Stay in the box or we’ll fine you, Newcastle council tells fundraisers

Newcastle City Council yesterday introduced a public space protection order that restricts fundraisers to areas measuring 8ft by 3ft at the top and bottom of the high street

Street fundraisers in Newcastle upon Tyne could face fines of £100 if they step outside one of two areas measuring 8ft by 3ft at the top and bottom of the high street, under new rules introduced by the local authority.

The rules were brought in by Newcastle City Council after its plans to ban face-to-face fundraising completely were challenged by the Institute of Fundraising.

Instead of an outright ban, the council has introduced a public space protection order, which will prevent fundraisers operating outside the two small designated areas, marked out on the ground with tape.

In addition, the order, which came into force yesterday, prevents more than two fundraisers at a time from operating on the site, and they will be allowed to do so only from 10am to 4pm on two days a week, which must not be consecutive days.

They will be allowed to operate on only one day a week in December, and will not be able to fundraise if a separate charity street collection is taking place.

Only one organisation will be allowed to fundraise on behalf of one charity each day and will have to apply at least six weeks in advance. Fundraisers will have to wear branded jackets, which they will have to remove when they are on breaks, according to the rules.

Any breach of these rules could result in a £100 fixed-penalty notice from the council or a police officer, the council said.

The IoF was unable to persuade the council to sign up to a site-management agreement to manage face-to-face fundraising in the city.

Nick Kemp, cabinet member for regulation at the council, said it had listened to the public when drawing up the new rules, which he described as a “proportionate response”.

He said: “Face-to-face fundraising has caused nuisance and annoyance to people, so we have used our public space protection order to deal with this.

“We believe this strikes the right balance and will put an end to the dark days when fundraisers would spread themselves out across Northumberland Street and accost people as they went about their daily business.

“We hope the public will agree with this approach while giving charities the chance to continue to raise money.”

Mike Smith, head of external affairs at the IoF said the organisation had been working with Newcastle council over the past year.

“We are glad that they have moved away from a disproportionate total ban towards these more measured proposals,” he said.

But he added: “We strongly feel that site-management agreements are a better way to more effectively manage street fundraising, working in collaboration with charities and in a way that doesn’t bring extra costs and administration to the council or local services.”

Under SMAs, which are currently operating in 126 other local authorities, the IoF administers and enforce the agreement, rather than the council. According to the IoF, 90 per cent of councils with an SMA would recommend one to other local authorities.

Smith said: “We are in regular contact with Newcastle council as these new measures are introduced, and will continue to work with the council on behalf of charity fundraisers raising money for vital causes.”

Newport City Council in Wales, Swindon Borough Council in Wiltshire and Kettering Borough Council in Northamptonshire have all introduced PSPOs in the past two years.

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Armed forces and emergency services charities invited to apply for Libor fine funds

The Treasury has not announced how much money is available and it is likely this will not be known until applications have been assessed

– This article was corrected on 22 June 2017; please see final paragraph

Armed forces and emergency services charities have been invited to apply for grants from the latest round of Libor fine funding.

The government has been giving selected charities and good causes funds raised from banks that were fined for illegally fixing the inter-bank lending rate, or Libor, in 2012.

In the latest round of funding, which opened to applications today, charities and community interest companies can apply for grants for projects that will support serving or former members of the armed forces or the emergency services and their families.

The Treasury, which is managing the fund, has not announced how much funding is available and the exact amount is not expected to be finalised until all the applications have been assessed.

The government has given out more than £700m in Libor fine funding since 2012.

There is no upper funding limit for applications and guidance put out by the Treasury says some projects might be funded in part if full funding is not possible. 

Organisations can bid alone or in partnership, with one partner deemed to be the lead organisation.

The Treasury said its assessment criteria included the difference each project would make to the armed forces and emergency services communities, the value for money it offered and how sustainable it was.

Applicants that ask for funding for a capital project would have to have match-funding of at least 50 per cent, the Treasury said.

The department said some projects would not be funded in this round, including those that focused on the delivery of emergency services, those focused primarily on heritage and conservation activities or those where the primary beneficiaries were members of the public.

The closing date for applications, which must be submitted online, is noon on 25 August. Final decisions will be made in November.

For more information and to apply, click here.

– The story originally said projects would be funded either in full or not at all.

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