The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Charitable groups secure funds

LOTTERY: £1 million to be shared across Tayside and Fife

- SCOTT MILNE smilne@thecourier.co.uk

Charitable groups across Courier Country are set to benefit to the tune of £1 million thanks to funding from the National Lottery.

Among the £1,014,504 being spread out across Tayside and Fife is just over £500,000 to help create a park at the former site of Douglas Primary School, Dundee.

Plans to create a “community park” on the grounds, near Douglas Community Centre, Balmoral Avenue, were approved in 2018.

Other recipients in the city include Dundee Science Centre, which will get £10,000, and Dundee FC Community Trust, which will use its £9,980 to deliver online activities for older people.

Greg Fenton, community manager with the Trust, said: “We are providing digital tablets to hospitals, care homes and individual­s so our participan­ts can take part in the programme. To see the group interactin­g digitally and seeing smiles on faces is a project well done.”

In Perth and Kinross, 12 groups will get a share of the £5.5m the National Lottery Community Fund is delivering throughout Scotland.

Among them is the Rannoch Community Trust, which will receive £78,246, while Tay Valley Timeback, which runs a transport project connecting people throughout Highland Perthshire, will get £59,430.

Emma Birtles, Tay Valley Timeback developmen­t officer, said: “This funding enables our project to grow and develop whilst also becoming more sustainabl­e. It will really make a difference to our community and to people’s lives.”

In Fife, the Linton Lane Centre in Kirkcaldy will use its cash boost to continue offering activities such as crafts, fitness and cooking to the community.

It comes just months after centre manager Mandy Henderson asked the public to dig deep to keep the facility open after it was forced to cancel all bookings and close activities at the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Welcoming the £50,172 windfall, she said a full programme would be on offer as soon as the centre opened fully. She said: “A lot of the people who benefit from these groups are young parents and adults with additional support needs who enjoy the craft and cookery group as their carers attend so they are supported and feel part of the group.”

Minority ethnic older people in Fife will also benefit, thanks to a £24,659 award to Fife Centre for Equalities.

Chief executive Nina Munday said it would enable the centre to work with other organisati­ons to build better connection­s.

In all, 13 groups in Fife will share £172,302 of funding. It includes £10,000 for the Vine Church in Dunfermlin­e, which delivers 150 meals to people in need every day. In Angus, Brechin Healthcare Group, Hedzup Ltd and Voluntary Action Angus will all receive between £3,000 and £9,900.

 ?? Picture: Gareth Jennings. ?? Tay Valley Timeback volunteer driver Liz Richards picks up Joyce Evans, 92, and Sadie Fraser, 88, at their homes in Aberfeldy alongside developmen­t officer Emma Birtles.
Picture: Gareth Jennings. Tay Valley Timeback volunteer driver Liz Richards picks up Joyce Evans, 92, and Sadie Fraser, 88, at their homes in Aberfeldy alongside developmen­t officer Emma Birtles.

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