The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

UK’S charities set to lose out on £4.3bn in funding

Many organisati­ons also facing rise in costs as Covid-19 leads to surge in demand

- TESS DE LA MARE

The UK’S charities are set to lose out on £4.3 billion of funding over the next 12 weeks, as events are cancelled and their shops are forced to close their doors in response to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Many small to medium-sized organisati­ons are facing imminent collapse unless the government steps in with a support package, the sector has warned.

The UK charity sector employs about 900,000 people in paid positions, and many expect to be forced to make redundanci­es before the Covid-19 crisis is over.

As well as lost funding, many charities are facing a rise in costs as the pandemic leads to a surge in demand from the people they were set up to assist.

Heidi Travis, chief executive of palliative care charity Sue Ryder, said the organisati­on was having to make some “incredibly difficult decisions”.

She said that before the pandemic, hospice charities only received enough government funding to cover about one-third of their costs, with the remainder raised through charity shops and events.

Ms Travis said the charity was working with the NHS to free up hospital beds for coronaviru­s patients, but has been forced to cancel all fundraisin­g events for the next three months and expects to have to close its shops.

“This is a plea and no less. Without immediate funding from the government the critical end-of-life care that Sue Ryder provides to thousands of families across the UK every year will cease,” she said.

Mark Russell, chief executive at the Children’s Society, said the charity was expecting a spike in the needs of its clients as vulnerable children no longer have a sanctuary in school due to their closure.

“As every day goes by we are spending vital resources without any certainty about the future,” he said.

A coalition of organisati­ons representi­ng the third sector is now calling on the government to provide emergency funding for charities and

I’m hearing from charities whose income has disappeare­d overnight but who still have to run services. KARL WILDING

volunteers that are supporting the response to the coronaviru­s.

It is asking for particular support for organisati­ons alleviatin­g pressure on the health service, or helping those suffering from the economic and social impact of coronaviru­s.

It is also calling for a “stabilisat­ion fund” for all organisati­ons, regardless of their function, to prevent their collapse.

Lastly it wants confirmati­on from Chancellor Rishi Sunak that charities should be eligible for the same business interrupti­on measures previously announced for the private sector.

Karl Wilding, chief executive of the National Council of Voluntary Organisati­ons, said: “I’m hearing from charities whose income has disappeare­d overnight but who still have to run services for their communitie­s.

“Many of them have very little emergency cash to tide them over.”

He added: “Supporting the national response and helping vulnerable people to cope is our first priority at the moment but we cannot do that if we are on the brink of financial collapse.”

 ?? Picture: Rex/shuttersto­ck. ?? The intensive care tent in a field hospital set up in Cremona, Italy, amid the outbreak.
Picture: Rex/shuttersto­ck. The intensive care tent in a field hospital set up in Cremona, Italy, amid the outbreak.

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