WCF urge for more donations and support

Warning issued over charities' finances as Wiltshire Community Foundation braces for a 'tough' 2021

Gorse Hill Baptist Church volunteers Julie Harris and Debs Burbidge packing Bags of Hope
Author: Mike DraperPublished 28th Dec 2020

Charities who lost out of thousands of pounds of fundraising because of Covid-19 face an even harder year ahead, according to the head of the UK's community foundations.

It's feared that some grassroots voluntary groups might not survive without financial help.

CHARITIES ARE 'ON A CLIFF EDGE'

Rosemary Macdonald is the Chief Executive of the UK Community Foundation, having been with Wiltshire Community Foundation until earlier this year:

"What we are hearing loud and clear from our network of community foundations is that local charities across the UK are teetering on a funding cliff edge. Without urgent intervention before the end of the financial year, we can expect many thousands of local charities to be pushed over the precipice."

Rosemary is full of praise for the work of community foundations like Wiltshire's who launched response funds to help groups cope with the immediate fallout from the coronavirus pandemic and are now helping them build for the longer term:

"Without the contributions of staff members, volunteers and donors, hundreds of thousands of people would have been left without access to hospice care, food distribution, mental health support, legal advice and much more. In this time of unprecedented hardship for many, emergency funding has made a huge difference to people's lives."

In Wiltshire the Coronavirus Response and Recovery Fund has so far raised almost £1.2 million and has distributed nearly £1 million.

Tara Hares packing food parcels funded by Wiltshire Community Foundation

It was launched in March in response to the need for urgent help as charities and voluntary groups found themselves adapting their services online, helping with distribution of food and looking for ways to stay in touch with isolated users, at the same time as losing thousands of pounds in fundraising.

COVID BLAMED AS 'PERFECT STORM'

Fiona Oliver, who become joint Chief Executive at Wiltshire Community Foundation in March, said:

"It was a perfect storm. Groups were being asked to help more people than ever before at a faster rate, just as they were losing volunteers or were being faced with having to furlough staff. Others, like Wiltshire Sight or mental health charities whose work depended on face-to-face contact, were forced to adapt how they operated just to stay in touch with the vulnerable people who were being left isolated, afraid and at risk."

The community foundation's small team found itself working flat out to process the applications, streamlining a process that normally takes weeks into days while maintaining its rigorous assessment procedures.

Fiona Oliver also said:

"We knew we needed to get the money out quickly because the need was so immediate. Foodbanks were running out of supplies because donations, in the main, had plummeted."

"Groups like Ipsum the mental health charity, The Samaritans, needed new equipment and extra staff costs to take their services online and over the phone with their staff and counsellors working remotely. The Youth Adventure Trust, and the Wiltshire and Swindon Scrapstores were among dozens of groups supporting isolated young people at home, helping parents who were struggling with home education and keeping teenagers off the streets. Our grants team did and are doing a brilliant job not just to process and review scores of applications and get grants approved by our independent panels, but also to advise and support groups making the applications, often for the first time."

THANK YOU - KEEP UP THE SUPPORT

Volunteers and organisers from the Royal Wootton Bassett COVID-19 Mutual Aid Group

Fiona is full of thanks for the continued support and funding:

"We are incredibly thankful and humbled by the support from the people of Wiltshire and the trusts and businesses that have supported us. People have responded to this crisis far more generously than we ever thought possible and we know what huge hearts the people of this county have. We are well aware there is a huge challenge as we head into 2021 and are still uncertain about what the early months of the year will bring. But we know that both the charities and voluntary groups and those that support them have amazing resilience and that gives us tremendous hope."

The fund quickly grew thanks to the generosity of people across the county and support from the National Emergencies Trust and companies such as the Oakfield Development in Swindon, Zurich, Wessex Water and Thames Water and Police and Crime Commissioner Angus Macpherson. An initial target of £50,000 was met and surpassed in the first week.

To date more than 180,000 people have benefitted from the more than 200 grants to groups across Swindon and Wiltshire.

To donate to the Wiltshire and Swindon Coronavirus Response Fund or to find out how to apply for a grant, go to wiltshirecf.org.uk

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