£1.4 million National Lottery boost gives older Scots a new lease of life

Community Fund Lottery cash for Move On and Fast Forward

Older people across Scotland are celebrating a £1.4m National Lottery cash boost that will help them get out of their homes and into their communities for tea dances, lunch clubs, men’s sheds, fitness classes and much, much more.

The cash goes to 16 community run projects – the first in Scotland to receive funding from The National Lottery Community Fund, previously known as the Big Lottery Fund, which rebranded at the end of January.

The new name makes a clearer link between playing the National Lottery and the community projects that benefit.

Two Edinburgh projects were successful in this round of Lottery grants – and in the main they support people from the other end of the age spectrum.

National charity Move On has received £1146, 036 to provide mentoring to disadvantaged young people aged from 14 – 24 in Edinburgh. The project, which has a base in Greenside Place, will ‘help young people to gain skills and develop resilience to meet life challenges.’ 

Fast Forward (Positive Lifestyles Ltd) is a another national voluntary organisation that exists to enable young people to make informed choices about their health and well-being.

Based on Bernard Street in Leith, Fast Forward has been awarded £76,415 to deliver educational parenting workshops for vulnerable and at-risk dads, grandads and male carers/guardians.

Activities will include group workshops and one-to-one sessions where themes such as adolescence, risk taking behaviour in children and young people and navigating difficult conversations will be covered.

Elsewhere in Scotland, the local men’s shed in Barrhead is already changing lives and giving retired and often lonely people, a place to call home.

The Barrhead Men’s Shed SCIO receives £49,150, to expand its activities so that it can boost its membership from 50 to 80 people who will get the chance to learn and share new skills whilst building new friendships.

Treasurer, Barrhead Men’s Shed SCIO, Ross McKemmie, said: “Thanks to the National Lottery, this award will give us greater sustainability which allows us to reach further into our community and encourage more isolated men to come along to our shed.

“We have a great range of skills to pass on and our members get great satisfaction carrying out a range of services for the local community including children’s nurseries and care homes. Our members still have a lot to contribute and The Shed means a lot to them so it’s absolutely brilliant that we will be able to keep going well into the future and support even more people who need our help.”

In Musselburgh, The Hollies Day Care Centre provides a wide range of support for local people aged over 60.  After an award of £120,000 the Centre will add a daily lunch club, exercise classes and tea dances to the programme of activities they already have on offer.

The Hollies Day Centre manager Liz Shannon, said: “The difference the award from The National Lottery Community Fund will make to the members and customers of the Hollies is immeasurable. It will allow us not only to maintain existing services but to expand what we already offer to the elderly population of Musselburgh and the surrounding areas.

“We will now be able to provide a programme of entertaining and structured activities for the over 60s in a warm, safe and comfortable environment.  This funding will help us to prevent social isolation and give them a place to meet friends and to make new ones.”

Lightburn Elderly Association Project Ltd (LEAP) picks up an award of £47,140 for a wide ranging programme of life-long learning classes and leisure activities for isolated older people aged over 50 in South Lanarkshire.

Over the next three the project will help around  1,200 people to make new friends, learn new skills and support them back into their community again.

Catriona MacGregor, LEAP’s Learning Co-ordinator, said: “People come along because they want to fill their day or they feel they are becoming more cut off from their communities and being in a group changes all that.

“This funding will allow us to develop our programme into other areas of South Lanarkshire and will help even more people who might otherwise find themselves isolated and lonely.”

The National Lottery Community Fund, Scotland Chair, Maureen McGinn, said: “Our name might have changed recently but our focus remains the same – funding projects which matter to people and communities.

“Feelings of isolation or loneliness are not just something that affect one particular age group or generation but can become more acute in later life.  So I am delighted that some of this funding will go to projects supporting older people to engage with their local communities and also contribute to them using their skills and experience.”

Last year The National Lottery Community Fund (previously the Big Lottery Fund) gave out over £48m of National Lottery funding to community projects across Scotland. Over 1130 projects benefitted from this, enabling people and communities to bring their ideas to life.

    To find out more visit www.TNLCommunityFund.org.uk   

 

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davepickering

Edinburgh reporter and photographer