logo
Bids from voluntary groups seeking help from West Lothian Council topped more than £1m

Bids from voluntary groups seeking help from West Lothian Council topped more than £1m

Daily Record28-04-2025

Bids from voluntary groups seeking help from West Lothian Council topped more than £1m - three times the £372,000 the council had to give - councillors heard. Out of 34 charity groups which bid, only 15 were awarded funding. And with more than half the Third Sector services total budget of £944,000 going to just five organisations there have been calls from the local Voluntary Sector Gateway for the budget to grow to meet rising demand. The bulk of the budget funds direct services for the council. The council's Economy, Community Empowerment and Wealth Building PDSP heard that five organisations have been awarded Service Level Agreements to deliver services. These are West Lothian Youth Action Project £190,000 for community youth services; HcL Transport £182,119 for community transport; Voluntary Sector Gateway West Lothian £63,770; Citizen's Advice Bureau £76,266 to provide additional advice services across West Lothian; and the Bennie Museum £51,142 for the provision of Museum Services in Linlithgow and Bathgate Linlithgow Heritage Trust. In the Third Sector Support Fund 19 organisations lost out this year. They had bid for £501,312 of funding. Among the organisations which lost out are Fauldhouse Community Development Trust, the Food Train, KidzEco, West Calder Hub, West Lothian Race Forum and Smile In a report to committee Clare Stewart, the Community Wealth Building Manager said: 'In total 34 applications were received totalling £1,003,449.97 with an available budget at the time of £362,613. 'An additional £10,000 was allocated as part of the process for funding that is available to West Lothian Council from the Lintel Trust to support a community project. This brought the total available to £372,613.' Among the winners were: Linlithgow Young People's Project, £36, 052; The Vennie, £33,157; Boghalll Drop in £37,043; Stoneyburn Future Vision Group £20, 600 and Armadale Playworks £35,272. All applications were assessed by a panel composed of representatives from the NHS, Voluntary Sector Gateway, and a range of council services including Anti-Poverty, Community Regeneration and Community Wealth Building. Following the assessment of all applications, the panel made recommendations to the Head of Planning, Economic Development and Regeneration that the £362,613 be allocated to 15 organisations. All 19 groups which did not receive funding this year have been offered guidance for future applications. The report added: 'The panel took into consideration a number of matters in assessing all applications including the quality of the application against the criteria for funding, the provision of support in the areas of identified deprivation, match funding, the outcomes that would be achieved by the investment and the potential for some projects to source funding through other funds, in particular the availability of local mental health funding. 'Officers contacted all unsuccessful applicants and offered a series of dates to give more detailed feedback on their application on a one to one basis either in person or via teams. To date eight organisations have requested feedback.' Stuart Barrie, the Operations Manager with the VSG, welcomed the feedback offered to the groups, saying it was helpful to organisations in seeking funding in future from both from the council, and other sources. And making a plea for growing support for the VSG Mr Barrie said: 'The continued financial support from the council the Third Sector is welcome and makes a huge difference to organisations and to communities in West Lothian. 'However the overall £944,000 has remained static for a number of years now. "The sector is facing significant financial pressures like everyone else and given the council receives an uplift to its annual budget could an uplift to this funding be considered in the future for the Third Sector?' Councillor Susan Manion, chairing the PDSP, said: 'We can happily have a discussion about that in relation to the financial position in what we do going forward and looking a future budgeting arrangements for the next year.' Don't miss the latest news from the West Lothian Courier. Sign up to our free newsletter here .

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Euro zone growth stalls in June with sluggish services, manufacturing
Euro zone growth stalls in June with sluggish services, manufacturing

Reuters

time8 hours ago

  • Reuters

Euro zone growth stalls in June with sluggish services, manufacturing

LONDON, June 23 (Reuters) - The euro zone economy flatlined for a second month in June, barely expanding as the bloc's dominant services industry showed only a small sign of improvement and manufacturing displayed none at all, a survey showed on Monday. HCOB's preliminary composite euro zone Purchasing Managers' Index, compiled by S&P Global and seen as a good guide to growth, held steady this month at May's 50.2. That was only just above the 50 mark separating growth from contraction and below expectations in a Reuters poll for 50.5. "The euro zone economy is struggling to gain momentum. For six months now, growth has been minimal, with activity in the service sector stagnating and manufacturing output rising only moderately," said Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank. "In Germany, there are signs of a cautious improvement in the situation, but France continues to drag its feet." Overall demand fell for a thirteenth month, albeit only mildly, with the new business index rising to 49.7 from 49.0. The services PMI nudged up to sit right on the break-even mark, up from May's final reading of 49.7, as the Reuters poll had predicted. But optimism among services firms increased and the business expectations index bounced to a four-month high of 57.9 from 56.2. The headline manufacturing index, which has been sub-50 since mid-2022, held steady at May's 49.4, defying expectations for a lift to 49.8. An index measuring output that feeds into the composite PMI fell to 51.0 from 51.5. Factories reduced their selling prices for a second month. The output prices index remained at 49.2. Euro zone inflation fell below the European Central Bank's 2% target in May and the central bank signalled a pause in policy easing after cutting its deposit rate for an eighth time this month. One of the ECB's top policymakers, Bundesbank President Joachim Nagel, said last week that the bank will keep doing all that is necessary to complete its nearly accomplished mission on inflation.

A surge in oil prices risks havoc for the global economy
A surge in oil prices risks havoc for the global economy

Telegraph

timea day ago

  • Telegraph

A surge in oil prices risks havoc for the global economy

It always seems inappropriate for writers to be focusing on the economic and financial impact of conflicts such as the current one between Israel and Iran while there are people losing life and limb. Nevertheless, such assessments have to be made. So should we be seriously worried? In general, non-economic factors, including those which damage life and limb, do not have much economic and financial impact on the world. There are exceptions, of course. A really big non-economic event, such as a shooting war between the superpowers, undoubtedly would have an enormous economic impact. And when an apparently localised conflict starts, we don't know how serious it might ultimately become. This alludes to a second reason for being coy about making an assessment. There are two interlocking types of uncertainty here. There is the usual uncertainty concerning economic relationships, but there is also the fundamental uncertainty about things completely outside the economist's conceptual toolkit, namely how serious the conflict will be, how long it will drag on for and what the ultimate outcome will be. The only viable approach is to think through various scenarios. So here goes. First, even after America's attack on Iran over the weekend, it is possible that the conflict dies down very quickly in which case no major economic damage will have been done globally. Alternatively, it may carry on for some weeks, but in a relatively contained way, not impinging on countries outside the area and not having a dramatic impact on oil prices. A third scenario involves Iran trying to strike back at the West by closing the Strait of Hormuz, which has just recently been approved by Iran. This is the narrow point of the Persian Gulf and some 20pc of the world's oil consumption must pass through it.

MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: Dogma cares little for the state of Britain's economy
MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: Dogma cares little for the state of Britain's economy

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: Dogma cares little for the state of Britain's economy

This country's economy is now in serious peril. This is not only because the Government is nudging at the very outer limits of what it can raise in tax and borrowing – though it is. It is also because that government is increasingly driven by ferocious dogma which cares little for such concerns. It may be that some in the Cabinet can see the danger, yet others do not even view it as a danger, but as an opportunity for yet more upheaval and dramatic change. The extraordinary developments of last week, in which the current very large Labour majority in Parliament brought about revolutions in abortion law and in assisted dying, are a warning that we are now in uncharted waters. It may possibly be that we have never had a government whose parliamentary forces are so radical. And the uncrowned queen of those forces is the Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, increasingly influential and remarkably effective in the Commons and in Whitehall. It is true that there has always been a role for disruptive and troublemaking men and women near the top of the Labour Party. In the Tony Blair years, a similar position was filled by the late John Prescott, a majestic steam-powered Dreadnought originating in the (now remote) days of real class war. Let nobody underestimate Lord Prescott's considerable influence on the government he served. But Tony Blair, Gordon Brown and the apparatus of New Labour kept him under control. In this case, it looks very much as if a confident and popular Ms Rayner has slipped free of any restraint by the Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer. Her Employment Rights Bill, which is alarming businesses all over the country, would have been strangled at birth in the days of Blairism. The unions would have been told – rightly – that the public had grown heartily sick of their overmighty antics in the past, and did not want to see them given back the unrestrained power they had rightly lost. And while Sir Keir and his Chancellor Rachel Reeves must know this, they seem either powerless to act, or surprisingly untroubled by the danger of it. Speaking to The Mail on Sunday last week, Ms Reeves simply evaded the question of Ms Rayner's plans. When a successful businessman such as Sir James Dyson accuses you of being 'vindictive' and of 'waging a war on aspiration', you really ought to listen. It is on the success of such businessmen that any future economic growth must be based. Without that growth, where are the taxes to come from to pay for the advanced welfare state in which we live? So we must applaud the open letter to British businessmen sent out by Shadow Business Secretary Andrew Griffith, in which he does what Sir Keir and Ms Reeves will not do, and makes it plain just how dangerous Ms Rayner's plans are. He warns those business chiefs that they are being sleepwalked into disaster, that the Rayner Bill will fundamentally change the balance of power in workplaces, at huge cost. Coming after the idiocy of the National Insurance increase, this a grave threat to the jobs of trade union members, as well as to the economy as a whole. We can only hope that the Prime Minister and his Chancellor will listen and act, for the nation's sake as well as their own.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store