Big Lottery Fund
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The Big Lottery Fund (BIG) is a grant-making organisation in the UK (England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland) created by the Government to administer the funding of good causes following the creation of the National Lottery. It has an annual expenditure of £630 million [1]
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[edit] Income
BIG has an income of approximately £630 million a year as of February 2007, which comes from the weekly Lottery draw and other games run by the National Lottery and represents roughly half the total amount of funds raised for good causes. BIG’s budget also makes it the largest of all the Lottery funders and a powerful voice for the voluntary and charitable sector.
[edit] Creation
BIG was unofficially created on 1 June 2004 by a merger of two UK Lottery distributors: the National Lottery Charities Board (trading as Community Fund) and the New Opportunities Fund.
BIG's official creation occurred on 1 December 2006 by an administrative merger of Community Fund and New Opportunities Fund and was further established by the National Lottery Act 2006 which incorporated the Millennium Commission. [2]
The Big Lottery Fund is now a single body with a new good cause and single set of simpler rules, to make it easier for potential applicants to access Lottery money. The resulting efficiency savings are available as additional Lottery funding for good causes. The Act also allowed for increased public involvement in the Lottery, with distributors given the powers to consult and take account of public views in making distribution decisions.
The aim is to support projects which bring real improvements to communities and the lives of people most in need, and one third of the Fund’s money is distributed through a broad funding stream focusing on local community needs.
[edit] The People's £50 Million
In December 2007, a competition called the People's £50 Million took place in which a public vote, using telephone and internet voting, was held to select one of a short-list of four worthy projects to receive a grant of £50 million. This was the largest sum of money to be awarded by a public vote in TV history.
The winner was Sustrans' Connect2 project. Other finalists were the Eden Project and their Edge (a desert biome dome for people to come together in tackle the environmental and social problems of the planet), a Black Country Urban Park (environmental transformation benefiting over a million people in one of the most deprived parts of the UK) and Sherwood Forest: the Living Legend (restoring the forest and developing visitor facilities).
[edit] Programmes Funded
- Demand-led programmes, which provide funding for voluntary and community organisations for work they have identified as needed (similar to the previous Community Fund programmes).
- Strategic programmes on specific needs and activities, based on needs described by communities across the UK and linking to the work of Government (similar to the previous New Opportunities Fund programmes).
- Transformational programmes, which provide funding for major projects of national significance.
As with previous National Lottery schemes, BIG (through predecessor funders) has funded both publicly popular and not so popular projects, though all have met identified needs and priorities.
BIG has launched a whole range of programmes across the four countries it covers – England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland – and includes broad programmes supporting skills, communities and enterprise as well as targeted work on advice provision, community building and research. It has been praised for supporting schemes across the UK to get school pupils involved in sporting and educational activities, and has made high-profile donations to projects supporting disabled people, young people, war veterans and children with learning difficulties. It also has an international programme.
[edit] References
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[edit] External links
- www.biglotteryfund.org.uk - Official Website
- www.lotteryfunding.org.uk - Information about funding opportunities
- www.lotterygoodcauses.org.uk - Information about how Lottery money is spent:
- www.national-lottery.co.uk - The National Lottery website
- www.culture.gov.uk - More information on the national lottery act.
- www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2006/20060023.htm - The full version the of National lottery Act 2006