Our grant giving programme Eligibility and guidance document (Summer 2018)

Similar documents
GRANT-MAKING POLICY. 2.2 The trustees ensure proper governance of the Foundation s grant-making in three ways.

Rank Foundation grant programme 2017 Information and criteria

Priority Axis 1: Promoting Research and Innovation

THE LARGEST CELEBRATION OF RURAL BUSINESS IN THE UK

Innovation and Improvement Fund

Guidelines: Comic Relief Local Communities Core Strength Grant

General small Funders (2013)

Strategic Plan

SOME OF THE LATEST GRANT FUNDING STREAMS

Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA)

Grant Making Policy. 2.1 Under the terms of the constitution, the Board of Trustees will apply funds to the following objectives:

Health Services and Delivery Research Programme

BBC Radio 4 and BBC One Lifeline Appeal

STOCKPORT S PORTAS PILOT

2017 results (HoC library): 2

Strengthening Communities Funding Guidelines

External Grants Guidelines

2014 to 2020 European Structural and Investment Funds Growth Programme. Call for Proposals European Social Fund. Priority Axis 2 : Skills for Growth

Evaluation of the Cumbria Flood Recovery Fund 2015 Summary

St. James s Place Foundation Grants 2015 Hospice Enabled Dementia Care Guidance for completing the application form

Workforce Development Fund

Rural Development Programme for England

Grant Fund. Prospectus 2016/17 Funding Round

Project Development Grants Guidance Notes

Postcode Community Trust - Community Grants

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

Social Enterprise. Taking the Pulse of the Small Charity Sector. Income. Maximising Assets. Resilience. Mission. Based. Innovation. Economy.

Great Place Scheme. Grants between 100,000 and 500,000 Guidance for applicants in Wales

THE NAUGHTON SCHOLARSHIPS TERMS AND CONDITIONS 2018

Third Sector Investment Programme Financial Assistance Fund 2010 / 2011

Comic Relief Core Strength Local Communities Fund

Social Enterprise Awards 2014

What are the terms and conditions of entry?

Targeted Regeneration Investment. Guidance for local authorities and delivery partners

Programme guide for Round 6 (November 2017)

GUIDE FOR APPLICANTS INTERREG VA

Paper 1 : Discussion Paper Current Update

RACQ Foundation. Guidelines and Application Form Natural Disasters. Funding Priorities Natural Disasters. Privacy. Eligibility Criteria

ACCENTURE SKILLING FOR CHANGE PROJECT SHORT TERM MONITORING AND EVALUATION CONSULTANCY TERMS OF REFERENCE

Support Programme. More than a Pub: Community Pub Business. How to apply for support and funding through the programme

SUMMARY OF TRUSTEES REPORT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 ST MARCH 2013

Community Grants. Applications are open from MONDAY 1 MAY WEDNESDAY 31 MAY 2017

Workforce Development Fund

Woodland Community Programme. Start-up grant Help Notes

Public Engagement Grant Scheme

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) Who can apply for a grant?

SOLWAY, BORDER AND EDEN AND NORTH PENNINE DALES LOCAL ACTION GROUPS

MASONIC CHARITABLE FOUNDATION JOB DESCRIPTION

Match Funding your Heritage Lottery Fund Heritage Grant With a National Churches Trust Repair Grant

Match Funding your Heritage Lottery Fund Our Heritage Grant With a National Churches Trust Repair or Community Grant

COMMUNITY AND DEMENTIA DEVELOPMENT FUNDING

Masonic Charitable Foundation 2017 Hospice Grants Bereavement Care. Information and criteria

Charities SORP 2005 Information Sheet Number 1

Guidelines for Applicants. Updated: Irish Cancer Society Research Scholarship Programme 2017

Scottish Government Regeneration Capital Grant Fund Update

Evaluation Fellow: Northern Ireland Project ECHO Knowledge Networks

INFORMATION FOR CLUBS

Rural Regeneration and Development Fund

Funding Bulletin February 2017

CIH South East Conference Awards , 9 and 10 March 2016

St. James s Place Foundation Grants 2015 Hospice Enabled Dementia Care Information and criteria

NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR HEALTH AND CARE EXCELLENCE. Health and Social Care Directorate Quality standards Process guide

Foundation Grants Guidance Notes

Innovating for Improvement

Section 1 Executive Summary

Clár Éire Ildánach The Creative Ireland Programme Scheme Guidelines

Mental Health Promotion Fund Wave Guidance notes

APPLICATION FORM DETAILS GOOGLE.ORG & ISD INNOVATION FUND

Challenge Fund 2018 Music

Rural Development: Broadband Scheme Introduction

Scotch Whisky Action Fund Tackling alcohol-related harms

Probation Service. Social Enterprise Kick Start Seed Fund. Guidance Information & Application Process

Guidance for applying to Funds A and B

Post-doctoral fellowships

2014 to 2020 European Structural and Investment Funds Growth Programme. Call for Proposals European Social Fund. Priority Axis 2 : Skills for Growth

The Drapers Charitable Fund. Guidelines for Applicants

1.1 Introduction. 1.2 Strategic Context HES Corporate Plan

EPSRC Impact Acceleration Account (IAA) Maximising Translational Groups, Centres & Facilities, September 2018 GUIDANCE NOTES

GUIDANCE PACK FOR COMPLETING APPLICATION FORM PLEASE READ THIS DOCUMENT CAREFULLY BEFORE COMPLETING THE ONLINE APPLICATION

Rural Business Investment Scheme

Local Energy Challenge Fund

Jeans for Genes Day Genetic Disorders UK. Guidance for Applicants JEANS FOR GENES DAY. Supporting families affected by genetic disorders

9. MID SUSSEX ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY 2013 PROGRESS REPORT AND ACTION PLAN UPDATE

Capital Grant Scheme application guidelines

West Lancashire Freemasons Charity

Post-doctoral fellowships

Funding guidelines. Supporting positive change in communities

ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowships Call specification

Levy and Grant How they work

Isle of Wight Rural SME Fund

Contents. The Rural Development (LEADER) Programme Co. Kildare s Local Development Strategy Who can apply?...

Research Council Policy Internships Scheme

NEWRY, MOURNE AND DOWN DISTRICT COUNCIL FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE 2016/2017 CALL

Local Rural Development Strategy for LAG South Antrim DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR AXIS 3 NORTHERN IRELAND RURAL DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME

Priority Axis 3: Enhancing the Competitiveness of Small and Medium Sized Enterprises

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT FUND

RACQ Foundation. Natural Disasters. Guidelines and Application Form. Page 1

distinction as to race, religion, age or disability, and in compliance with relevant legislation.

Funding the East Midlands. A guide to finding Funding, Investment and Support for the VCS and Social Enterprises

ocume Lambeth Community Fund Fund guidelines

Transcription:

Our grant giving programme Eligibility and guidance document (Summer 2018) Introduction The Prince s Countryside Fund ( the Fund ) will provide funding towards projects operating in England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland that clearly contribute towards one or more of The Prince s Countryside Fund s objectives. We want our funding to have a long term positive impact on rural communities, helping those that live and work there to sustain the countryside, by tackling key rural issues. Our grants have to result in things that relate directly to our current objectives to: To improve the prospects of viability for family farm businesses To sustain rural communities and drive economic vibrancy To support aid delivery in emergency and building resilience This document includes: 1. Key areas the Fund seeks to address 2. Criteria for application 3. Application Form guidance 4. Funding decisions 5. Summary 1. Key areas the Fund seeks to address To be eligible for a grant you will need to demonstrate that your project is focusing on at least one of these three areas. Improving the prospects of viability for family farm businesses: The Fund is seeking applications from projects that will focus on developing stronger, more sustainable farm businesses and other rural enterprises with the aim of halting the decline of the rural economy. These projects should focus on: Providing business support and advice for rural businesses including supporting farmers in financial hardship to help them improve their efficiency and/or add value to their business through the provision of on-farm business advice. Facilitating the transfer of knowledge for continuous improvement of agricultural businesses in poor rural areas and providing opportunities for continuing professional development of farmers. Supporting farmer led initiatives including cooperatives and producer groups aimed at adding value, reducing costs, sharing information and shortening supply chains in farming/rural areas experiencing financial hardship. Providing training opportunities and apprenticeship schemes for those seeking a career in agriculture. The Prince s Countryside Fund, 137 Shepherdess Walk, London N1 7RQ 020 7566 8797 / pcfapplication@bitc.org.uk www.princescountrysidefund.org.uk The Prince s Countryside Fund Charity No. England and Wales 1136077 and Scotland SC048055. Company No. 7240359

If you are considering applying under this theme to provide business support and advice for farm businesses, please contact us to discuss in more detail your proposed activity and to ensure there is not an overlap with The Prince s Farm Resilience Programme. Prospective locations for delivering the PFRP in 2018/19 include: Lincolnshire, North Yorkshire, Cornwall, Worcestershire, West Yorkshire, Isle of Skye, Perthshire, Brecon Beacons, Northern Ireland, Dorset, Somerset, Cumbria, Leicestershire and North West Wales. If you are planning to deliver a similar project in these areas and are considering applying for funding please contact Maddy Fitzgerald for more information madeleine.fitzgerald@bitc.org.uk. Sustaining Rural Communities and driving Economic Vibrancy: The Fund is seeking applications from projects that provide innovative solutions to deliver assets and services that keep isolated and sparsely populated rural communities together and develop a more sustainable rural economy. These projects will focus on: Supporting village service provision including pubs, shops and transport Encouraging rural enterprise through facilitating business support and advice and the creation of business hubs and enterprise areas. Providing training opportunities such as rural career apprenticeships, bursaries and vouchers to access training and qualifications. Providing advice and training to people searching for local jobs. Supporting Aid Delivery in Emergency and Building Resilience: The Fund will support projects that support farm businesses, rural businesses and communities to plan for and recover from natural disasters such as flooding or animal disease. If you are considering applying under this theme, please contact our Grant Manager to discuss in more detail your proposed activity. 2. Criteria for Application Type of applicant Applications are accepted from (please note this list is not exhaustive): Charities Community Benefit Society Community Interest Companies Companies limited by guarantee Not for profit organisations Social enterprises Unincorporated associations The Prince s Countryside Fund will not accept applications from individuals or the following organisations: Statutory bodies, such as local authorities, NHS bodies, or work where there is statutory responsibility to provide funding. Religious bodies where the funding will be for religious purposes. Political organisations where the funding will be used for political purposes.

Type of activity Applications will be accepted for new projects and initiatives that meet the criteria listed in the previous section. The Prince s Countryside Fund will not accept the following types of applications: Projects where the work has begun and money has been spent in anticipation of receiving funding. Projects where the funding would displace existing funding streams, such as agrienvironment schemes. Projects which do not demonstrate sufficient public benefit and in which private benefit is more than incidental. Applications for feasibility studies where the outcome is unknown cannot be funded. Applications from support organisations that do not provide direct service delivery to clients will be accepted, however applications will have to be for specific projects with tangible and deliverable outcomes. Amount of funding Organisations can apply for a maximum of 50,000 (inclusive of VAT) of funding to a maximum period of three years. The Prince s Countryside Fund s Trustees on occasion may only offer part funding (when this is the case revised outputs will be agreed if applicable). The Fund can pay for a portion or all the costs of a project, as either a one-off grant or as ongoing support. The Fund will consider applications for match funding. The Fund will not support projects wholly dependent on its funding for over three years. Applications for project and resource funding will be considered. Applications for capital funding are accepted but only for the purchase of equipment and for refurbishment. The Prince s Countryside Fund does not accept capital funding requests for the purchase of buildings or land. Requests for funding of up to a maximum of three years will be considered. Extensions will be considered based on results and the current priorities of the Fund. Funding will be made in six monthly instalments from the start of the project following receipt of a written report detailing the satisfactory completion of the outcomes to date except in the case of small grants which may be made in a single payment. 3. Application Form Guidance All applications must be completed using our online application form. No supplementary information will be accepted. Please note for some questions we have set a maximum word count you can have in your answer. The word limits are not just for guidance. We will not consider any further information over the word limit so please make each one count. Questions which may require further explanation than is given on the form are noted below: SECTION 1: Project Overview What is the main purpose of your project and how is it relevant to The Prince s Countryside Fund? Please provide the overall aim that sums up the purpose of your project. It should be one or two sentences and something that you can achieve or at least influence strongly over the course of your project.

SECTION 2: You and your organisation Please complete in full and provide the contact details for the person managing project. SECTION 3: The Project What evidence do you have to show your project is needed? Please provide evidence that is recent and relevant to demonstrate the need of the project. This can come from a combination of sources, such as: Research into the scale of the need. Local statistics about the population of the area or levels of deprivation, or other statistics. Local authority initiatives or partnership strategies between statutory and voluntary sector services that are in place because the need is already well known and evidenced. Testimonies from those who will benefit from the project. Surveys of potential beneficiaries and members of the community Learning from previous work you have undertaken How many and who will benefit? Please provide information on the types of people who will benefit from your project and how many. We will accept estimates, and examples could be 200 farming businesses or 12 people. What key outputs will your project deliver every six months? Please include a timeline of activity. Outputs are the products, services or facilities that result from a project s activity. Depending on the type and scale of the project, please provide as many realistic outputs as possible. For example: Number of individuals recruited to participate in farming apprenticeship scheme or Number of local residents recruited to volunteer in the community shop. What key outcomes will your project achieve? Outcomes are the changes, benefits, learning or other effects that result from what the project makes, offers or provides. This differs from outputs, which as described above are the specific direct deliverables, such as the products, services or resources that are delivered through the work. Depending on the type and scale of the project, please provide as many realistic outcomes as possible. For example, depending on your project, outcomes could be: If your project will train seven young people as hill farmer apprentices the outcome will be a new trained labour force entering the rural economy improving the sustainability of hill farming or at least three participants finding paid employment within 12 months. These outcomes are the most important element of your application. Please make sure that there is a direct correlation between the outputs, outcomes of your project and the Fund s objectives. How will you collect information about the change that comes about as a result of your project? Many projects have both direct beneficiaries and indirect beneficiaries. You only need to collect data on your direct beneficiaries, unless indirect beneficiaries are important to achieving your project s outcomes. How you collect your evidence will depend on the type and scale of the project, how much you know about the people who will benefit and the time your staff or volunteers have available.

We don t expect you to collect information from everyone, but you ll need to have enough evidence to provide reliable figures about the spread of people benefiting from your project. Examples include: Quantitative data such as the number of people supported, the type of support requested or the number of workshops delivered. Quantitative data such as the number of changes that happened and qualitative data describing people s experiences. E.g. the number of people who have progressed into training or employment and the level of confidence reported by beneficiaries. Please describe how your project will have an impact on the wider community? Please describe the difference you want to see in your own terms, and how the grant from the Fund will help you achieve it. SECTION 4: Project Finances Financial Information Please complete in full. Please note we only require a financial breakdown of where you will spend The Prince s Countryside Fund grant not the full cost of the project. Please divide under core activities and costs using the table provided. Please note that value for money in terms of the outcomes achieved by the Fund s investment will be used to consider which applications are successful. If you are applying for a community shop or pub and shortlisted for consideration by the Board of Trustees, you will be asked to submit a full business plan. SECTION 5: Reference The referee should write a brief statement of support for the project. This person should be someone who knows and has seen the work of your organisation/community group in a professional capacity, but is independent. Please upload the reference as a pdf to the grant application portal. If your application is shortlisted for consideration by the Trustee Board, we will contact the referee to validate their reference. SECTION 6: Signatures We require two typed signatures for the project. Ideally this needs to be the Director and Project Manager or appropriate position. If you are successful it will be these two individuals who will be required to sign a hard copy of the grant agreement. 4. Funding decisions Applications for funding must be made on The Prince s Countryside Fund s website. No other supporting documentation will be considered. All eligible applications meeting the criteria specified will be considered by an assessment panel. Shortlisted applications will be referred to The Prince s Countryside Fund s Trustee board for a final decision. Funding will be conditional upon the recipient agreeing to the Fund s grant conditions as amended from time to time. These will include a requirement for the applicant to provide details of progress against set targets every six months which the applicant must meet before additional tranches of

funding will be released. This will enable the Fund to monitor how effectively grant funding is being used. Funding will not be provided if doing so would damage the name or reputation of the Fund or if the Trustees have other good grounds for refusing funding. Successful applicants will also be required to share the results and lessons learned from their work with others, so that successful projects may be replicated elsewhere. These results will also be communicated by the Fund, to demonstrate the impact that the charitable funding has had and to maximise its effectiveness. Successful applicants will be required to help communicate and promote The Prince s Countryside Fund s support. Funding decisions are final. Unfortunately, due to the sheer volume of applications and the extremely small administrative team individual feedback cannot be provided. 5. Summary In summary, successful applicants will: Ensure that the project results contribute to The Prince s Countryside Fund s objectives. Apply for funding for projects that tackle at least one key theme as defined in this document see section 1). Be part of an eligible organisation see section 2. Present a clear overview of the duration of the project that shows how the project will achieve its desired outcomes (within budget), and in doing so, the objectives of The Prince s Countryside Fund see section 3. Be able to demonstrate a clear need and the support of the community. Ensure administration costs will be kept to an absolute minimum to maximise results. Value for money will be considered in the assessment process. Bid for funding for a maximum of three years and for a maximum total of 50,000. Be able to demonstrate significant public benefit arising from their project.