Launch of the Kent Big Society Fund to help social enterprises
grow
19 December 2011
A new fund providing £3 million of loans for new and existing
social enterprises in Kent will be launched by Kent County Council
in partnership with the Kent
Community Foundation.
Called the Kent Big Society Fund, the money will provide loans
to help support social enterprises that have the desire and
appetite to grow their enterprise in the county and create further
employment at a time when access to finance from high street banks
and grant funding from the public sector is increasingly
difficult.
The fund will be established through the Kent Community
Foundation (KCF), an experienced Kent-based charity with many years
of experience in administering and managing funds for the benefit
of the Kent community.
The £3 million will be donated over three years, with the first
£1 million given to KCF in January 2012 to establish the fund. The
money will then be used to provide loans to social enterprises with
repayments being recycled to provide new loans. KCC will top up the
fund by £1 million each year until 2014.
As KCF is a charity, any further donations into the Kent Big
Society Fund from private individuals and corporate bodies will
attract tax and gift aid relief. KCC and KCF hope to attract money
from philanthropic and other sources to the fund.
The fund will be open for applications in January and interested
social enterprises, or those thinking of forming a social
enterprise and who might be eligible for loan funding, will be able
to apply to the KCF from mid-January. The first decisions on
applications will be made by a KCF Investment Panel at the end of
March.
Mike Hill, KCC Cabinet Member for
Customer and Communities, said:
“The Kent Big Society Fund will help social enterprises to make
a real difference for local people and the local economy. It will
help social enterprises to grow, create further employment
opportunities for Kent residents and, at the same time, deliver the
wider social value that is at the very heart of social
enterprise."
“I know £3 million is a lot of money, but we believe that there
is huge potential in the social enterprise sector in Kent, which
can be unlocked through the fund. It really is a show of faith from
KCC in the great potential of the social enterprise sector in Kent.
We hope those with a similar belief will help us support social
enterprises by also donating to the fund.”
Carol Lynch, Chief Executive Officer of Kent Community
Foundation, said:
“Kent Community Foundation is thrilled to be working with Kent
County Council to establish the Kent Big Society Fund. This is a
terrific opportunity to encourage and support local social
enterprises to benefit the community and enhance the economic,
social and environmental vibrancy of Kent. We are particularly
excited by the opportunity loan financing offers to ‘recycle’
funding that can benefit many more projects in the future, as loans
are repaid."
“We hope the Kent Big Society Fund might also encourage existing
charities and community projects to consider whether social
enterprise is a way of developing their aims in a financially
sustainable way, which is so important in a climate of constrained
grant funding. While social enterprise is not a panacea, there is a
growing understanding of how this kind of enterprising approach can
tackle long-standing social problems from the grassroots up, and
improve the lives of the people of Kent."
“Kent County Council is leading the way in terms of supporting
and stimulating social enterprise models as a sustainable way of
improving the lives of Kent residents. As the fund develops, we
will be encouraging local businesses and philanthropists to invest
in the Kent Big Society Fund, financially and by offering their
business knowledge and expertise to mentor budding social
entrepreneurs.”
Next year, Kent County Council will announce the Kent Jobs for
Kent Young People scheme. £2 million of the Big Society Fund will
be put towards developing this new initiative that will support the
rising number of young unemployed – details of which will be
launched in the spring with the aim of substantially reducing the
numbers of unemployed under the age of 25.