NAVCA urges Frances Maude to keep the government’s lottery promise
NAVCA Chief Executive, Kevin Curley, has written to the Minister for the Cabinet Office, Francis Maude MP, to urge him to deliver on the government’s promise to direct more of the Big Lottery Fund’s money to charities and community groups. The current consultation on the Big Lottery Fund policy directions, launched by the Cabinet Office, proposes BIG funding should go ‘primarily’ to the voluntary and community sector. Previously the Government said that BIG lottery funding should exclusively go to the voluntary and community sector. (see notes 1 & 2)
‘Primarily’ could in the future mean as little as 51%. The Big Lottery Fund distributes £600m a year, and this will increase after the Olympics, so this u-turn could cost local charities and community groups up to £300 million every year.
The policy that Big Lottery funding should go exclusively to the voluntary and community sector was in the Conservative Party 2010 manifesto. It was also the government’s stated position as recently as July 2010, when the Department for Culture, Media and Sport Structural Reform Plan said it would “reform the Big Lottery Fund to ensure that only voluntary and community sector projects are funded and to prevent funding of politicised projects”, in order to boost the Big Society. (see notes 3) It has also been the public position argued by government Ministers. (see notes 4 & 5)
The government’s existing commitment for all Big Lottery Fund money to the voluntary and community sector helped avoid controversy as they reduced the share of good cause money going to BIG from 50% to 40%. The proposal in the consultation calls into question the government’s previous position.
Kevin Curley, Chief Executive of NAVCA, said
“A year ago the Government reduced the share of good cause money going to the Big Lottery Fund from 50% to 40% and increased the shares going to support heritage, sport and art. At that time Ministers promised that 100% of Big Lottery Fund spend would be in the voluntary sector. Now they are just saying that primarily the money will go to our sector.
“Public spending cuts especially in local government grants mean that there is more pressure than ever on lottery funding. I am worried that this is a quiet signal that more Big Lottery Fund spending will go to the statutory sector. And I would feel that the whole voluntary sector has been let down if the government reneges upon the reassurances it gave us just 12 months ago.
“Anyone who cares about our sector should respond to this consultation and press the government to make good the commitment they made last year for all Big Lottery Fund money to go to voluntary and community sector organisations”.
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October 2011
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