Great Fundraising Organizations, by Alan Clayton. Book cover.

Lloyds TSB Foundation announces its income for 2004

Howard Lake | 11 March 2004 | News

The Lloyds TSB Foundation for England and Wales has announced its income for 2004 as £22.7 million.

The Foundation supports charities that meet social and community needs, as well as those that promote education and training for disabled and disadvantaged people. Of this income, £14.7 million will be allocated to regional groups and £2.6 million to England and Wales-wide groups through the main grant-making programme, the Community Programme. A further £1.7 million is available for collaborative projects that actively encourage charities to work together to strengthen their knowledge and share good practice and resources. In addition £690,000 is also set aside for new initiatives – innovative developmental projects where there is a clear intention to extend successfully piloted work across England and Wales as a whole.

The four independent Lloyds TSB Foundations, which also include Scotland, Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands, are amongst the largest grant-making trusts in the UK and receive one per cent of the Lloyds TSB Group’s pre-tax profits averaged over three years, in lieu of their shareholder dividend. The money will go to underfunded charities that help disadvantaged and disabled people to play a fuller role in the community.

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The income to the four Foundations is allocated in the following manner: England and Wales £22.7 million; Scotland £6.1 million; Northern Ireland £1.7 million; and Channel Islands £0.97 million.

Kathleen Duncan, Director General for Lloyds TSB Foundation for England and Wales said: “We are pleased that despite difficult economic times the Foundation will continue to have a substantial income to assist grass-roots charities. Since 1997 the Foundation for England and Wales has donated over £130 million to help people in local communities.”

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