Friday 16 March 2007

Community causes hit to meet soaring costs of Olympics

In a Times report today on the rising costs of the London Olympics, there's greater focus on the effect on the National Lottery and the good causes it supports.

The report claims that "thousands of community projects" covering health, education, arts and sport face cuts or closures over the next five years to fund the new £9.3bn bill, and reveals that, as well as the lottery contributions, Gordon Brown had to raid £5bn more from Whitehall departments.

What impact will that have on the services they provide?

Apparently the Chancellor had been pressing for a much larger contribution of £2bn from the National Lottery. Not surprising, when Tony Blair committed him to handing a net total of £36bn to the EU - completely without justification - between now and 2012.

Though it remains to be seen whether MPs will approve that bad EU budget deal.

The National Lottery was already set to contribute £1.5 billion to the Olympics costs. Further calls on its funds will inevitably have a huge impact on services.

While grants till 2009 will apparently be protected, thousands of new groups applying for cash in the next five years are likely to be turned down.

Big losers

The Big Lottery Fund, which supports tens of thousands of community projects, is to lose 17.5% of its funding, totalling an extra £425 million over four years.

The Arts Council England faces an extra £62 million cut, the Heritage Fund will lose £90 million and Sport England will lose £55 million during the same period.

The Times report also provides more information about where Ken Livingstone will find the extra £300 million he now has to contribute - without putting up council tax.

Livingstone is also said to have pledged to protect transport fares, but his office said the funding would be shared between Transport for London and the London Development Agency.

Peter Hewitt, chief executive of Arts Council England, said he was deeply disappointed that more money was to be diverted away from the arts.

He said, “The impact is likely to be felt across the whole of England and disproportionately by smaller arts organisations, local projects and individual artists — the main recipients of our lottery funds,” Mr Hewitt said.

Dame Liz Forgan, chairwoman of the Heritage Lottery Fund, said that the cuts were “bad news for the UK’s heritage” and that she expected libraries and museums to face serious cutbacks.

She said, “In recent years our lottery money has been the single largest source of support not only for our historic places, museums and galleries but also for our natural heritage and the cultural history of the people of these islands.”

Derek Mapp, the chairman of Sport England, said: “The decision to divert a further £55.9 million of Sport England’s share of lottery income between 2009 and 2012 to fund the Olympics and Paralympics seriously endangers the creation of a sporting legacy from the 2012 Games.”

Sir Clive Booth, chair of the Big Lottery Fund said that the Government’s decision to divert £425 million from its good-causes resources “will be a cause of concern for many organisations across the UK”.


Yet depriving money from good uses and causes in all these areas wouldn't be necessary if the government weren't wasting such an unjustifiably large amount of money on the EU.

Will MPs take the right decision when the EU budget deal comes before Parliament, and choose to countermand Blair's waste, save the money and prevent these cuts instead?

In the real world of finite government resources, MPs must take difficult choices and ask: who deserves those tens of billions of pounds more?

Good causes? Or an organisation with a terrible reputation for waste and fraud, that hasn't had its accounts approved by auditors for twelve years running?

No contest, surely.


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