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Recession unduly effects
Ethnic Minority Charities states new research
9 March 2010
The
recession has had an adverse effect on ethnic minority
charities, depriving already disadvantaged communities
of essential services, states a report released
today by the Council of Ethnic Minority Voluntary
Sector Organisations (CEMVO). The report on the
Impact of the Economic Downturn on Black and Minority
Ethnic Third Sector Organisations reveals 45% of
all Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) third sector
organisations have had funding cut by local authorities
and other funders since the beginning of the recession
in 2008, despite a 77% increase in demand for their
services over the same period. The figures have
led leading social justice campaigner Gary Craig,
Visiting Professor at the University of Durham,
to state his belief that the BME third sector is
now 'not just under pressure but under attack'.
The report, based on a six-month
study of BME charitable organisations by CEMVO,
reveals that cuts in grants by local authorities
have caused most problems for ethnic charities,
42% of which have incomes of less than £10,000.
Of those that had seen cuts in funding, 39% were
cuts from local authorities alone, while 61% faced
cuts from local authorities, government departments,
grant making trusts, the Big Lottery Fund, and
others.
"That nearly half of all BME charities are
now struggling is a scandal," says Hashmukh
Pankhania, Chief Executive of CEMVO. "Unemployment
is highest among BME communities and the current
economic climate has brought an even greater demand
for employment and debt management advice, education
and training. BME charities should be benefitting
from increased funding in 2010, not facing cuts
that will marginalise and limit still further
the inadequate help already on offer."
Professor Gary Craig writes in the foreword to
the report that news of cuts from a variety of
funding strands proves the value of BME organisations
is consistently under-recognised:
"In a country where the BME
population now exceeds 8%[*] and is substantially
larger in some areas, where this population has
been shown to make an enormous social, economic
and cultural contribution to UK life, it makes
no sense to undermine the activities of organisations
striving to maximise that contribution. Yet that
is precisely, as the evidence in this report shows,
what is now happening.
"Society's failure, at all
levelsto ensure proper resourcing of BME organisations
is essentially a consequence of racism which remains
a serious and growing problem in the UK, he continues.
CEMVO's study of the BME sector shows a sector
not just under pressure but under attack."
Although the UK government pledged up to £42.5
million to help the wider third sector weather
the recession in February 2009, 99% of BME charities
responding to the CEMVO survey said they had not
been approached by or made aware of how they might
benefit from this financial support by any infrastructure
organisation other than CEMVO. A succession of
studies from the 1980s onwards has shown how BME
organisations have been underfunded - even set
against the context of general underfunding for
the Third Sector - and struggled to survive.
The CEMVO report makes a number of recommendations
to the government, including: -
- Better marketing and promotion
of help available to the sector
- Ring fencing emergency funding
for BME organisations' cash flow and interim
payments to enable them to meet obligations
- Adopting a policy of payment
in advance (particularly by local authorities)
- Expediting the use of proceeds
from dormant accounts
- Giving greater publicity to
the availability of interest-free or low-interest
loans within the sector
- Increasing investment in tailored
capacity building to secure long-term sustainability
for the third sector
- Increased investment to encourage
BME communities to engage in volunteering
The full report will be available
online from Tuesday 9th March at www.cemvo.org.uk
under the Policy/Research section.
[*] Based on 2001 census figures
About CEMVO
The Council of Ethnic Minority Voluntary Sector
Organisations (CEMVO) is a registered Charity
based in four English regions, Scotland and Wales.
The charity aims to secure the social regeneration
of ethnic minority communities through a number
of activities and programmes, to strengthen and
support the minority ethnic voluntary sector,
and engage in research to influence policy debates.
Since CEMVO was founded 10 years ago, it has worked
with over 2,000 organisations and raised over
£30 million for the BME third sector.
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