NCVO says better communication with trustees required after regulator warns charity

The umbrella body said it was “alarming” that the chair of the charity that received the Charity Commission’s first official warning did not understand her role

The sector must get better at reaching trustees “who may not fully understand their roles” the National Council for Voluntary Organisations has said, after the Charity Commission warned a charity which paid a trustee and spent most of its income on fundraising.

The National Hereditary Breast Cancer Helpline was issued with the first official warning by the Charity Commission last month after the charity failed to address concerns about its finances.

Wendy Watson, the charity’s founder, paid herself £31,000 for running the charity while she was chair, a payment which had not been properly authorised and which she says was an error.

The charity had also been criticised for spending large amounts on staff, charity shop and sales costs, which meant that the charity was only spending a fraction of its income on running its helpline.

While the charity shops brought in 90 per cent of the charity’s income, according to its accounts for the year ending 31 March 2016 store costs and fundraising accounted for £409,227 of its total income of £924,827.

Staff costs were also £397,168 and cost of sales accounted for £123,580, the accounts show.

The charity’s 2015 accounts show that only £27,403 was spent on charitable activities, despite a total income that year of £974,555.

Speaking to Sky News yesterday, Watson said she wanted to make the charity more sustainable so she could retire and hire staff to run the helpline, which she had been running voluntarily by herself.

She said: “Mistakes were made. I’m not a businesswoman, I’m somebody passionate that wants to keep the helpline going and find a way to raise some money to do that.

“The charity needed to make the shops more profitable, which is what we’ve been doing. That will enable me to train others to work on the helpline so that I can retire.”

A report released by the Charity Commission last month says that the charity had been “exposed to undue risk through a lack of appropriate financial controls and its financial model was unsustainable”.

The report also criticises the unauthorised payments made to Watson and the charity’s receipt of interest-free loans from a trustee “for which no formal agreement or repayment schedule was in place”.

The report says: “Specifically, although the former chair had resigned as a trustee, she continued to run the charity’s operations without any formal role and continued to receive payments.

“They were continuing to allow the former chair to make key decisions about the operation of the charity, despite having resigned as a trustee.”

The charity’s failure to properly address the issues raised by the regulator led to the commission issuing an official warning under the Charities Act 2011 – the first time it has used these new powers.

The warning calls on the charity to review the loan arrangements it has in place, properly record board-level decisions and improve its financial controls.

Aidan Warner, external relations manager at NCVO, said: “It’s obvious that Mrs Watson is very well intentioned but this case is the perfect reminder that good intentions are not enough to run a successful charity.

“There’s a major question as to how the trustees ever arrived at the strategy of rapidly opening a large chain of shops in order to try and support a small, low-cost helpline.

“It’s alarming that Mrs Watson didn’t properly understand her role as a trustee, and that matters didn’t improve even after the commission’s involvement.

“We have lots of guidance available on trusteeship which is very well used. But I think all of us in the sector should think about what more we can do to reach those trustees who may not fully understand their roles.”

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Благотворительность за лондонским садовым мостом объявляет о закрытии

The Garden Bridge Trust обвинил мэра Лондона в отказе от поддержки кончины проекта

Благотворительность за спорным предложением о строительстве садового моста через реку Темзу в Лондоне объявила, что она заканчивается.

В своем заявлении на своем веб-сайте Garden Bridge Trust, который был создан для строительства и управления предлагаемым садовым мостом в центре Лондона, заявил, что он заканчивает проект из-за отсутствия поддержки мэра Лондона

Мэр Лондона отказался от поддержки моста в начале этого года после опасений относительно способности траста поднять 185 миллионов фунтов стерлингов, необходимых для завершения проекта.

В заявлении благотворительная организация заявила, что теперь она прекратит контракты и заключит соглашения о финансировании доноров, прежде чем их закончат в соответствии с Законами о компаниях.

Он также сказал, что говорил с правительством и потенциальным благодетелем о будущем моста, но сказал, что попечители пришли к мнению, что мост не может быть построен без поддержки мэра.

Мосту было выделено 37,4 млн. Фунтов стерлингов из Департамента по транспорту и транспорту для Лондона, и у правительства есть соглашение о том, чтобы подписать расходы на отмену, которые приведут к общему объему государственных денег, вложенных в мост, до £ 46,4 м.

Отмена проекта моста следует за обзором, проведенным лейбористской депутатом парламента Маргарет Ходж от имени мэра Лондона Садика Хана, в котором говорилось, что вряд ли доверие могло бы обеспечить достаточную финансовую поддержку для создания и поддержания Мост.

В докладе Ходжа было сказано, что налогоплательщику было лучше согласиться на потерю 46,4 млн фунтов стерлингов, уже вложенных в эту схему, чем вкладывать в нее дополнительные государственные деньги.

Однако попечители Trust Garden Garden критиковали этот отчет за то, что он не смог полностью расследовать деятельность по сбору средств благотворительной организации и ее работу по привлечению общественности.

Доклад привел к тому, что Хан отозвал поддержку мэра для проекта в апреле этого года, что явилось условием одобрения планов из лондонского района Если Ламбет и Вестминстерский городской совет.

Разрешение на разрешение должно было истечь в декабре, и благотворительная организация попыталась купить землю на южном берегу Темзы в течение трех лет без успеха.

Счета Garden Bridge Trust, выпущенные в начале этого года, показывают, что ему все еще необходимо собрать £ 56 млн. Стоимостью проекта в размере 185 млн фунтов стерлингов, но также предупреждает, что расходы могут еще больше увеличиться.

Письмо лорда Мервина Дэвиса, председателя Траст-фонда Гарден-Бридж, к Хан говорит: «Мост сада был бы уникальным местом, красивым новым зеленым пространством в центре Лондона, бесплатным для использования и открытым для всех , Демонстрируя лучшие британские таланты и инновации. Это тем более разочаровывает, что доверие было создано по просьбе TfL, организации, возглавляемой мэром, для доставки проекта.

«Это печальный день для Лондона, потому что он посылает миру сообщение о том, что мы больше не можем доставлять такие захватывающие проекты. Я хотел бы поблагодарить наших доноров и сторонников, которые оказали нам неослабевающую помощь и поддержку по путь ".

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Collapsed drugs charity Lifeline Project owes £1.6m to creditors

A document posted with Companies House reveals the results of a meeting with creditors

The collapsed drug and alcohol charity the Lifeline Project owes almost £1.6m to its creditors, according to a document that reveals the results of a meeting of creditors, which was posted with Companies House earlier this week.

The Lifeline Project collapsed in May this year and transferred its entire staff and the majority of its projects to the charity Change, Grow, Live in June.

According to the document, £250,000 is owed to preferential creditors, with the expectation that they will be paid in full.

There are approximately 5,300 potential creditors according to the document, and it is currently estimated that there will be sufficient funds available to pay unsecured creditors, although there is no estimate available yet for how much this will be.

The document says the charity had almost £3.2m in the company ledger when administrators were appointed.

Major creditors include: the Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS Foundation Trust, which is owed £217,104.78; the NHS Business Services Authority, which is owed £79,795.37; and the vulnerable persons charity Changing Lives, which is owed £40,767.33.

According to the joint administrator David Thornhill, the sale of the Lifeline’s Project’s main programmes and assets to CGL is a better result for the charity’s creditors than if it had simply been wound up.

The document says that although Lifeline had grown significantly between 2006 and 2016, with income rising from approximately £13m to £62m, this fell to £53m in the 11 months to February 2017.

Much of the growth of the charity had been funded from cash flow and reserves, which were “virtually exhausted” due to funding losses on contracts in the year before Lifeline’s collapse. The document says that internal financial controls and business infrastructure had “not developed at the same rate” as the charity’s growth.

“Despite successful tendering for contracts in recent years, it appears that several key contracts have been entered into without proper consideration of the cost structure and longer-term financial implications for the wider business,” the document says.

“In addition, certain contracts were agreed on a payment-by-results basis which simply did not generate the level of income needed to generate surpluses.”

According to the document, the three largest loss-making contracts reported cumulative losses of £1.4m in the 11 months to February 2017, in addition to unfunded work the charity carried out to further its charitable purpose, which cost more than £600,000.

Another £700,000 in legal and professional costs was also spent dealing with various property and employee disputes, the document says, which meant Lifeline had trading losses of £2.9m in the 11 months to February 2017.

The document says that a finance controller left the charity in February 2017 and was not replaced, and a further key individual left the finance team two months later, which meant the charity’s finance function was “weakened”.

This led to discussions with CGL from April this year, which in turn led to the sale of the business and its assets to CGL on 2 June.

The document says that 1,300 staff were transferred to CGL, which mitigated £7m in redundancy and associated costs.

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Government begins advertising for next Charity Commission chair

The successful candidate will replace William Shawcross, whose term comes to an end later this year

The government is advertising for applicants to be the next chair of the Charity Commission.

The successful applicant will replace William Shawcross, who is leaving later in the year having been in post since 2012.

The advertisement for the vacancy, which is published through the Centre for Public Appointments, says the successful applicant will be paid £62,500 a year and will work two-and-a-half days a week.

By comparison, Shawcross works three days a week on a £50,000 annual salary. 

The advert says the successful candidate must be able to support the organisation “through a period of significant change and cultural development in either the private or charity/not-for-profit sector”.

The person will be responsible for leading the regulator’s board in setting the commission’s strategic priorities and policy direction over the next three years, it says.

This is likely to include the subject of the regulator charging charities for its services, something the regulator has been edging towards in recent years and on which it is soon due to launch a consultation.

The successful candidate must be able to demonstrate they can be an “accessible and engaging ambassador” for the organisation and “influence high-level stakeholders within government and in parliament, the media, the charity sector and the business world”.

The person must also have an understanding of and interest in the charity sector, “including an awareness of the multifaceted challenges it faces resulting from changing social and economic circumstances”. 

Applicants will be scrutinised by a four-member panel comprising Sue Owen, permanent secretary at the Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport, and chair of the panel; Lord Kakkar, chairman of the Judicial Appointments Commission; Julia Unwin, chair of the Independent Inquiry into the Future of Civil Society; and Alan Downey, who is described in the job advert as an “other panel member”. 

Whoever is appointed will also have to attend a pre-appointment hearing before the Culture, Media & Sports Select Committee.

Shawcross, a journalist and writer, has been a controversial chair of the Charity Commission because of comments he has made on issues including chief executive pay and charging charities to fund the regulator.

In 2012, three of the seven MPs on the Public Administration Select Committee of the time opposed his appointment because of concerns about his political impartiality, citing previous support of the Iraq war and the Conservative Party.

The closing date for applications is 3pm on 22 September, and the successful applicant will be expected to serve a term of up to three years.

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Charity has paid £500k to the Official Custodian for Charities

The Jewish charity the Reb Moishe Foundation has been the subject of a Charity Commission probe, and is appealing two orders to hand funds to the custodian

A Jewish poverty and education charity that is appealing against two Charity Commission orders to hand over funds has so far paid £500,000 to the Official Custodian for Charities, the custodian’s accounts for the 2016/17 financial year show.

The document shows that £500,000 from the Reb Moishe Foundation has been safeguarded since 5 July 2016 by the custodian, a holding service that protects disputed charitable property.

It is the first time the amount of funds received by the custodian from the charity has been disclosed.

The amount received by the custodian is only a partial settlement of the amount requested by the Charity Commission.

The charity’s sole trustee has appealed to the charity tribunal against two orders to hand over funds to the custodian as part of the regulator’s statutory inquiry into the charity.

Since 2015, the Reb Moishe Foundation has been the subject of a Charity Commission investigation of a £2m loan the charity made in 2006 to a company called Gladstar.

The charity’s sole trustee, Jacob Plitnick, is the director of Gladstar. The commission was alerted to the loan in late 2014 by HM Revenue & Customs.

Plitnick was ordered by the commission to hand the funds over, but made only a partial payment, according to the regulator. A further order was made on 21 July 2016. Both orders are being appealed by Plitnick at the charity tribunal.

The Charity Commission’s inquiry into the charity is continuing, and the inquiry is also looking at other issues associated with the charity’s relationship with Gladstar, such as reductions in the interest payable on the loan and the fact that Gladstar was running at a significant deficit.

The charity’s accounts for 2013 – the latest accounts at the time the investigation was opened – showed it was owed more than £2.3m by Gladstar.

The amount owed by Gladstar to the charity rose to £2.6m by the end of 2015, according to the charity’s accounts for that year, with an interest rate of 10 per cent a year.

In contrast, the charity had an income of £213,307 in 2013 and spent £49,180. Its 2015 accounts showed the charity had an income of £181,443 and spent £75,662.

A further directions hearing about Plitnick’s appeal against the order to hand over further funds to the custodian will be heard later this month.

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Clinks takes over women’s charity Women’s Breakout

The two permanent members of staff at the women’s centre charity have lost their jobs because of the move, which came about because of financial difficulties at Women’s Breakout

The criminal justice umbrella body Clinks has taken over the women’s centre charity Women’s Breakout, with the loss of both permanent members of staff at the latter organisation.

Women’s Breakout, which was formed six years ago and had an income of £60,000 in the year to the end of March, approached Clinks about the merger because it was having financial difficulties and in an attempt to keep its women’s centres open, a spokeswoman said.

She said that the merger, which was completed today, meant the two permanent staff at Women’s Breakout would be made redundant when Clinks took over the charity’s services.

Clinks, which has 18 staff and had an income of £1.2m in the year to the end of March, will take on a Women’s Breakout trustee as part of the merger, according to the spokeswoman.

Women’s Breakout had no offices. Clinks will hold a consultation with Women’s Breakout members on whether to retain the charity’s branding.

Two years ago, Clinks released a report called The State of the Sector, which said there had been almost 400 redundancies among criminal justice charities between April 2012 and March 2015.

Dame Anne Owers, chair of Clinks, said it was crucial to keep women’s centres open.

“This merger will ensure that the work of Women’s Breakout will continue and we very much welcome Women’s Breakout members within Clinks,” she said.

Roma Hooper, chair of Women’s Breakout, said: “We are delighted we have secured its future within Clinks. We believe that the integrity of Clinks and its commitment to strengthening the work of Women’s Breakout will enhance the voice of our women’s centres and continue to support the work being undertaken.”

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Top charity earners on a fifth of counterparts in financial services

An analysis of 52,000 jobs in London by Emolument.com says the top 10 per cent of earners in financial services receive at least £290k, compared with £61k in the voluntary sector

The highest-paid charity workers are paid about a fifth of what their counterparts receive in the financial services sector, research indicates.

An analysis of 52,000 salaries from jobs in London by the salary benchmarking website Emolument.com found that the top 10 per cent of earners in the financial services industry received at least £290,000 a year compared with £61,000 for those in the voluntary sector.

Of the 20 sectors analysed, the charities and not-for-profit organisations came out as the lowest payers on £67,000 a year, behind the public sector and education.

The salaries quoted are the lowest annual amount required to be included in the top 10 per cent of earners in each sector.

Financial services came out on top by far, with insurance in second place on £153,000.

The figures are based on information provided by people using the website’s benchmarking service since 2015 and include data from 835 charity professionals.

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BasicNeeds merged into Christian disability charity

The international mental health charity will become a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBM UK on 20 July

The international mental health charity BasicNeeds has been merged into the Christian disability charity CBM UK, the charities have announced.

BasicNeeds became a wholly-owned subsidiary of CBM UK on 20 July after encountering difficulties raising funding for its mental health programmes, a spokeswoman for the two charities said.

She said BasicNeeds, which has an income of £1.6m a year, approached CBM UK several months ago and proposed the merger to prevent the closure of its mental health programmes, which run in 14 countries.

Five members of BasicNeeds’ UK-based staff have joined the CBM UK team, but three roles – two part-time and one full-time – have been lost as a result of the merger. A further IT role in Sri Lanka has gone as a result of the merger and as part of savings to the IT and finance operations at the newly merged charity, the spokeswoman said.

She said no jobs would be lost in BasicNeeds’ mental health programmes abroad and there would be no reductions in funding for those programmes.

CBM UK employs 29 staff and has an income of £6m a year. Both charities will remain registered with the Charity Commission, but the trustees of CBM UK will take over BasicNeeds’ governance, the spokeswoman said.

Adrian Sell, chief executive of BasicNeeds, will continue to oversee the charity’s programmes and will join CBM UK’s leadership team, the spokeswoman said.

The two charities will be based at CBM UK’s headquarters in Cambridge. BasicNeeds was formerly based in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire.

Sell said: “BasicNeeds is excited by the potential of joining with CBM to greatly increase the positive impact we can have on people with mental health problems. Through working together we can combine our expertise and resources and become a leading global voice and source of expertise on mental health in development.”

Kirsty Smith, chief executive of CBM UK, said: “This exciting merger with BasicNeeds will help us to expand and develop our mental health work alongside our important programmes supporting people affected by blindness and other types of disability, to help meet this huge and neglected need.”

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Brain Tumour Charity launches closed Facebook group

The Brain Tumour Charity has created a closed Facebook group as part of its newly launched Teenage and Young Adult Service to help people living with brain tumours.

The TYA has been set up for young people aged between 16 and 30 who have been diagnosed with tumours and, as the charity says, might “feel isolated, often with no idea where to turn for information and support”. The services it will provide will include:

  • Emotional and practical support from a dedicated teenage and young adult worker
  • A closed Facebook group to help young adults connect with others in similar situations, no matter where they live
  • Opportunities to be in touch with Young Ambassadors, people who understand what it’s like to live with a brain tumour diagnosis
  • Events where young adults can meet new people, learn new skills and get helpful information and support.

People can register their interest about the Facebook group through the TYA page on the Brain Tumour Charity website. Once information has been provided, they will then be given access to the group.

Emma Wood, a TYA worker, said: “We hope that the Young Ambassadors Facebook group will be a hub where young adults can connect with others and share experiences. And we can also share information about events they might be interested in getting involved with.”

The charity’s Young Ambassadors will also be creating videos and vlogs aimed at telling their own stories and helping the charity to raise awareness about brain tumours.

“Our aim is to work with the Young Ambassadors team to make videos and vlogs as a useful resource for our TYA, which will be shared through this new service,” Wood said.

“We also offer support by email, text, whatsapp and Facebook messenger. And we will be carrying out a survey in the coming months to ask young people about the support they would like: maybe other options, such as live chat.”

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