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Groups fear government is seizing control of National Lottery money

Posted: 11 November 2004 | Subscribe Online


Voluntary organisations fear for their future because the government is using National Lottery cash instead of taxes to fund mainstream services.

Ten years after the lottery was launched there are concerns in the sector that its original aim - to give money to good causes including art and heritage - is being eroded.

Critics have warned that cash is being spent on health and education, while many small voluntary groups delivering vital services separate from government objectives are in danger of losing funding.
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Research commissioned by lottery operator Camelot shows the game has raised £16bn and has been a "major catalyst for hundreds of millions of pounds worth of regeneration investment".

But fears persist that the merger of the Community Fund with the New Opportunities Fund to create the Big Lottery Fund could see money diverted away from the voluntary sector and towards government priorities.

The Association of Chief Executives of Voluntary Organisations reacted angrily after the government appeared to ignore its consultation on the Big Lottery Fund by announcing its key themes before the public consultation ended in September. These include community learning, promoting community safety and promoting well-being.

The association's head of policy and communications, Nick Aldridge, described some "worrying" recent developments about the lottery that were "fuelling suspicion" that the government was starting to take control of lottery money.
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He said a letter sent by culture minister Tessa Jowell in August stated that the Big Lottery Fund would no longer include the open grants programme that had existed under the Community Fund. This allowed charities to apply for large sums of money for a wider range of work.

On BBC1's Breakfast with Frost, former prime minister John Major, who launched the lottery, accused the government of "grand larceny" by siphoning off funds for its own priorities.

A spokesperson for the government insisted lottery money was being spent in accordance with the public's wishes.


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