Skip to content ↓

News

Page 4

  • Be part of our #iwill Youth Grants Panel

    Published 02/11/22

    The #iwill Fund looks to support social action activities that create opportunities for young people aged 10-20 to develop their potential and their capacity to significantly contribute to their community.

    Social action involves activities such as campaigning, fundraising and volunteering and has huge potential to create enjoyable opportunities and skills development for young people, and in turn benefit the local people and places. Grants of up to £10,000 will be awarded to groups for projects lasting up to a year; with the aim of funding both groups that are well established but also those that are new and innovative, especially those that can reach young people that are new to social action.

    As part of this we will be putting together a youth panel made up of 18-21 year olds.

    This will be an exciting opportunity for them to participate in a Youth Panel which will be focused on distributing a grant pot towards youth-led projects across Northamptonshire that seek to increase youth-led social action projects that create positive change in local communities and gain insight & experience into grant giving. There will be a training session in evaluating grants assessments, prior to the panel.

    The main task of the Panel will be to evaluate applications and select the awardees. This panel will take place in person, in January 2023 (exact date & venue TBC) and will be assisted by Northamptonshire Community Foundation.

    We will only have spaces for a limited number of people. If you know a young person between 18-21 from your group who would be interested, please could you get them to email San-D Godoy Messenger:  san-d@ncf.uk.com and Alex Rex alex@ncf.uk.com  with :

    • A little bit about themselves

    • Have they have been involved in youth social action and if so, how?

    • Why they would like to take part in the #iwillFund panel

    If they could please send this to us by Friday 11th November (or want to find out more information), we will then be making decisions after that.

    Read More
  • Cast Study: The McCarthy-Dixon Foundation

    Published 31/10/22

    The McCarthy-Dixon Foundation foodbank provides food parcels to local schools, as well as other organisations such as domestic abuse services, mental health services, and HM Prison and Probation services. TMDF also provides social clubs, digital inclusion classes, affordable haircuts, cookery classes and home renovations to local, vulnerable groups.

    The organisation received a grant through the Family Fund Aid Fund to stock the foodbank with essentials to provide items for food parcels and breakfast boxes to be distributed to local schools to supply a healthy breakfast snack to any child that has missed breakfast before their school day. 

    TMDF provided 22 schools in Northamptonshire with 60 Breakfast Boxes for the second half of the spring term (from February half-term until Easter Holiday); there are 60 Breakfast Boxes ready to be delivered to schools for the first half of the summer term (from Easter until the May half-term). Each Breakfast Boxes contains 14 packs of nutritious breakfast bars, healthy cereal bars and raisins to be kept in classrooms, so teachers can give them out to children who go to school without breakfast. 

    Feedback from schools prove the importance of having breakfast to the healthy physical and emotional development of children. Breakfast Boxes contain healthy snacks and nutritious breakfast bars for those school children who go to school without eating in the morning. This can affect their physical and emotional abilities to learning.

    Read More
  • Blog: UN SDG 16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions

    Published 24/10/22

    Across the last year we have worked with donors, partners, funded charities and community groups to help achieve this global goal on our doorstep whether it be the launch of our Welcome Fund Appeal to help the safe resettlement of refugees from Afghanistan and the Ukraine or working alongside the High Sheriff’s Initiative Fund to provide grants to projects reducing serious youth violence across our communities.

    UN SDG 16: Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions is about safe and peaceful communities, where all residents feel included and have a deep sense of belonging; living in towns, villages and neighbourhoods where they can go about their daily lives without fear of becoming a victim of violence and crime. It is fundamentally also about access to justice, accountable institutions and healthy democratic processes.

    The goal’s mission statement is as follows: "Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels.”

    At Northamptonshire Community Foundation we have funded several projects and activities on behalf of our donors to support this mission locally; this includes projects supporting migrants and refugees, projects tackling violence and supporting victims of crime, community law services, rights and equality councils, community safety initiatives, citizens advice and advocacy and residents groups representing local people’s interests and concerns.

    Our community conversations that we have held on how to best go about achieving this goal locally includes a commitment to encourage projects that address the following:

    • Promote education on and understanding of the rule of law and democracy
    • Community assets – promoting, funding and supporting physical spaces where under-represented communities can meet
    • Celebrate diversity, promote inclusion and recognise the different needs within communities
    • Champion the key role the VCSE sector plays as a strategic partner to the public sector

    Our recent impact report has recorded across the last year highlights how we have supported local residents across this goal including 11,409 people feeling an increased sense of belonging in their community and 761 local residents reporting feeling safer in their communities as a result of a funded project.

    This year we saw the Knife Angel visit Northamptonshire and I, like many residents, went along to visit outside All Saints Church in Northampton and reflect on the tragic loss of lives in local communities through violence and thoughtless actions. The Knife Angel was created in order to highlight knife crime in the United Kingdom and educate young people of the harmful effect violent behaviour can have on their communities.

    Our High Sheriff’s Initiative Fund is dedicated to tackling serious youth violence and last year it awarded grants to local projects helping prevent young people from engaging with the criminal justice system. This included:

    Springs Family Centre working with young people in Spring Boroughs, Northampton at risk of offending or re-offending through a programme of activities.

    Northampton Town of Sanctuary funding a Summer and Autumn programme of diversionary activities aiming to upskill and empower vulnerable young people at risk of getting involved in county lines.

    Kingswood Neighbourhood Centre based in Corby funding a project working with at risk and  excluded children and young people.

    Growing Together Northampton funding a Summer Holiday Play scheme for vulnerable children and help improve life chances.

    Our Welcome Fund Appeal and Funding Programme has raised essential funds to help the safe resettlement of refugees in Northamptonshire. Foundation trustee and Refugee resettlement worker, Syrah Nazir highlights the importance of resettlement programme activity in achieving peaceful and safe communities via local charities:

    ‘The local work has included putting welcome packs together and wrap around support. Lots of agencies have got together to do that including the British Red Cross, Re:store Northampton, Northampton Hope Centre, alongside offers of clothing. Charities such as Ability Northants and DACT (Daventry Area Community Transport) have offered community transport support.’

    ‘Firstly and foremostly the work is about empowering people that have come here to lead better and safer lives especially those from war torn regions where this may be the first time in a long time that they’ve had an opportunity to experience a peaceful existence. We want to help refugees to navigate new cultural experiences and lead a normal life as much as possible.’

    Northamptonshire Community Foundation with many of its UK-based colleagues has also worked alongside Ukrainian Community Foundations via a Whatsapp group to help connect with and support the journey of people fleeing the invasion and to ensure we work alongside public bodies to provide the best safety net for resettlement here in our county.

    Northamptonshire Community Foundation thanks all our donors, community groups and charities that are committed to working with Northamptonshire Community Foundation to help build safer communities and protect lives.

    You can follow us on social media to find out more about our work to achieve the Global Goals and find out more about the local projects we fund to help build peaceful and safe communities.

    Read More
  • Remember a Charity Week

    Published 10/10/22

    This week (5th - 12th September 2022) is #RememberACharity week which aims to raise awareness of the importance of gifts in Wills to good causes across the UK.

    Leaving a gift in your Will to a Community Foundation enables you to leave a legacy and support local communities and generations for many years to come.

    Legacies continue to be one of the most important aspects of UK charity fundraising and because Community Foundations are about endowment building, longevity and making a difference in perpetuity, leaving a legacy to us will ensure your gift makes a lasting difference for future communities across Northamptonshire.

    If you have a specific interest or purpose in mind, we encourage you to discuss this with us to help ensure we meet your wishes.

    Legacies of all sizes make a difference, no matter how big or small, they help us forward plan our future grant-making and make a lasting difference to local lives and communities.

    Alan Maskell explains why he and his wife chose to leave a legacy with us:

    "We wanted to ensure that upon our deaths, a contribution form our estates would help local people who are most in need. For that reason we decided to leave a legacy to the Foundation, to contribute to the needs of people living in poverty, social isolation, who suffer from disabilities or those experiencing life's little problems, as a way of thanking the county for what we have personally achieved whilst living here."

    For more information on leaving a legacy please click here or contact CEO Rachel McGrath via emailing rachel@ncf.uk.com or call 01604 230 033 and we will be happy to discuss the difference your help could make.

    #leavealegacy #localgiving

    Read More
  • Case Study: United African Association

    Published 27/09/22

    About the Group

    United African Association (UAA) advise, support, advocate for and represent the African community. They promote community cohesion through events, projects and activities that showcase African culture and heritage.

    Their current activities include providing African food parcels, supporting the food beneficiaries and wider community with various issues, signposting to other organisations and telephone befriending services.

    Support required

    UAA required funding to purchase African food items to continue providing food parcels to those faced with the worst food poverty in the community and support those referred trough GPs, Health Clinics, Mental Health Nursing staff,  Northamptonshire Children’s Trust and social services whose service users are not eligible for Local Authority assistance.

    What was achieved through the grant
    Over 400 beneficiaries have benefitted from the grant with the majority of food parcels being provided to African beneficiaries who are facing employment shortages and are unable to access benefits because of their immigration status.

    Improvements in individuals’ diets were reported as well better access to health food. Other advantages reported included enhanced physical health or well-being with just under half the beneficiaries confirming that they felt less lonely.

    UAA have also been able to purchase special provisions for the Ramadan period and Eid Festival as requested by the African Muslim community.

    Read More
  • Case Study: Laugh Out Loud Theatre

    Published 20/09/22

    About the Group

    Laugh Out Loud Theatre are a non-profit theatre company whose aim is to bring theatre back into the community within the county for everyone to enjoy. They want to make theatre affordable and accessible to all. Their shows are designed and written to maximise audience engagement and participation. They want the community to feel a part of the work they create.

    Support required

    Laugh Out Loud Theatre required funding to enable them to write and perform a new 30 minute family friendly play for the Queen’s Jubilee which included real stories from the local community and celebrates Queen Elizabeth’s Reign with a focus on how she actively engages with people on a personal level.

    Laugh Out Loud Theatre wanted the performance to be packed with fun, joy and nostalgia to appeal to all ages and help bring back some solidarity into the local community which has been affected by the pandemic over the last two years. They wanted the play to be performed outside to ensure it was more accessible to those who are still uncomfortable going into a more traditional theatre space. They also wanted the piece to be performed across the county in various parishes over the June Bank Holiday weekend as a free event for the public which would allow those from low income homes to access the show.

    What was achieved through the grant

    Laugh Out Loud Theatre performed the brand new 30-minute piece of theatre entitled 'Her Majesty's Shoes' in four venues across Northamptonshire - Kettering Arts Centre, Irthlingborough Community Centre, Stanwick Village Hall and Quinton Village Hall. The show involved five stories about the Queen that were given to them by members of our local community. There were four professional actors involved in the cast and a volunteer technician for each show. The cast encouraged members of the audience up on stage at certain points throughout the show to perform alongside them.

    The show was very well received by those who came to watch and appealed to more than just the usual theatre goers and perhaps introduced the notion of theatre and acting to a new generation of children who would not have had the opportunity to see theatre or be involved with it otherwise.

    Because the show was 30-minutes in length, free to the public and performed in outdoor spaces, it was accessible for all. People with learning difficulties, such as ADHD or Autism, were able to get involved without it being too overwhelming. The production brought back a lot of memories for our older audience members, and it was a celebration of nostalgia which really resonated with people both young and old.

    The first (premiere) show at Kettering Arts Centre was filmed for people who could not attend any of the shows in person and this can be viewed for free on their YouTube channel: 'Her Majesty's Shoes' live performance. - YouTube

     

    Read More
  • Arts Council England 'Let's Create Jubilee' grant funds Community Tree of Hope unveiled in Kettering

    Published 06/09/22

    A six-foot Tree of Hope has been officially unveiled in Kettering – designed as a legacy of hope post covid.

    The tree, weaved from willow and made possible thanks to a £10,000 Arts Council England grant, is set in the grounds of Groundwork Northamptonshire’s community green space, The Green Patch.

    left to right – Kimberley Lawson from Groundwork, Fern Gibson from NCF,
    Groundwork CEO Kate Williams on the right

    The unveiling took place during a community picnic, attended by local families and volunteers. The tree, designed by a local artist, is decorated with dozens of wooden and laminated leaves, all created by local people. Some are dedications to a loved one, others are reflections on the struggles of the past couple of years, while some are inspirational message of hope.

    Grey Lindley, Manager of The Green Patch, said: “Our wonderful tree is designed to celebrate the Jubilee and to leave lasting legacy to mark the occasion and of hope - capturing ideas and dreams for the future.

    “Groundwork Northamptonshire has a history of successfully working with and supporting children and young people, socially isolated adults, those with additional needs and families who are struggling with food and fuel poverty. We are incredibly proud to have to nurtured this creative and innovative approach to the arts. Trees are incredibly symbolic and can give so many messages of hope for the future.”

    Fern Gibson, Marketing, Communications and Event Manager for Northamptonshire Community Foundation, added: “It was humbling to attend the official unveiling of this ‘Tree of Hope’ and to see this unique piece of art which is covered in inspirational messages from the local community. The piece really does instil hope for the future after what has been a tough few years for all.

    “It will be a special place for people to come, reflect and look forward whilst children will be able to use the space to play, dream and be inspired. The piece really does celebrate hope and community and we are delighted to help support this project through the distribution of the Arts Council England’s ‘Let’s create Jubilee Fund’ in the county.”

    The ‘Tree of Hope’ project was funded through Northamptonshire Community Foundation by the Arts Council England ‘Let’s Create Jubilee’ fund, which aimed to ensure that thousands of people from communities across England had the opportunity to take part in exciting creative events – all in celebration of the Platinum Jubilee.

    The grant provided funding for a Jubilee picnic and celebration which saw the launch of the event, the commission of the tree structure itself as well as a series of co-creation workshops with professional artists in which Green Patch users designed and created the leaves for the ‘Tree of Hope’ structure.

    You can visit the Tree of Hope by dropping down to the Green Patch any Tuesday or Thursday between 10am-2pm. Please see www.greenpatch.org.uk for further details.

    Read More

Page 4