Calls for more support
for North East Cambridgeshire
charities and community
groups
Plans to cut
red tape, promote charitable giving and
get more people involved
Malcolm Moss
MP welcomed this week important
new proposals from Conservative leader,
David Cameron, to help boost the work of
charities, social enterprises and
voluntary groups across (area). A
series of practical policies seek to
strengthen the voluntary sector, cut
unnecessary red tape and get more people
involved in local charities and local
community groups.
The
Conservative policy proposals include:
Simplifying
the Gift Aid system to reduce the
bureaucratic burden on charities and
promote more charitable giving
Replacing
the Big Lottery Fund (BLF) and with a
Voluntary Action Lottery Fund; the BLF
has attracted criticism for giving
grants to controversial causes and
spending money on government services
rather than funding voluntary good
causes.
Creating a
network of Social Enterprise Zones to
boost social investment in deprived
communities.
Cutting
unnecessary red tape and form-filling.
Establishing
a one-stop funding portal for
significant government grants, to help
voluntary groups through the confusing
‘jungle’ of different state grants.
Enabling the
voluntary sector to compete on an equal
footing with the private sector to
provide services.
Promoting
co-operatives, to allow local
communities to run, and own, community
assets and set up new government-funded
schools.
Malcolm Moss
MP said:
“I
welcome these new proposals to help
boost local charities and community
groups across North East Cambridgeshire,
by cutting red tape, encouraging more
charitable giving and helping social
enterprise to provide local services.
“The social
challenges we face today are every bit
as serious as the economic challenges
Britain faced in 1979. The big dividing
line in British politics today is about
the role of the state. Gordon Brown
believes in top-down state control;
Conservatives believe in bottom-up
social responsibility.”