CUPP Seed Fund Programme

Community University Partnership Programme (CUPP) seed funding aims to support the development of partnerships between academic staff and community organisations that will work together on a topic of mutual interest. Up to £5,000 is available per project and CUPP can offer you support to develop partnerships, project ideas and your application.

To see what sort of projects they have previously funded, please visit Community 21 and search for ‘2015’.

The deadline for applications is 23rd May 2016, and successful projects would be expected to start by October 2016.

Tel: 01273 643004
E-mail : cupp@brighton.ac.uk

Free Training: Community & Events Fundraising 22nd March

Venue: Brighton Racecourse, Freshfield Road, Brighton, East Sussex, BN2 9XZ 

Date: 22nd March

Time: 9.30am-4.30pm (registration from 9.15am)

Cost: The training provided and all delegate materials are free of charge to FSI Small Charity Members and Associate Members.  However we require a £50 deposit to secure your booking, £40 is refunded to you on attendance and £10 is retained as a booking fee.

For more information go to http://www.thefsi.org/services/training/brighton/

You can vote for local charities to get cash from Tesco

If you are shopping in Tesco before 6th March, you can vote for one of three local projects to receive a grant from the Bags of Help grant scheme.

For this scheme Tesco has teamed up with Groundwork. It will result in three community groups/ projects in each region awarded grants of £12,000, £10,000 and £8,000 – all raised from the 5p bag charge. So the good news is that every project will get some money, but it is up to the public to choose how much.

The local finalists are Brighton & Hove Food Partnership, Fishersgate Residents Association and Milner & Kingswood Tenants Association.

You will need a token to vote – make sure you ask for one when you pay for your shopping.

Bags of Help funds projects that are about green spaces in local communities. See Groundwork’s website for more information and how to apply.

Stuart Read Legacy Arts Fund

Grants of up to £1000 available from the Stuart Read Legacy Arts Fund for projects that promote the arts amongst young people under 17.

Next deadline is March 25th.

More details on our favourite funders page 

Grants available for London Road Area

Just over £2,500 is available for grants of up to £500 per application from the Healthy Neighbourhood Fund, London Road.

The fund is being managed by Serendipity – info@ses-partnership.co.uk, and applications must be returned to them by 18th March 2016. For further information also contact Serendipity.

The overarching theme for grants is to support projects that impact on the health and well-being of the community within the London Road area of Brighton (the area boundaried by New England/Viaduct Road, the Level, and Trafalgar Street). There are also the following public health priorities for applications:

  • Projects or activities that educate to prevent people starting to smoke or support them when they are ready to stop,
  • promoting healthy eating, improving diet and nutrition and helping to reduce obesity
  • Encourage active living and physical activity
  • Improving sexual health
  • Encouraging and supporting sensible drinking
  • Improving mental health and well-being and addressing isolation

Applications can be made by groups and organisations in the voluntary and community sector, groups of individuals, or individuals, but not from statutory or private organisations.

The applications should be no more than 2 sides of A4 and cover the following points:

  • Contact name and address
  • Group/Organisation Name (if not individual application)
  • Name of Project
  • Start and End Date
  • Details of Project/Activity -What are you going to do?
  • How this impacts on the themes and priorities of this fund.
  • Number, type, and location of beneficiaries – Who you going to do it with, how many, where?
  • How are you going to evaluate the work – How can you show you did what you said you would?
  • Project Cost – with breakdown – How much/what for?
  • Funding requested – with breakdown (if relevant where is the rest of the money coming from)
  • Sustainability or Exit Strategy – What happens at the end of the Funding?.
  • Additional Information – for example, how do we know you can deliver it?

Community Trees Fund

This fund is for up to 4 fruit trees (but no more than that) on semi-vigorous, vigorous and very vigorous rootstocks where children under the age of 16 are actively involved in the planting project.

Deadline 31st March 2016

For more info: http://www.treecouncil.org.uk/Grants/Community-Trees

 

Sport Relief Community Cash 2016: Deadline extended to Thursday 25th

Sport Relief Community Cash is looking to fund local groups (with incomes of less than £100,000) engaged in work/projects ‘where there is clear evidence of a beneficial impact on people’s lives who are excluded or disadvantaged through low income, rural or social isolation, age, disabilities, race, sexuality or gender’.  Grants of up to £1000 are available.

You can access more information, including the criteria and how to apply at http://www.sussexgiving.org.uk/apply-for-grants/apply-now/

Grow the Game grants open for football projects

The Football Foundation’s Grow the Game scheme is open for applications from not-for-profit groups in England until 10 March 2016.

The grant scheme aims to support community organisations and sports groups to increase participation in football, by involving new players and volunteers in  new football teams.

For 2016, the following types of teams will be considered for funding:

Male teams from the Under-14 age bracket and above.
Female teams.
Disability teams.

Not-for-profit organisations in England can apply for a grant of £1,500 per new team created over two or three years with financial support being reduced in the second or third year of the project

Eligible organisations include:

Football Clubs.
Youth Clubs with a football programme.
Community groups, centres and clubs.
Charitable organisations.
Parish Councils.
Sports associations.
Local authorities.
Multi-sports clubs.
Companies limited by guarantee.
Industrial and provident societies.
Unincorporated not-for-profit organisations.

Grant money can be used towards a combination of the following essential costs associated with providing new football activity:

Facility hire.
Hire of FA qualified coaches.
Referees fees.
CRB checks.
Affiliation fees.
League entry.
First aid kits.
Promotion and publicity.
FA coaching courses.
Additional courses.

The deadline for applications is 10 March 2016.

For more details go to the Football Foundation’s website.

Sport Relief Community Cash

Deadline is Tuesday 16th February, 5pm.

Grants of £500 to £1000 available to small grassroots community groups in Sussex for local projects.

Apply through Sussex Community Foundation.

The full criteria for this funding can be found on the Sussex Community Foundation website but broadly –

The aims of the grant are:

To support work where there is clear evidence of a beneficial impact on people’s lives who are excluded or disadvantaged through low income, rural or social isolation, age, disabilities, race, sexuality or gender.

To support community groups undertaking work that helps people of all ages feel more included in their community, builds their skills and increases their sense of achievement.

Who can apply?

They are particularly keen to ensure we reach groups of people who often miss out. As such they accept applications from:

 

  • constituted voluntary and community groups
  • charities
  • social enterprises
  • co-operatives
  • community interest companies

Bags of Help

Tesco’s new grant scheme Bags of Help allows communities to bid for up to £12,000 in community funds, to be used towards environmental improvement projects. This project is being administered by Groundworks together with Tesco.

The grant will fund capital projects that provide community benefit and where there is no charge to access. Projects that would typically receive funding include:

.               Parks, pocket parks and urban green spaces

.               Green corridors – river and canals, cycle ways

.               Formal and informal play areas

.               Open access sports facilities within public parks and recreation grounds

.               Informal outdoor recreation facilities; e.g. gym equipment, woodland walks

.               Nature reserves, community woodland, ponds and village greens

.               Churchyards

.               Seafront improvements

.               Community allotments, community gardens, orchards and city farms

.               Spaces in the grounds of hospices and day centres

.               Allotments

.               School grounds

.               Community spaces on housing estates or residential areas

There’s no match funding requirement to access this grant, but the grant should be the majority of the funding required for the project, which could be a stand-alone project or a discrete, self-contained part of a larger project or part of a phased project and will need to be delivered within twelve months of receipt of the grant.  Landowner’s permission is essential and some projects might also need planning permission.

Once all the bids are in and have been shortlisted by Groundwork and Tesco to the final three projects in each area, Tesco customers will get the chance to vote in local stores for which of the three finalists will receive either £12,000, £10,000 or £8,000. So projects in the final three are guaranteed some money! You can read more about the grant programme on Groundwork’s website http://www.groundwork.org.uk/Sites/tescocommunityscheme

The next funding round will open for applications in April! If you have any questions or want further advice on developing project ideas, contact Ben the Community Enabler for Sussex and Surrey.

Mob: 07736132698

Email: Ben.Smitton@groundwork.org.uk

www.south.groundwork.org.uk