Charities Funding Reduced After Local Government Cuts £86 Million From Their Budgets

Cuts

First Posted: 02/08/11 00:52 BST Updated: 01/10/11 11:12 BST

Over 2,000 charities across England face a black hole in the funding of care for the sick, young, disabled and elderly due to budget reductions.

Research published on Tuesday suggests vital services for many of society’s most vulnerable people are facing £86 million worth of cuts this year.

Freedom of Information requests made by the anti-cuts campaign group False Economy show organisations serving children and young people are the worst affected, facing over £17 million worth of funding cuts this year.

267 community based charities will also have their funding cut by local councils, as well as 151 disability charities, 142 charities focusing on the elderly and 64 charities tackling domestic and sexual violence.

Charities have warned services to the elderly, children and abused women are at risk as a result of cutbacks. Vivienne Hayes, chief executive of Women's Resource Centre (WRC) told the Huffington Post UK that cuts in the money available would have a devastating impact on women who’ve suffered domestic violence and rape.

“With nowhere to turn, women and girls who have experienced violence will be unable to seek help for themselves and their families. Women's organisations are the net below the net offered by local services - they catch those women who otherwise would slip through the cracks and end up destitute.

“Without them who will help these women in the future?”

Separate research done by WRC shows 95% of charities supporting those in need of care face cuts – which could affect around 88,000 people.

Peter Kyle, deputy chief executive of the Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations said the government’s current proposals didn’t do enough to tackle the black hole in charity funding. He warns that once a charity’s closed it can’t be brought back.

“The question is do they add up to the size of the problem they are trying to tackle? With so many charities struggling at the moment, I think the answer will be no.

“The proposals in the recent public service white paper could inject another £2 billion into the voluntary sector between now and 2015, but so many of them are out to consultation they are going to be deliberated on, but now is the time for the government to get to grips. If a charity goes bust today you can’t suddenly magic it back again.”

Kyle said increased funding cuts now may cost taxpayers “a fortune” in the future: “The point is at the moment in the charitable sector the government can just lob money off a budget but it will cost the country and taxpayers a fortune down the road.”

Cuts are already having an impact on charities across the UK. Advocacy Alliance in Bedfordshire faces a funding cut of £100,000 this year. Its chief executive, Vicki Airs, told the Huffington Post UK that vulnerable people would have less access to services.

“At some point, particularly given reductions in alternative sources of funding it is likely there will be reduced services for vulnerable people.”

Advocacy Alliance supports 1,000 vulnerable people each year, but the charity believes those most in need of care may no longer get help in getting access to benefits and coping with traumatic events.

The charity’s partnership development officer, Richard Doughty, warned women with learning difficulties whose child had been taken into care would no longer be able to receive help.

“One person we supported with learning difficulties – that means an IQ under 75 - had her child taken into care. We provided a volunteer to support her through the courts system.

“The volunteer advocate we provided helped her understand the child protection system and the court system. She now has joint parental responsibility with her child’s foster parents.”

TUC head Brendan Barber said the figures showed the big society was a con: “These deep cuts to voluntary groups across the UK show that government claims that charities can replace direct services currently provided by central or local government are false. It sounds great, but in practice, the Big Society is looking more and more like a big con.”

A Department for Communities and Local Government spokesperson said it was up to councils to decide how to allocate cuts in the voluntary sector.

“Councils have challenging decisions to make around how they prioritise spending but the government is clear that councils must resist any temptation to pass on disproportionate savings to the voluntary sector.

"In their approach to budget setting, the best councils are showing that they understand that a strong, thriving voluntary sector is more important now than ever and could be the key to providing high quality, good value services to their residents.”

They warned councils who failed to recognise the importance of voluntary services were being “short sighted”.

But Chairman of the Local Government Association Sir Merrick Cockell said local authorities never choose to make cuts “lightly”:

“Local authorities have rightly carried out full and frank consultations before reducing funding to groups.”

The number of charities facing cuts according to the research:

  • Children and young people – 382
  • Community – 267
  • Arts – 179
  • Disability – 151
  • Elderly – 142
  • Information, advice and counseling – 126
  • Homelessness and housing – 125
  • Adult care 112
  • Volunteering – 104
  • Health – 89
  • Economic – 68
  • Citizens Advice Bureau – 66
  • Domestic and sexual violence – 64
  • Other – 61
  • Environment – 57
  • Sports – 56
  • Crime – 46
  • Education – 44
  • Amenities 33
  • Equality – 23
  • Transport – 19
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Over 2,000 charities across England face a black hole in the funding of care for the sick, young, disabled and elderly due to budget reductions. Research published on Tuesday suggests vital servi...
Over 2,000 charities across England face a black hole in the funding of care for the sick, young, disabled and elderly due to budget reductions. Research published on Tuesday suggests vital servi...
 
 
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09:42 AM on 08/07/2011
If you steal from one person to give to another, it's not charity; it's theft.
04:13 PM on 08/02/2011
The big society is a very simple concept,

We all have to work for free, while the tory supporting corporations take the fruits of our labour as profit.

See ......SIMPLE!

Lib Dems ....... you should be ashamed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tim Haselden
An Enemy of Rupert Murdoch, since 1984.
03:11 PM on 08/02/2011
Well Thatcher always said, "There is NO such thing as society". Her even more zealous offspring are in charge now, nevermind what the Eton Trifles try to convince you with cuddly Dave & curiously gormless George.
Oh and for American readers, this Big Society isn't the same as the one LBJ tried to bring in. Though I think they are trying to use the associations with it to get it past the libdems. This is the destruction of the welfare state & the sell off to Cameron cronies of the bits that make a profit.
The remainder handed to charities , who are going to the wall because of loss of funding & a reduction in donations. It's entirely a continuation of the tories infernal matron's policy. "Der Markt bestimmt alle".
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carlgt1
02:50 PM on 08/02/2011
nickel & diming people to death -- they could have cut billions from the bloated military budgets (both in the US & UK) and barely noticed it, and not have touched any of these services.
02:21 PM on 08/02/2011
"A charity, or charitable organization, in England and Wales is a particular type of voluntary organization. It is required to use any profit or surplus only for the organization's purposes, and it is not a part of any governing department, local authority or other statutory body."

What is the government doing giving my taxes to any charity. I'd rather give it directly, thanks.
01:50 PM on 08/02/2011
I lost my job last summer, a large component was helping people find paid employment with charities. Then I moved onto an unpaid roll working with a charity co-ordinating matching people up with positions available. In January I quit in disgusted that role because people who should (and would) have been working for these organisations in paid positions forced into voluntary. I hate the way things are now, it sickens me, I want to help out but I will not put endorse this "Big Society".

Time to face up to the fact "It Ain't Big and It Ain't Society"
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chatnuptime1
The Wolf's Den.
09:41 AM on 08/11/2011
Depressed Git.. Being an American how do does one volunteer to work while unemployed? I mean what do you do for housing and food and what not if your not earning a living? Volunteering is great but you have to pay your bills too. I volunteer for the Blind Clinics fixing computers.. but I have a job also..volunteer work doesn't pay anything.
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Valksy
civis mundi sum
11:21 AM on 08/02/2011
There is a reason that "Big Society" is commonly shortened to BS - because it is. Even the tories don't know what it means, other than being a handy little soundbite to distract the masses while they bring about a Thatcherite nightmare that crushes anyone who is not one of them.

Someone needs to tell Clegg he is nothing but a footstool at best, a peg boy at worse, for the Tory monolith that has taken advantage of a global crisis (not a Labour crisis, they didn't have a magic wand to stop global meltdown) and disenfranchised those who have the least and sometimes have the biggest load to carry (coping with an elderly relative, a disabled child).

Our nation is in tatters, the fictional "White Knights" of the private sector who were going to ride to our rescue and create jobs have been proven to be nothing but a bare faced lie from an unqualified idiot chancellor and the foundations of what makes a society great - charities for example - are being decimated.

Cameron/Clegg will go down in history for the growth in one thing and one thing alone - after a 20 year decline, suicides in Britain are showing a significant increase. Despair, hopelessness, our country being ripped apart for a right wing agenda. And now people are dying for living in Britain.
11:54 AM on 08/02/2011
Keep them coming.
12:16 PM on 08/02/2011
F&F.

I think I'm beginning to understand this Big Society concept at last - I can be a bit slow with complex or truly revolutionary concepts.

1) Reduce 'public expenditure', encouraging charities to carry more of a burden for community care
2) Use the resulting cash to subsidise the banks
3) Choke the charities of funding
4) Persuade the banks to take up the burden of community care!

Its poetry! And I'm humbled and enlightened.

Big Society - make Society (them) bigger and 'government' (us) smaller. Inspired.

Nick, no wonder you were so keen to jump into bed with these guys, they're geniuses. Hope they're looking after you in there!
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Tim Haselden
An Enemy of Rupert Murdoch, since 1984.
10:47 AM on 08/02/2011
Three words that sum up this tory government (No, I haven't forgot their libdem collabortors), these words should be memorable to most they are "ARBEIT MACHT FREI".
10:24 AM on 08/02/2011
The loss of CABs and other advocacy groups will also make it harder to seek legal redress against councils who are illegally withdrawing statutory services because of the cuts. In the Tories' vision of a big society nobody hears you scream.
lastpost
see biography
05:55 AM on 08/02/2011
"Charities Funding Reduced After Local Government Cuts £68 Million From Their Budgets"
Well someone has to fund the (shopping) basket case, that is the Common Market.

"Over 2,000 charities across England face a black hole in" 
-back of an un-mandated leader’s ayes.

"64 charities tackling domestic and sexual violence"
will effectively become obsolete. When the master plan to eliminate the police fully kicks in.

"With nowhere to turn"
a brand new billboard will be erected on the reinforced gates protecting Downing Street.
Don’t send me your poor and disenfranchised masses.

"who will help these women in the future"
Hey, politicians. If you are saving fallen women. Don’t forget to save some for yourselves.

"the government’s current proposals didn’t do enough"
"once a charity’s closed it can’t be brought back"
Spot the glaringly obvious connection?

"now is the time for the government to get to grips"
Before the nation notices those fingers, around its throat.

"coping with traumatic events."
Like waking up, and discovering it isn’t a democracy after all?

"They warned councils who failed to recognise the importance of voluntary services"
might be forced to repeal the 1833 abolition of slavery act?
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Lawyer13
retired Lawyer, General and Psychiatric Nurse, wit
05:38 AM on 08/02/2011
I see that the largest number affected are Children and Young People, to my way of thinking this is just the area that needs the most help, if we spend money in this area, we save money by up to 7 times the outlay.