Big Lottery Fund income down by £60m last year

The figure, shown in its accounts for the year to 31 March, reflects a cut of £120m in the amount received from the National Lottery

The Big Lottery Fund’s overall income fell by about £60m last year after a £120m decrease in the amount of money it received from the National Lottery, its latest accounts show.

According to the BLF’s annual report and accounts for the year to 31 March 2017, published yesterday, overall income fell from £820.2m the previous year to £762.1m.

This came after a near £120m fall in proceeds from the National Lottery, which declined from £769.3m in 2015/16 to less than £652m last year.

But the BLF also received £94.5m in dormant bank account money from the Reclaim Fund, a significant increase on the £37.2m it received the year before, the accounts show.

Last month, figures from the Gambling Commission showed that the total amount of money given to the National Lottery Distribution Fund in the 2016/17 financial year was £1.63bn, a fall of 15 per cent on the £1.93bn handed over in 2015/16.

A statement at the time by Camelot, the company that runs the National Lottery, said the value of ticket sales in 2016/17 had fallen from a record of £7.6bn to £6.9bn.

Camelot said it had launched a strategic review to work out how to boost player interest.

The BLF accounts also show that its grant expenditure increased from £593.4m to £717.4m, with total expenditure increasing from £715.5m to £876.3m.

This means there is a £114.3m gap between the BLF’s income and expenditure for the 2016/17 financial year.

In a statement, a BLF spokeswoman said: “Last year, we awarded £712.7m and supported 13,814 projects in communities across the UK. In the past decade we have seen fluctuations in income and yet have awarded more than £8.5bn to people who have great ideas to support their communities and help them to thrive. 

“In addition to National Lottery revenue, our income includes funding we distribute on behalf of third parties and dormant accounts. These can vary and we anticipate awarding more than half a billion pounds to support people and communities across the UK next year.”

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BBC Children in Need 2016 raised a record £60m

The 2016 BBC Children in Need appeal raised a record £60m, the charity announced today.

The sum beats the previous record of £56.9m, which was raised by the 2015 appeal.

BBC Children in Need has enjoyed almost non-stop growth this century. The 2000 appeal generated £20m; by 2010 the amount had climbed to £37m. Since then the sum has gone up every year except two, despite austerity.

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The 2016 appeal, in which £46.6m was raised on the night, also a record, included the introduction of a £20 text-to-donate code, as well as new content provided through VR viewers.

The charity currently supports more than 2,400 projects.

Simon Antrobus, chief executive of BBC Children in Need, said: “The impact this incredible amount of money will have on some of the most disadvantaged children and young people is hard to put into words.”

Highlights of the 2016 campaign included fundraising efforts spearheaded by Chris Evans on BBC Radio 2, The One Show’s Rickshaw Challenge on BBC One and a concert in honour of Sir Terry Wogan, the former long-term presenter of the appeal who died in early 2016.

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