Presentation by Megan Combe and Dougie Grierson to the West Lothian Community Councils forum on 26th Sep 13, detailing the funding options available to local groups.
Diane Gray's presentation on HLF funding and work in Dumfries and Galloway as a Development Priority Area. Presentation to D&G staff and councillors in Annan, Dumfries, Kirkcudbright and Stranraer in Feb 2014
Face your funding fears HERITAGE & BIG LOTTERY FUNDS 220914Megan Braithwaite
Workshop on facing your funding fears, given at West Lothian funding fair 22/09/14, delivered by Megan from Heritage Lottery Fund & Adele from Big Lottery Fund. Ins
A presentation given by Megan Combe at the Perth and Kinross Council First World War networking event 23.08.13. Presentation covers funding for First World War projects and other open programmes for heritage from the Heritage Lottery Fund
Diane Gray's presentation on HLF funding and work in Dumfries and Galloway as a Development Priority Area. Presentation to D&G staff and councillors in Annan, Dumfries, Kirkcudbright and Stranraer in Feb 2014
Face your funding fears HERITAGE & BIG LOTTERY FUNDS 220914Megan Braithwaite
Workshop on facing your funding fears, given at West Lothian funding fair 22/09/14, delivered by Megan from Heritage Lottery Fund & Adele from Big Lottery Fund. Ins
A presentation given by Megan Combe at the Perth and Kinross Council First World War networking event 23.08.13. Presentation covers funding for First World War projects and other open programmes for heritage from the Heritage Lottery Fund
Margaret Thompson, Community Heritage Grants, National Library of AustraliaMuseums & Galleries NSW
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Dr Allan Sudlow (Head of Research Development):
‘Research collaboration with the British Library’
• Our core purposes and strategic priorities
• Ways of working with us
• Who to contact and when
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Margaret Thompson, Community Heritage Grants, National Library of AustraliaMuseums & Galleries NSW
Margaret Thompson has worked at the National Library of Australia since 2005 as part time Assistant to the Community Heritage Grants program, assisting the Coordinator in the administration of the program. Prior to that she has had a career as a Librarian, both at the NLA and various government, special and public libraries in Canberra and interstate.
Community Heritage Grants
The Community Heritage Grants program is a federally funded annual program, administered by the National Library of Australia, which provides grants of up to $15,000 to assist in the preservation of Australian cultural heritage collections of national significance.
Not-for-profit community organisations, such as historical societies, regional museums, galleries and Indigenous and migrant groups, are eligible to apply. Applications for 2017 have now closed, but will re-open again next year in March 2018. This presentation will provide further information for potential applicants on the wide range of eligible projects, tips on preparing your application, and how to navigate the online application process.
Andrew Trump Heritage Project Officer NSW Office of Environment & Heritage.Museums & Galleries NSW
Andrew Trump has worked as an arts manager (New England Theatre Company, Q Theatre), an events and celebrations manager (Australia Day Council of NSW, NSW Centenary of Federation Committee), and a local government cultural planner (Gold Coast City Council). He is currently responsible for the design, development, implementation and management of a new three year grants program, part of the Heritage Near Me initiative of the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage.
Heritage Near Me Program
The Heritage Near Me incentives program is part of an initiative announced by the then-Minister for Heritage in 2015. Heritage Near Me is an innovative new program that empowers NSW communities to protect, share and celebrate their local heritage. The program has three funding streams: Local Heritage Green Energy Grants; Local Heritage Activation Grants; and, Local Heritage Strategic Projects. This talk will outline the applicant guidelines for each stream, the current priorities for funding, and provide examples of recent successful applicants.
For more information: http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/Heritage/heritage-support.htm
Funding Now - Current Trends for Museum Funding with the Heritage Lottery FundMuseums & Heritage Show
Speaker: Fiona Talbott, Head of Museums, Libraries and Archives, Heritage Lottery Fund - This session will take a look at the current trends in successful awards to museum projects from the Heritage Lottery Fund and pass on lessons learnt to potential grantees. In addition it will take a look at possible future directions for funding under HLF’s next strategic plan.
Katey Boal, National Trust for Scotland
Lorna Cruickshank, Highland Council
Presentation from the Museums Galleries Scotland 'Fortune Favours the Brave' conference, September 2013.
PAVS Heritage Lottery Fund presentation November 2015LornaLivock
This presentation will provide information about who the Heritage Lottery Fund is, what grant programmes are available including First World War: then and now and Young Roots. Current priorities will also be identified and top tips for accessing funding shared.
Margaret Thompson, Community Heritage Grants, National Library of AustraliaMuseums & Galleries NSW
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Dr Allan Sudlow (Head of Research Development):
‘Research collaboration with the British Library’
• Our core purposes and strategic priorities
• Ways of working with us
• Who to contact and when
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Successfully obtaining funds for your museum or gallery requires knowledge and creativity. Access to Funding is a workshop delivering specialist knowledge to make accessing funds a reality.
Margaret Thompson, Community Heritage Grants, National Library of AustraliaMuseums & Galleries NSW
Margaret Thompson has worked at the National Library of Australia since 2005 as part time Assistant to the Community Heritage Grants program, assisting the Coordinator in the administration of the program. Prior to that she has had a career as a Librarian, both at the NLA and various government, special and public libraries in Canberra and interstate.
Community Heritage Grants
The Community Heritage Grants program is a federally funded annual program, administered by the National Library of Australia, which provides grants of up to $15,000 to assist in the preservation of Australian cultural heritage collections of national significance.
Not-for-profit community organisations, such as historical societies, regional museums, galleries and Indigenous and migrant groups, are eligible to apply. Applications for 2017 have now closed, but will re-open again next year in March 2018. This presentation will provide further information for potential applicants on the wide range of eligible projects, tips on preparing your application, and how to navigate the online application process.
Andrew Trump Heritage Project Officer NSW Office of Environment & Heritage.Museums & Galleries NSW
Andrew Trump has worked as an arts manager (New England Theatre Company, Q Theatre), an events and celebrations manager (Australia Day Council of NSW, NSW Centenary of Federation Committee), and a local government cultural planner (Gold Coast City Council). He is currently responsible for the design, development, implementation and management of a new three year grants program, part of the Heritage Near Me initiative of the NSW Office of Environment and Heritage.
Heritage Near Me Program
The Heritage Near Me incentives program is part of an initiative announced by the then-Minister for Heritage in 2015. Heritage Near Me is an innovative new program that empowers NSW communities to protect, share and celebrate their local heritage. The program has three funding streams: Local Heritage Green Energy Grants; Local Heritage Activation Grants; and, Local Heritage Strategic Projects. This talk will outline the applicant guidelines for each stream, the current priorities for funding, and provide examples of recent successful applicants.
For more information: http://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/Heritage/heritage-support.htm
Funding Now - Current Trends for Museum Funding with the Heritage Lottery FundMuseums & Heritage Show
Speaker: Fiona Talbott, Head of Museums, Libraries and Archives, Heritage Lottery Fund - This session will take a look at the current trends in successful awards to museum projects from the Heritage Lottery Fund and pass on lessons learnt to potential grantees. In addition it will take a look at possible future directions for funding under HLF’s next strategic plan.
Katey Boal, National Trust for Scotland
Lorna Cruickshank, Highland Council
Presentation from the Museums Galleries Scotland 'Fortune Favours the Brave' conference, September 2013.
PAVS Heritage Lottery Fund presentation November 2015LornaLivock
This presentation will provide information about who the Heritage Lottery Fund is, what grant programmes are available including First World War: then and now and Young Roots. Current priorities will also be identified and top tips for accessing funding shared.
Presentations brought to you by www.salisburyanglican.org.uk
Presentations are copyright – however if you would like to have a copy of this please put your request to Email: comms@salisbury.anglican.org
Social Contract Archaeology: a business case for the futureDigVentures Ltd
In July 2012, DigVentures pioneered an entirely new procurement model for archaeology, hosting Europe’s first crowdfunded and crowdsourced excavation at the internationally significant Bronze Age site at Flag Fen (www.digventures.com). Crowdfunding has been most successful in creative industries such as film, music and drama, where supporters can launch projects such as films, records, exhibitions and runway shows through buying perks and rewards (such as invitations to premieres, performances, or limited edition artwork) with creative and social entrepreneurs retaining commercial and artistic ownership of their project. Ideas that may not fit the pattern required by conventional financiers therefore achieve traction in the marketplace, supported by what has been called the ‘wisdom of crowds.’ This new approach to funding (using social networks in the context of e-commerce transactions) was combined with crowdsourcing, inviting the public to join the excavation team – either via a robust digital platform from the comfort of their armchairs (in real time), or with their sleeves rolled up on the site itself. The DigVentures approach can best be described as ‘Social Contract Archaeology’ – a value-led archaeology situated within the emerging trend for social commerce, entering into a social contract with as wide a constituency of funders and stakeholders as possible. Assessing the success of this new business model in terms of audience reach and engagement, this paper will present key metrics for breadth, depth and diversity of on and off-line participation, evaluating our contribution to the public good.
Heritage Lottery Fund is the UK’s largest dedicated funder of heritage.
More than £4.4billion is spent across the UK. £375million is spent in the East of England, with over £30m across Herts.
Who's funding what in Kingston upon Thames?Superhighways
Using 360 Giving data, data scientist David Kane explores which grantmakers are funding charitable projects in Kingston and what they are most interested in funding. This presentationswas delivered at the Kingston Data Hack day in Kingston on 12th June 2018.
Big Lottery Fund Scotland Overview Oct 2012John Fellows
This presentation gives an overview of funding available from the Big Lottery Fund to projects based in Scotland. Details correct in October 2012. For up to date information
on our range of funding programmes, please refer to our website at www.biglotteryfund.org.uk/scotland
View presentation slides from our November 2012 Briefing events for funded organisations.
The briefings aimed to update funded organisations on the changes the Arts Council is going through and discuss how they can help us make a strong case for maintaining public funding of arts and culture in advance of the next Government spending review.
Mary-Louise Weight, Coordinator CHG National Library of Australia outlines what these grants will fund from Significance Assessments, Preservation Needs Assessments & Preservation materials.
Culture Means Business: Culture, Regeneration & Big SocietyDavid Barrie
Presentation made at an event hosted by Plymouth Culture Board, and supported by the University of Plymouth, Plymouth City Council and the Plymouth Chamber of Commerce, Thursday October 7, 2010. The theme of the presentation: what society and the economy wants and needs from culture and urban development is changing. In the context of the Government policy programme in the U.K. called 'Big Society', different values and emphases are now coming in to play. Three examples are given of urban renewal projects at different urban scales that express some of these new values and some of their economic impacts outlined.
Ibstock Cory Environmental Trust and Cory Environmental Trust in Britain, Pre...
HLF and WLC presentation to WL Community Councils Forum Sep 13
1.
2. Who we are
• One of four lottery funders in Scotland
• Support all types of heritage projects
• Award grants over £3,000
• £600m for Scotland‟s heritage since 1994
3. What is heritage?
Historic buildings and sites
Natural heritage (e.g. historic parks, biodiversity etc)
Museums, archives and collections
Industrial, transport & maritime heritage
„Intangible‟ heritage (e.g. oral history, language and dialect, place names, cultural
traditions etc)
“Heritage is our legacy from the past, what we live with today
and what we pass on to future generations.” UNESCO
4. West Lothian is a priority
area for HLF from 2013
What is a priority area?
7. Sharing Heritage
• Celebrating community heritage
• Grants from £3,000 - £10,000
• Not-for-profit groups
• 8 week assessment
• No application deadline
• Projects have to meet minimum of
one outcome for people
8. First World War: then & now
• For communities to explore,
conserve and share their First
World War heritage
• Grants from £3,000 - £10,000
• 8 week assessment
• No application deadline
• For projects that benefit all ages
but will prioritise young people
• Projects have to meet minimum
of one outcome for people
9. Grants up to £10,000
• Start up grants
• Celebrate
10. Our Heritage
• Grants from £10,000 - £100,000
• Replaces Your Heritage
programme
• 8 week assessment
• No application deadlines
• Prioritise not-for profit groups
• Projects have to meet minimum
of one outcome for heritage and
one outcome for people
11. Young Roots
• Engaging young people in
heritage
• Led by young people (11 –
25yrs)
• Grants from £10,000 - £50,000
• 8 week assessment
• No application deadlines
• Partnerships between youth
and heritage organisations
• Developing young people‟s
skills
12. Heritage Grants
• Grants over £100,000
• Two round application process with
development funding
• Projects have to achieve at least
one outcome for heritage, people
communities (up to £2million)
• Regular deadlines
• Scotland committee make decision
on requests up to £2million
• UK Board make decision on
requests over £2m
13. Grants over £100,000
• Heritage Enterprise
• Parks for People
• Landscape Partnerships
• Townscape Heritage
• Grants for Places of Worship
14. How can we help?
Project Enquiry advice – online form
Website www.hlf.org.uk
• Application materials
• Guidance documents
• Case studies – examples of projects we‟ve funded
15. Contact us
Megan Combe, Development Officer
Heritage Lottery Fund
38 Thistle Street
Edinburgh
EH2 1EN
0131 225 9450
MeganC@hlf.org.uk
New – follow us on twitter
@HLFScotland
16. External Funding and Community
Council’s
Douglas Grierson, Community Regeneration
Officer, Regeneration and Employability
17. What I want to cover
• A general overview of External Funding
• West Lothian Council’s Village
Improvement Fund
20. Are Community Councils eligible
and what are funders looking for?
• Community Council’s are eligible as a
general rule.
• As a statutory body some funders don’t
support applications.
• All funders fund projects, not general or
ongoing activities
• Work with other local groups where
possible
21. West Lothian Village Improvement
Fund
• Funding of £35k, £15 and £5k available to
villages across West Lothian in 2013/14
• Funding will be available in subsequent four
years although amounts to be finalised
• Capital projects only
• Should be revenue neutral where possible
22. West Lothian Village Improvement
Fund
•Projects can include:
•Street furniture;
•Improved village gateways;
•Landscaping, planting etc.;
•Addressing gap sites;
•Access in and around villages;
•Improved facilities for young people; and
•Investment in local community facilities.
23. Support and information available
• Regular Funding Newsletter;
• Regular Funding Events/surgeries;
• Officer support available;
24. Q&A and contact details
Dougie Grierson
Community Regeneration Officer
Area Services
Tel: 01506 281088
Mob: 07500 816852
e-mail: douglas.grierson@westlothian.gov.uk
Editor's Notes
Small grants programme - £3,000 -£10,000It’s at the same level as Sharing Heritage – all First World War projects at this level should come under this programme, not Sharing Heritage. Rolling programme - 8 week assessment. We will be funding good applications that involve people of all ages, however, if we are looking at projects in competition, then we will prioritise those that involve young people. (aged 11-25)We will fund activity and travel abroad to help people understand more about the nature and impact of this global war – see FAQs for more information about this.The programme will run until 2019. We are still funding First World War projects under other programmes – we have already spent more than £13million on First World War projects.