 020 7566 1101
Email: info@unltd.org.uk
Website: www.unltd.org.uk

The Wates Foundation

Community Support & Development - To support activities facilitating access to and delivery of community services to those in need and to help develop the capacity of community organisations to deliver their services better. Grants of up to £25,000 a year for a maximum of three years. Brian Wheelwright, Director, The Wates Foundation, Wates House, Station Approach, LEATHERHEAD, Surrey KT22 7SW
Tel: 01372 861000 Fax: 01372 861252
E-mail: director@watesfoundation.org.uk
Website: www.watesfoundation.org.uk

The Young People’s Fund

The YPF will concentrate on the outcomes from the green paper ‘Every Child Matters ‘and on providing facilities and activities for young people out of school hours and in the holidays. There is £200 million available through the YPF across the UK over the next three years. In England , the sum is £157.5 million. For now, the YPF is still under consultation and sits under the New Opportunities Fund and so applicants should contact the New Opportunities Fund for more information. Young People’s Fund, New Opportunities Fund, 1 Plough Place, London

EC4A 1DE Tel: 020 7211 1957
Email: helen.coath@nof.org.uk
Website: www.nof.org.uk/default.aspx?tc=659&tct=1

UK Villages Community Kitty

The UKVillages Community Kitty awards grants of £50-£500 to community projects. To date they have supported a range of projects across the UK - from a knitting circle, to a playgroup needing toys, sports equipment for cubs, and support for several village halls and playing field committees - as well as a number of Heritage projects. UKVillages Ltd, 37 Church Street, Harston, Cambs,

CB2 5NP, UK Tel: 01223 874 500
Email: info@ukvillages.co.uk
Website: www.ukvillages.co.uk/articles.nsf/content/ukvkittyThese site are updated daily with hundreds of funding links:UK Funding Agencies
Community Grant Schemes and Charity Non Profit Funding

Eddy Jackson
07809233688
www.cyrene.co.uk
www.communicationuk.com

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