IoF gets Arts Council grant to expand its Cultural Sector Network

The £431,832 grant will cover a four-year period to support training, mentoring and peer-to-peer networking

The Institute of Fundraising has been awarded an Arts Council England grant of almost £432,000 to expand the work of its Cultural Sector Network, which supports fundraising in arts and culture organisations.

The funding of £431,832 will be awarded over a four-year period from April and will support a programme of training, mentoring and peer-to peer networking opportunities for arts and cultural fundraisers across England.

In a statement, the IoF said that arts and culture organisations played a vital role in communities and enriching people’s lives, but too many, especially those outside London, faced a daunting funding environment.

“By providing training and ongoing fundraising support, the network will help to ensure these important charities, groups and organisations are able to grow and flourish in the years to come,” the statement said.

The work funded by the grant will focus on linking fundraisers working for organisations based outside London, the statement said, to build up a national network.

The initiative will also help to connect cultural sector fundraisers with the IoF’s eight regional special interest groups and its black fundraisers and sole fundraisers special interest groups.

The IoF will also work in partnership with the Young Arts Fundraisers network on the project.

Martin Kaufman, chair of the IoF Cultural Sector Network, said: “This new funding from the Arts Council will make a huge difference to cultural organisations across England, many of which are struggling to find the funds they need.

“By greatly expanding the IoF’s Cultural Sector Network’s support to build fundraising skills and capacity, it will mean we will be able to support a highly diverse range of cultural organisations to raise the funds they need to continue and to grow their wonderful work across the country.”

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English National Opera readmitted to Arts Council fold

Removed from the ACE national portfolio in 2015 because of concerns about its business model, the ENO will be back in the portfolio from April next year

The English National Opera has been readmitted to the Arts Council England’s national portfolio of funded organisations after a three-year absence.

The move comes as part of an announcement made today by Arts Council England revealing the 831 national portfolio organisations that will receive funding totalling £409m between April 2018 and March 2022.

The ENO was removed from the national portfolio in 2015 because of serious concerns about its governance and business model. The funder also noted that there was uncertainty at the time about the charity’s senior leadership team after its chair and executive director both announced they would be leaving the ENO in February of that year.

The ENO appointed Cressida Pollock as its new chief executive in 2015 and tasked her with making changes to the charity that would enable it to be readmitted to the Arts Council’s national portfolio.

The Arts Council today confirmed that the ENO had been readmitted to the national portfolio and would be given £12.4m a year.

It is the same level of funding the charity had been receiving from the Arts Council as part of a special agreement while it sought re-entry to the national portfolio.

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The annual amount of funding the ENO was receiving from the Arts Council had been reduced by £5m before it was removed from the national portfolio.

Pollock said in a statement today that the charity was delighted to be back in the fold after it faced “a very real risk of closure” three years ago.

“This follows the huge amount of work that has gone into stabilising ENO and developing a sustainable platform from which we are able to grow,” she said.

“Only three years ago we were facing a very real risk of closure, and it is hugely significant to see the work of the whole company celebrated through this show of confidence from ACE.”

The Arts Council said the amount of funding it was providing through the national portfolio was increasing by £41.2m a year on the previous agreement.

The funder said it was for the first time offering funding over four years rather than three to give more stability to recipients.

The Arts Council said it was investing an additional £170m outside London over the next four years.

It added that 72 museums and seven library organisations would be part of the national portfolio for the first time, including the Tank Museum in Dorset.

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Two arrests made during police investigation of martial arts charity

North Yorkshire Police have arrested a man and a woman, both in their 50s, in connection with an investigation into the Jack Raine Community Foundation

Two people have been arrested as part of an investigation into a York-based martial arts charity.

A 55-year-old man and a 59-year-old woman have both been arrested by the North Yorkshire Police force as part of its investigation into the Jack Raine Community Foundation. They have been bailed until 4 July. It has not been made public what connection the two have with the charity.

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The foundation is the subject of a Charity Commission inquiry, which began after the police informed the regulator that they were conducting a financial investigation of the charity.

A spokesman for North Yorkshire Police said today: “A 55-year-old man and a 59-year-old woman have been arrested in connection with a financial investigation involving a York charity. Both have been released on bail as enquiries continue.”

According to the Charity Commission website, the Jack Raine Community Foundation had an income of £215,392 and spent £217,034 in the year to 1 February 2016.

The Jack Raine Community Foundation did not respond to a request for comment from Third Sector before the publication of this story.

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