The Lloyds TSB Foundation Young Offenders Programme

August 17, 2009 by inomag  
Filed under Resources

The Lloyds TSB Foundation for England and Wales has launched its Young Offenders Programme which has  1 million funding available to charities which are working to improve the life choices and chances of young offenders in England and Wales.

You need to be a registered charity in order to apply. Your charity can be any size but should have a proven track record of working with young offenders, aged between 15 and 21, in areas including:

* Acommodation
* Skills training
* Employment mentoring
* Drugs and alcohol
* Mental health
* Restorative justice
* Family support and relationships.

Grants can fund new and innovative work. They can also be used to extend a proven model of successful work or to enable the development of joined up projects. Funding can be up to three years and can cover core and project costs. Capital costs are not covered.

The application deadline for expressions of interest is 25 September 2009.

For more information see the Lloyds TSB Foundation for England and Wales website http://www.lloydstsbfoundations.org.uk/FundingProgrammes/Pages/YoungOffendersFundingProgramme.aspx

The Impetus Trust

August 3, 2009 by inomag  
Filed under Resources

Reducing Re-Offending Fund has 1.3 million to support 3 6 charities in the criminal justice sector. The fund is collaboration between Impetus Trust, Indigo Trust, Esm Fairbairn Foundation, and the Henry Smith Charity. The funding will be over 3 4 years and aims to make a significant impact on the high level of re-offending in the UK.

Successful organisations will receive a combined package of unrestricted funding and tailored capacity-building support from the Impetus Investment Team and network of consultants and advisers.

The deadline for applications is 15 September 2009.

For more information please visit: http://www.impetus.org.uk/reducing-reoffending-fund.html

Church prison project folds through lack of Government support

April 2, 2009 by admin  
Filed under Resources

A pioneering prison support project, welcomed by hundreds of inmates and staff, has folded due to lack of Government support.

The project, developed in Lancashire by the Church of England’s Diocese of Blackburn, was designed to be of national benefit by cutting re-offending rates through comprehensive support to prisoners and their families.

More than 1,300 prisoners applied to join the pilot project, in four Lancashire goals, during its three-year lifespan. The Family Days and Support Project trained 120 volunteers to work with four prisons, Preston, Lancaster Castle, Kirkham and Wymott, creating opportunities for families to spend time together in creative activities.

“The project has helped shape future plans for prisoners and their families in the prisons,” said a 70 page project review, published on April 1st. “The consensus was that the project has filled a niche and will be badly missed.

“The overwhelming feeling is one of sadness and frustration that the project has ended, and worry that much of the good which it has undoubtedly done may be wasted without something to take its place. The general conclusion is that this project, or something very similar, should not only be reinstated in Lancashire but repeated throughout the country.”

The project aimed to create a “through the gate” support policy, keeping families together, reducing re-offending rates by 20 percent and achieving a £3 saving for each £1 invested.

Prisoner rehabilitation started during the first week of a prisoner’s sentence and the project included encouraging work with other prisoner problems like drugs, accommodation, employment and education and training.

Peter Nowland, who supervised the project for the Church of England, said availability of funding from HM Prison Service North – west changed during the year that the three year Treasury funding ran out.

While some of the work led to Family Support posts being set up in prisons “this does not fully address the family issues in the community, nor the need to support families and ex-offenders upon release.”

An unnamed prison governor said: “I think we’d be foolish if we didn’t roll it out, not just regionally but nationally because it’s a key part of what prisoners need… recognition there’s gaps in their lives that we’ve been trying to fix.”

A prisoner commented: “As a prison Listener I truly believe that this project is playing an additional role towards suicide prevention, self- harm reduction … in what I regard as a vital project for the prison Service.” And a family member added: “if I won the lottery I’d give Grassroots (the Church department running the scheme) a couple of million quid just to carry on.”

Source: www.ekklesia.co.uk/node/9121