Derbyshire charities and groups handed share of £160,000 community fund in 2016

Posted by nathan lloyd | Published: 30/12/2016


Central England Co-operative can today reveal that it has helped change the lives of 89 groups and charities – by donating nearly £160,000 from its Community Dividend Fund in 2016.

A diverse range of projects picked from across 16 counties were handed a funding boost during the past 12 months, with the largest single amount given being £5,000.

Everyone from Scout groups to football clubs and churches to schools benefited from the fund that guarantees that at least one per cent of the Society’s trading profit is reinvested in local communities in a bid to help projects to thrive from the Midlands to the East Coast.

Martyn Cheatle, Chief Executive of Central England Co-operative, said: “We have handed out nearly £160,000 to projects in our communities in 2016 and over £2 million since the scheme was established in 2007.

“The Community Dividend reflects a key principle of our society, in that we reward the loyalty of our customers by investing in and supporting local communities.

“The scheme helps to benefit a wide variety of projects, with grants between £100 to a £5,000, which will make the communities that we serve a better place for our members to live, work and visit.

“I would like to urge all of our members to get in touch and put forward a community cause close to their heart for the Community Dividend scheme.”

In the past 12 months, several projects have shared thousands of pounds in and around Derbyshire as part of the community Dividend Fund.

Stand Road Bowls Club, in Chesterfield, were handed £3,500 to pay for a new shelter.

Members of the crown green bowls club are now be able to shelter from the rain as a result of the grant.

Maureen Kayser, from Stand Road Bowls Club, said: “This grant will mean we can put up a shelter on our ground to shield us from our English weather.

Presently we have no shelters and it is bleak when you have to watch and try to score with an umbrella balanced over you and the score cards. “Therefore it will make a huge difference to our ground and the watching of the sport.”

Codnor Bowls Club was handed a Community Dividend Fund grant of £2,600 towards new fencing and refurbishment of its pavilion and bowls hut.

Members will not be the only ones to benefit from the funding as youngsters from nearby schools also use the facility during term-time.

Chris Emmas-Williams, from Codnor Bowls Club, said: “This will considerably help not just the school but the whole of our community.”

Sandiacre Memorial Institute was given £1,350 to pay for planters and compost to help boost flower and vegetable beds that pre-school children in the area help to maintain.

A total of £1,250 was awarded to Breedon Play and Learn Pre-School.

The vital funds were used to pay for new high-visibility jackets for youngsters for when they go out and about exploring in the local community.

People can apply for funding by heading online and visiting https://communities.centralengland.coop/ or heading in store to pick up an application form.

Potential applicants have to have been a Central England Co-operative member for six months, the project should be in the trading area of a Central England Co-operative store and all applications will need a referee.

Notes to editors

About Central England Co-operative

Central England Co-operative is one of the largest independent retail co-operative societies in the UK. It is a modern, forward-looking organisation employing over 8,000 staff, with projected gross sales of £958million for 2016/17. The Society recently celebrated being named Leading Co-operative of the Year 2016 by Co-operatives UK. The Society’s principal areas of activity are food, funeral services, and property. Central England Co-operative has more than 430 trading outlets across 16 counties including; West Midlands, Warwickshire, Worcestershire, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Rutland, Nottinghamshire, Northamptonshire, Lincolnshire, West Yorkshire, South Yorkshire, Suffolk, Norfolk, Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire.  The Society has an ambitious food store development programme for 2016/17.
Central England Co-operative is proud of its reputation for ethical business practices and corporate responsibility.  It is a member of Business in the Community, the membership organisation that stands for responsible business, and has also won many business awards for excellence.  The Society supports a number of charities including Newlife Foundation for Disabled Children and invests a percentage of its trading profit into local communities.
For more information visit http://www.centralengland.coop follo,w Central England Co-operative on Twitter: @mycoopfood, and on Facebook: facebook.com/centralenglandcooperative
Rob Smyth – PR officer - Central England Co-operative - 01543 414140
Email – publicrelations@centralengland.coop