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Community Foundation Northern Ireland: AXA PARKS Fund

Community Foundation for Northern Ireland
Currently closed for applications Communities Community and neighbourhood development Education and learning environment Health, wellbeing and sport Natural environment and climate Antrim & Newtownabbey Ards & North Down Armagh City, Banbridge & Craigavon Belfast City Causeway Coast and Glens Derry City and Strabane Fermanagh and Omagh Lisburn and Castlereagh Mid and East Antrim Mid Ulster Newry, Mourne and Down Northern Ireland Republic of Ireland Medium (up to £60,000) Small (up to £10,000)

Overview

About the AXA PARKS Fund

Never has there been more important time for our green spaces to flourish.

Parks, large and small, in local communities throughout Ireland, are vital sources of respite, places to exercise, somewhere to meet family and friends, help protect our environment and nurture places for our local habitat to flourish.

AXA is working to make a difference in local communities through AXA PARKS – a new environmental grants programme, supporting local community projects that demonstrate a real commitment to improved outcomes for our environment and our communities’ wellbeing. The €1m project will see AXA support projects across the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland.

AXA PARKS will serve not only communities but will also look to help protect our native biodiversity – helping ensure that people, plants, and animals can thrive across the whole island.

AXA’s ambition with this programme is to ‘Act for human progress by protecting what matters’, building on existing AXA initiatives such as the Carbon Neutral Car Insurance offering and Tree Planting programme that will see 600,000 native trees grown in Ireland.

In this grant round, over €600,000 is available for charitable organisations in the Republic of Ireland*, and grants will be awarded proportionally across Ireland based on population spread. They anticipate that this round will be highly competitive and up to 100 grants will be awarded.

Successful projects will include all of the following aspects:

  • The green spaces will be on public land that is accessible to all members of the community.
    Exceptions apply for specific cases, for example refuges, schools, or community day care centres where the land might not be accessible to the whole community, but where the green space will be of huge benefit.
  • The green spaces and their development will encourage community engagement, participation and a sense of ownership in the local area.
  • The green spaces will improve the local environment through protecting current native biodiversity or supporting the recovery of neglected or damaged natural habitats.

For this Fund, biodiversity is defined as the variety and variability of all living things including plants, animals, microbes, fungi and people. Biodiversity and its interconnectedness, provides people with the basic elements we need such as clean air and water, food, fuel, building products and medicines, so it is vital that we make space for nature in our towns, villages and countryside for us to continue living full and healthy lives.

Eligible organisations can apply for £3,000 to £20,000 to develop and enhance a green space in their local area.

Organisations can apply only once to the Fund in 2022. Where multiple applications are received from the same organisation, none will be considered for assessment.

Eligibility

Eligible organisations…

  • Can be a registered charity or a local community/voluntary group
  • Can be a non-fee paying school or non-profit pre-school
  • Must have an annual income of less than £500,000
  • Can be a local branch of a larger charity, provided the branch has an annual income of less than £500,000
  • Must be embedded in the local community and must have a track record of responding to community needs
  • Must have up to date and sufficient governing documents and financial accounts

Eligible projects…

  • Must be to enhance/develop an outdoor physical space in the local community
  • Must be accessible to the whole community or fit the specific cases above
  • Must encourage community engagement and participation in the development and use of the space
  • Must enhance or protect local biodiversity

Organisations and projects that don’t fit these criteria will not be considered for funding.

Please note:

  • The organisation must own the land or have permission from the landowner to develop the Green Space.
  • Proposals to this fund can include the proportion of staff time or consultation costs specifically related to the project (e.g. Ecologist consultancy costs or surveyors).
  • Budgets can include the costs of building materials, plants and flowers, equipment and furniture.
  • Budgets can also include labour costs where an external company is contracted.
  • Where possible, all materials purchased with this funding should be sustainable and environmentally friendly.
  • Budgets can be larger than the funding available in this grant round, however, your application must cover at least 75% of the total project costs.

Organisations can apply only once to the Fund in 2022. Where multiple applications are received from the same organisation, none will be considered for assessment.

Examples of eligible projects

All projects in this grant round must encourage community participation through the creation of the green space, whilst also preserving and enhancing local biodiversity.

Some examples of projects include:

  • The creation and enhancement of…
  • Community Gardens or Green Spaces
  • Sensory Gardens
  • Green Spaces at schools or pre-schools
  • Wildlife habitats such as species-rich meadows and grasslands
  • Pocket forests and urban orchards
  • Walking trails
  • Rain gardens
  • Ponds
  • Pollinator corridors
  • Native flowering hedgerows
  • Projects that broaden accessibility to a current green space
  • The transformation of concrete spaces to green spaces (e.g. living walls and roofs, bioswales)
  • The rewilding or ‘greenification’ of local towns and villages.
  • Implementation of actions in existing community biodiversity action plans
  • Projects that protect endangered habitats and species

Once developed, the space should be open for the community to use and enjoy.

For further information on this and for detailed definitions, please see our resource pack or contact applications@communityfoundationni.org

Priorities for this Strand

They anticipate that this will be a competitive grant round so proposals that include any of the following will be prioritised at the assessment stage:

  • Organisations that have a strong community engagement track record.
  • Projects that provide opportunities for community members to participate in the creation and/or enhancement of green spaces.
  • Green spaces that aim to improve mental or physical health.
  • Green spaces that allow for an educational element, such as allowing for workshops on biodiversity, planting, or citizen scientist projects etc.
  • Projects that will be sustained beyond the life of this grant.
  • Projects that adhere to environmentally friendly principles and use of sustainable materials.

Funding Available:

  • Organisations can apply for funding between £3,000 and £20,000.
  • Funding should be spent by the end of August 2023.
  • Budgets must be reasonable and realistic and can include labour costs, equipment and capital costs and consultancy costs (eg Ecologist consultation costs).
  • Budgets can also include costs to evaluate the impact of the space.

Governance Documents:

When submitting the application, all organisations will be required to upload digital copies of the following governance documents.

  • The Constitution or Memorandum and Articles of Association.
    • This must show the mission statement or main objects of the organisation, how any donations will be used and the winding up clause.
    • This document must be signed.
  • A current account bank statement.
    • The statement must be in the same name as your constitution.
    • The statement must clearly show the Account Name, Account Number, Sort Code.
    • The statement must be dated within the past three months. If the bank statement is overdrawn, please provide an explanation as to why the account is overdrawn. The Foundation staff will then consider this explanation in line with our due diligence policies and procedures.
  • The organisation’s most recent annual accounts.
    • Annual accounts should include unabridged financial statements for the year, or where relevant, a monthly profit and loss for the year.
    • All applicants must declare their organisation’s annual income on the application form and this will be verified in your most recent annual accounts.
    • Organisations with an annual income of less than £100,000 should provide a Profit and Loss account for the previous year.
    • Organisations with an annual income of more than £100,000 must provide audited annual accounts.
    • Accounts should be from the last two years and must be signed.
  • A copy of your equality policy.
  • A copy of your child protection and safeguarding policies.
  • A photograph of land prior to commencement of works.

If you do not submit the correct governance documents, your application will not be considered for funding.

Reporting requirements

All grantees will be required to submit an Interim and a Final Outcome Report during the project.

Interim reports will be due at the end of February 2023 and Outcome reports will be due in September 2023.

Photographs showing ‘before’ and ‘after’ will also be required to show the difference made by the Fund.

All applications must meet the criteria above. Any organisation or project that does not meet the eligibility criteria will not be successful in this grant round.

2022 Grants

Key dates

Opens to applications 22/04/2022
Application deadline 1pm on 20/05/2022
Check if this scheme is running again 15/05/2023