NORTH YORKSHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL

Skipton & Ripon AREA CONSTITUENCY COMMITTEE – 9th March 2023

Stronger Communities Update

 

 

 

1.0          Purpose of Report

 

To provide Members with an update on the Stronger Communities Programme and an overview of progress made in the Skipton & Ripon Constituency area. 

 

2.0       Background

 

2.1       Despite the ever-changing landscape of the pandemic over the past 12 months, the community support infrastructure through the Community Support Organisation (CSO) network has remained largely in place since March 2020.  As we moved into recovery, a minority of CSOs wound down or scaled back their pandemic response activities.  A significant number have however continued to work with the programme on supporting communities with the challenges they face in relation to cost of living and winter pressures.  This has been alongside exploring how the successful CSO model could be built upon and developed further to support the health, wellbeing and prevention agenda, and wider community resilience in localities, through the Community Anchor Organisation (CAO) model concept. 

 

2.2       In addition to this work, the programme has also been able to resume pre-pandemic projects and has taken the lead role on a number of new countywide programmes.

 

2.3       A number of new national initiatives have been launched over the past 12 months particularly around alleviating the cost of living pressures being felt by families and residents on low incomes. Stronger Communities are leading on a number of these programmes and work in partnership with others within the Council and externally.  

 

3.0       Community Support Organisations (CSOs) & Community Response

 

3.1       The work of the CSOs has shifted focus in 2022/23, moving from pandemic response to recovery. Instead of supporting people who were self-isolating or shielding, their efforts have been on building confidence and independence and helping to remove some of the dependencies that emerged during the pandemic. This has included activities such as supported shopping trips, accompanied walks, social events and support groups and activities.

 

3.2       In acknowledgement of broader community resilience challenges including cost of living and winter pressures, the CSOs have been retained until the end of March 2023; continuing to work in partnership with NYCC to act as a place based single point of contact for locally based support, in collaboration with their volunteers, partners and networks. 

 

3.3       A total of £924,700 has been invested in the CSO infrastructure across the county in 2022/23; this includes a £22,000 contribution from the Humber and North Yorkshire Integrated Care Board (ICB) to support the development and rollout of the Rockwood Frailty Toolkit.  A breakdown of CSO investment by geography is outlined below.  

 

District

No. of CSOs

Total Value

Craven

3

£92,000

Hambleton

4

£138,000

Harrogate

6

£203,500

Richmondshire

5

£126,000

Ryedale

2

£68,000

Scarborough

3

£173,200

Selby

3

£124,000

Total

26

£924,700

           

 

 

           

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.4     Future Opportunities for CSOs

Stronger Communities has also been working alongside the CSOs to identify elements of the model that could be retained and developed further to support the wider health, well-being and prevention, and community resilience agenda.  Following a well-attended ‘Response to Recovery’ event that took place in May 2022 for those organisations that had undertaken the CSO role, followed by the ‘Learning Together and Co-Creation’ day in early November, the development of a Community Anchor Organisation network across North Yorkshire has been progressed.  This is building on the successful CSO model, and further exploring the role that locally rooted, place based organisations can play in building resilience in communities.

 

3.5       In February 2023, as part of it’s established ‘Achieve Together’ Investment Programme, Stronger Communities opened a new opportunity to establish a Community Anchor model for North Yorkshire.  Grants of £15,000 a year (for up to 3 years) will be made available from April 2023 for place rooted organisations, based in principal service towns or centres, who are able to serve a wider hinterland.  This investment supports the core aims of the wider Stronger Communities Programme which include:

·         Prevention and reducing health inequalities

·         Community resilience

·         Social regeneration

 

3.6       After gathering insight from other local authorities and community development programmes and gaining insight from voluntary and community sector organisations (including CSOs), a number of characteristics and activities which we would hope to see in a Community Anchor Organisation have been developed.  This encompasses:

 

Characteristics

·         Crucial to the place and the community in which it is based.

·         A voice for local people.

·         Collaborative, open and encouraging of other contributions.

·         Proactive with a can-do mindset.

·         Already delivering services.

·         Independent and community led.

·         Financially resilient.

 

Activities

·         Building local partnerships and alliances to deliver services.

·         Improving physical and mental wellbeing and reducing health inequalities.

·         Regeneration of their communities.

·         Building community resilience.

·         Improving people’s financial resilience.

 

3.7       The funding currently being used to support this work is non-recurring and as such, the challenge will be to develop financially sustainable options for CAOs in order for them to become less dependent on public sector grants and establish diverse income streams – which could include earned income through contracts and charging. 

 

3.8       Community Grants

In addition to the work with CSOs, Stronger Communities has awarded £114,696 in Community Grants supporting 109 groups and / or projects to date in 2022/23.  This investment has allowed communities and small grass roots groups and organisations to recover from the pandemic and to re-establish local events and activities in their communities.  A geographical breakdown of the grants awarded is outlined below.

 

District

No. of Grants

Total Value

Craven

7

£8,000

Hambleton

8

£7,300

Harrogate

12

£11,990

Richmondshire

10

£10,000

Ryedale

15

£14,500

Scarborough

37

£35,214

Selby

17

£16,692

Countywide

1

£8,000

Total

108

£111,696

 

3.9       A breakdown of grants awarded in the Skipton & Ripon Constituency area is attached at Appendix A.

 

4.0         Wider Stronger Communities Programme Work

 

4.1         The Stronger Communities programme has been able to resume some of its pre-pandemic work over the past twelve months; it is also leading on a number of large new national programmes. 

 

4.2         The range of activities the team are leading on, or are contributing to, is broad and varied:

·         Holiday Activities and Food Programme for free school meal eligible children (Department of Education funded)

·         Household Support Fund - awards to low-income households (Department of Work and Pensions funded)

·         Homes for Ukraine Programme (Home Office)

·         Wellbeing and Prevention investment – Stay Healthy, Independent and Connected

·         Digital Inclusion

·         Cost of living

·         UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF)

·         Mental health programmes (NHS)

·         Local Government Reorganisation (LGR)

 

4.3       Holiday Activities and Food Programme

            Stronger Communities continue to lead on the delivery of this programme, which was launched with the branding of FEAST (Food, Entertainment, Arts & Sport Together) in partnership with Children and Young People’s Service (CYPS) and the voluntary and community sector.  Coordination of the programme has been undertaken by North Yorkshire Together who in conjunction with a network of locally placed clubs and community organisations, deliver a range of enriching activities over holiday periods.

 

The new Holiday Activities and Food Coordinator is now in post and is working with North Yorkshire Together partners, as well as colleagues in CYPS, Stronger Communities and Public Health to develop the programme further with a particular emphasis on providing a wraparound service for families, its nutrition and healthy food offer, building stronger relationships with schools, and increasing the number of teenagers engaging with the programme.

 

4.4       Household Support Fund

In the last 6 months, Stronger Communities have continued to administer the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) funded Household Support Fund. 

 

The third phase of the scheme aimed to support those most in need with significantly rising living costs between October 2022 and March 2023, particularly focussing on those who missed out on national government cost of living support.  In line with the expenditure guidelines and the agreed eligibility framework developed in partnership with the seven District and Borough Councils, 23,395 eligible households across North Yorkshire have received a direct award in the form of a shopping voucher in January 2023.  This encompassed eligible families, pensioners and working age adult households, as well as those who missed out on other forms of national Cost of Living support.  In addition to this, supplementary funding was awarded to North Yorkshire Local Assistance Fund (NYLAF), Warm and Well, and 16 food providers across the County.

 

Household Support Fund will continue from 1 April 2023 for a further 12 months; guidance for the scheme has been received and work will commence on how this will be deployed shortly.

 

4.5       Homes for Ukraine Programme

Following the launch of the national Homes for Ukraine programme, officers from the Stronger Communities team have continued to lead on North Yorkshire’s multi-agency approach to ensuring arrangements are in place for host families (sponsors) are approved (home and welfare checks) and procedures are in place to distribute the government funding for sponsors and guests.  The approach also supports the many local groups who have set up across the county to help welcome and support the Ukrainian refugees with things such as language lessons, social events and peer support.

 

The current number of Ukrainian guests residing in North Yorkshire, through the Homes for Ukraine sponsorship programme is approximately 838. In addition, 346 guests, who initially arrived in North Yorkshire, have either moved into private rental accommodation, to another Local Authority area, or returned to Ukraine, making a total of 1184 arrivals since March 2022.  Of the guests who have moved on from their sponsor, 78 groups, or 191 individuals are now living in rental properties within North Yorkshire.

 

The government has recently announced a number of updates to the scheme; this includes an extension to the maximum sponsorship term from 12 to 24 months, an increase to the thank you payment once guests have been in the UK for 12 months, and additional funding to acquire housing and support for guests to move into their own homes and reduce the risk of homelessness.

 

            4.6       Wellbeing and Prevention – Stay Healthy, Independent & Connected

            The Stronger Communities team have continued to support colleagues in Targeted Prevention (Health and Adult Services) to develop options for future investment in well-being and prevention, learning from the place-based pilots operating in Craven and Selby.  The Stay Healthy, Independent and Connected Grants scheme was launched in late 2022, with new providers starting work in their localities on 1 April 2023.

 

4.7       Digital Inclusion

            The digital buddies and champions programme delivered in partnership with Citizens Online, libraries, Living Well and community volunteers has proved a vital resource during the pandemic helping people to access online services and stay connected to friends and families. This has been delivered in tandem with the recycling of ICT equipment and devices project Reboot North Yorkshire.  Awareness of Reboot North Yorkshire continues to grow, with an increased number of organisations and services referring their beneficiaries into the scheme, particularly those who are socially isolated, or those in need of a device to access training or education. 

 

4.8       Cost of living - Food Insecurity

            Following the Council’s investment of a Defra grant in 2020/21 for a range of community projects that help combat food and fuel insecurity arising out of the pandemic; additional funding was made available to deliver the Food for the Future programme, aiming to embed local sustainable food support options, which also support beneficiaries to build their levels of confidence and independence.  An additional 44 have also been made available to food banks and / or providers of free or low-cost food through the three rounds of HSF.

 

The food insecurity research and insight work continues to progress well in conjunction with City of York Council (CYC), with the report expected in Spring 2023.   This broadly encompasses the following areas: 

 

·         Developing and utilising an evidence base of interventions including associated outcomes.

·         Building our understanding of the realities faced by food providers, the unmet needs, the real-life outcomes, and thoughts about sustainability /viability.

·         Developing a clearer map of provision across York & North Yorkshire and gaining a feel for possible gaps in areas / or models.

·         Innovating / experimenting with an approach that involved people with lived experience.

The team continues to work closely with the Public Health Healthier Lives, Community and Economy team who are looking to bring together a range of organisations in the food sector to establish a food system framework and ultimately a food partnership to address the immediate to long term challenges presented. Joint work on exploring the impact of Cost of Living on Health Outcomes will also commence in Spring 2023. 

 

4.9       Broader Cost of Living work

              In conjunction with internal and external partners and coordinated by Stronger Communities, the cost-of-living support page on the NYCC website has been updated and reconfigured to provide as comprehensive a picture as possible.  This encompasses links to more local level sources of information, including the District and Borough Councils and Community Support Organisations (CSOs), as well as detailing information on Warm Spaces, and support available for community and voluntary groups wishing to tackle cost of living challenges in their communities. 

 

The programme has also supported the development of the NYCC Cost of Living Communications Campaign utilising a variety of tools. This includes the development of a range of social media assets and an A5 leaflet that has been made available in hard copy and digitally, which will drive people to the updated cost of living page on the website, their local CSO, and potentially to NYCC’s Customer Service Centre by telephone as an alternative. 

 

     4.10     UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF)

            As part of the government’s Levelling Up agenda the Council submitted its proposals for its allocated UKSPF funding, which have now been approved. There is a strong emphasis within the criteria for UKSPF on place shaping, community empowerment, engagement and strengthening the voluntary and community sector, and Stronger Communities are taking the lead role in the delivery of the Communities and Place strand. An advisory group is in place made up of public and voluntary sector partners and the year one allocations have been signed off with contracts being prepared.

 

4.11   Mental health programmes (NHS)

            The Stronger Communities Programme has worked in partnership with colleagues in Public Health and the NHS to deliver a range of community led mental health projects since 2019. These include grass roots suicide prevention programmes and other specialist mental health services.  As part of the national Community Mental Health Transformation programme, Stronger Communities continue to work in partnership with the NHS to transform mental health services for people with a serious mental illness through building capacity within communities and the voluntary sector. The approach includes NHS financial investment, managed by Stronger Communities, working with four place based multi-agency partnerships to develop and/or pilot new community -based services and projects through grant funding to voluntary organisations and community groups with the over-arching aim of enabling people with a serious mental illness to live well in their communities.

 

4.12     Children and Young People

            In conjunction with Children and Young People Service (CYPS), the Stronger Communities team continues to work with Early Help to deliver their Get Going grants scheme that seeks to grow community capacity by working alongside and with our communities to stimulate, support and develop activities that enable children, young people and their families to be happy, healthy and achieving.

 

4.13     Capacity Building

            The Stronger Communities Programme has continued to strengthen local community assets and infrastructure; this has included encouraging relationships and collaborations between voluntary and community sector organisations as well as stabilising, and / or building capacity within them if required.  The impact of the pandemic on income and capacity within the sector, together with concerns in relation to rising fuel costs is resulting in concerns about their long-term viability and sustainability. Stronger Communities continues to work with colleagues such as Community First Yorkshire, The Two Ridings Foundation, the Lottery and other partners to identify issues and concerns and develop joint responses. 

 

5.0         Planning for the future

 

5.1       Independent Evaluation

            The Stronger Communities Programme is subject to a 5-year independent evaluation, conducted by Skyblue Research; evaluation of the CSOs has been encompassed within this, alongside continuing to develop our ten-year strategy, People, Place and Power. 

 

5.2       The Learning Review Evaluation (2018 – 2022) highlighted a number of key achievements of the programme.  Some of the headlines include:

 

·         1,100 community projects supported in over 200 communities in North Yorkshire since 2018.  This rises to 1,415 projects since the programme’s inception in 2015.  

·         Over 600 Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) organisations have received financial and / or relational support from the programme.

·         An estimated 100,000 benefitted from the programme between 2015 and 2020, with 60,000 benefitting in 2020/21.

·         £3.45million of external funds have been secured as a result of Stronger Communities organisational development investment in to VCSEs or place based collaborations.

 

5.3       Local Government Reorganisation (LGR)

The Stronger Communities team is involved in a number of work-streams to support the formation of the new unitary council. Stronger Communities also delivered elements of the Let’s Talk campaign in partnership with Borough and District Councils between September and December 2022.

 

6.0       Local Area Information

 

6.1       Community Support Organisations (CSOs)

The remit for CSO’s this year has been to support recovery and encourage people to become as independent as they can be again. Therefore, there have been fewer shopping trips and prescriptions being collected, whilst we have seen a rise in group activities, with more provision than pre-pandemic from each organisation.

 

Volunteer numbers have picked up again this year, and organisations are feeling more confident about their volunteer base than this time last year.

 

CSO’s are:

·         Grassington Hub

·         Skipton Step into Action

·         Age UK North Craven

·         Nidderdale Plus

·         Ripon Community House

·         Masham Community Office

 

Each of the three Craven based CSO’s participated in a pilot of Staying Healthy, Independent & Connected (SHIC), a HAS place based prevention model which evolved in part from the learning from the CSO model. When HAS subsequently contracted for the SHIC model across North Yorkshire all three of the pilot organisations as well as Nidderdale Plus and Masham Community Office were successful. Holding a contract with HAS is a development opportunity and source of additional funding for these organisations, especially Grassington Hub, SSIA, Nidderdale Plus and Masham Community Office helping to create more robust and sustainable community organisations.

 

 

6.2       Work with Local Organisations

It was sad to see the closure of the local Community Transport provider Skipton Action on Disability (SCAD). Skipton Step into Action had begun a pilot car scheme on a very small scale as they came across people who couldn’t use the SCAD service but needed transport. Stronger Communities worked successfully with Integrated Passenger Transport (IPT) to secure funding for them to extend the pilot into a Volunteer Car Scheme supported by IPT. This is now live including proactively seeking an accessible vehicle.

 

Masham Community Office (MCO) are in the process of raising £200,000 to purchase the building they are based in their landlord North Yorkshire Police informed them that they wished to sell. MCO have seen this as an opportunity to secure the asset for the future. The wider community including individuals, organisations, local business and the Stronger Communities Programme are working with MCO to help them raise the funds needed to purchase the building.

 

   6.3      Mental Health Support

Since Stronger Communities funded a Strategic Director post 5 years ago (shared with the Orb in Knaresborough) Pioneer Projects has gone from strength to strength. The organisation secured the Mental Health prevention contract based on a Wellbeing Hub model, with first hubs developed in Bentham and Skipton four years ago. Recently Pioneer secured £100,000 (NHS programme Transforming Community Mental Health Services) for three consecutive years to expand the model across Craven, creating the Craven Mental Health & Wellbeing Network with Wellbeing Hubs in:

 

-       Cross Hills with Glusburn Institute

-       Grassington with Grassington Hub

-       Skipton with volunteers from Skipton Baptists / Methodist Church

-       Greatwood & Horseclose Community Centre with the Residents Association

-       Broughton Rd, Skipton with Broughton Rd Community Centre

-       Settle with The Place in Settle

 

The NHS programme Transforming Community Mental Health Services is being directly supported by Stronger Communities Programme in the Harrogate District. Route One to Wellness established with the support of the Stronger Communities Achieve Together. Route One to Wellness is a collaboration between Harrogate MIND, Wellspring Counselling Services, Claro Enterprise and The Orb has been awarded £50,000 to enable them to offer community-based support services via direct referral from PCN social prescribers. In addition, The Orb has been awarded £35,000 for development work to enable partners within statutory and voluntary sector organisations to work better together, the ambition is this will lead to the creation of Wellbeing hubs in Nidderdale, Ripon & Masham.

 

6.4       Health & Wellbeing

Stronger Communities has been an active partner in the Craven Health and Care Partnership (Craven Communities Together), the cross-sector partnership created to address local health inequalities since inception five years ago.

 

The partnership has recently secured £100,000 plus two years recurrent funding of £67k to improve health outcomes for people living in the Broughton Rd and Greatwood and Horseclose areas in Skipton. The funding will be used to increase community capacity to understand the barriers to accessing health services in these communities, and to increase provision of community wellbeing services and uptake of health services and support. A cross sector subgroup will provide leadership and oversight to the work.

 

Ripon Community House in partnership with Nidderdale Plus, Boroughbridge   Community Care and Masham Community Office secured £7,500 to increase capacity of food and essential household supplies for those facing financial hardship or in need across the rural areas of the north and west areas of the Harrogate District.

 

7.0       Financial implications                     

 

7.1       The financial implications are set out in the body of this report.

 

8.0       Legal implications               

 

8.1       The legal implications are set out in the body of this report.

 

9.0       Climate change Implications                      

 

9.1       There are no significant climate change implications arising from this report.

 

10.0     Equalities implications

 

10.1     There are no significant equalities implications arising from this report.

 

11.0     Recommendations

 

11.1     It is recommended that Members note the content of this report.

 

 

 

 

Report Authors

Marion Tweed-Rycroft, Stronger Communities Delivery Manager (Craven District)

Liz Meade, Stronger Communities Delivery Manager (Harrogate District)

Marie-Ann Jackson, Head of Stronger Communities

28 February 2023

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Appendix A – Breakdown of Community Grants Awarded

 

 

District

Organisation Name

Value

Craven

Yorkshire Energy Doctor

£1000

Craven

The Place Settle

£1000

Craven

Skipton Step into Action

£2000

Craven

3rd Skipton Scout Group

£1000

Craven

Our Creative Connections

£1000

Craven

The Carers Resource

£1000

Craven

Our Creative Connections

£1000

Harrogate

Yorkshire Energy Doctor

£1000

Harrogate

Ripon City Band

£1000

Harrogate

Ripon Poetry Festival

£1000

Harrogate

Ripon City Festival Trust

£1000