Today's report from the National Audit Office (NAO) finds that as
of 19 February 2021, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and
Sport (the Department) had disbursed £454 million of £494 million
it made available to support charities during the COVID-19
pandemic.1 It did so through seven schemes and a network
of nearly 200 partners and intends to award and disburse funding
until 31 March 2021.
In April 2020, the government announced a financial support
package for charities to relieve pressure on public services and
help charities meet increased demand during the COVID-19
pandemic. The Department is responsible for distributing £513
million, which after deducting expected administration and
evaluation costs, leaves at least £494 million available to
charities.2
Since April 2020, the Department has announced seven funding
schemes through which charities could access funding, with the
most recent scheme being announced in December 2020.3
Charities could access funding through a network of 198 partners
including at least nine government departments; three public
organisations; and 186 other partners.
The largest single scheme from which charities could compete to
access funds was the Coronavirus Community Support Fund (CCSF),
managed by The National Lottery Community Fund
(TNLCF).4 The Department initially allocated £310
million to CCSF but later changed this to £199
million.5 It decided TNLCF was the only organisation
capable of distributing the funding available in the timeframe
the Department wanted. After deducting administration and
evaluation costs of £11 million, £188 million was available to
charities. This scheme received over 13,800 applications worth
nearly £342 million. By the end of October, TNCLF had disbursed
more than 95% of the £188 million it had available.
The Department initially ringfenced £160 million for government
departments to distribute to charities providing key services or
supporting vulnerable people within their sectors. It received 53
applications for this scheme worth £277 million. Following
assessment by the Department, £164 million was allocated to
support 21 projects across nine government departments.
Government stressed the need to distribute its charity funding at
pace. By the end of July 2020, more than three months after the
funding was announced, charities had received £103 million, 21%
of the £494 million available across all schemes. This rose to
£359 million (73%) by the end of October 2020 and by 19 February
2021, charities had received £454 million (92%) of available
funds. As at 19 February, the Department had awarded £18 million
to charities that had not yet been disbursed. The remaining £23
million had not yet been awarded or disbursed to charities, which
the Department intends to do up to 31 March 2021.
Any funds remaining undistributed or unspent by government
departments, other partners or charities after 31 March 2021 are
expected to be returned to HM Treasury.
- ENDS -
Notes for Editors
- 1. Support was targeted at those organisations in the
voluntary, community and social enterprise sector providing vital
services to the vulnerable.The report refers to organisations in
this sector as charities.
- 2. The total government support package to the sector
includes £200 million allocated to the Department of Health &
Social Care to purchase bed capacity in charitable hospices and
£60 million for the devolved governments of Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland.These allocations are out of scope of this
investigation.
- 3. The £513 million was allocated across seven schemes: £199
million to the Coronavirus Community Support Fund (CCSF)
delivered by the National Lottery Community Fund (TNLCF); £164
million to sector-specific projects across nine government
departments; £85 million to the Community Match Challenge; £37
million to the Big Night In; £17 million to the Youth COVID-19
Support Fund; £8 million to the Loneliness Fund; and £5 million
to the Voluntary and Community Sector Emergencies Partnership
(VCSEP). Figures do not sum due to rounding.
- 4. The National Lottery Community Fund is one of the
Department’s non-departmental public bodies.
- 5. Prior to the scheme being launched the Department reduced
the allocation from £310 million to £200 million and later this
reduced to £199 million because the Department funded some
evaluation costs itself and there was an underspend on the
scheme. The Department used funding not distributed through the
CCSF to set up four of the seven schemes: The Community Match
Challenge, support to VCSEP, the Youth COVID-19 Support Fund and
the Loneliness Fund.