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Signed up but still nervous

Posted: 01 August 2005 | Subscribe Online


The Howgill Family Centre, which was founded by a group of parents in 1977, has 50 permanent staff and runs services, including health and education services, for children in West Cumbria - an area with high levels of unemployment and deprivation.

It was the leading accountable body for one of the Sure Start trailblazers and has signed a contract with Cumbria Council to be the leading body for the children's centre.

Chief executive Russell Norman believes this development is a natural extension of what it has already been doing. He says the organisation's longevity and the relationship that it has built up with the council over years means there is a willingness to let it continue.

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But despite the favourable position the organisation finds itself in compared with many others in the voluntary sector, Norman admits to nervousness over the move of Sure Start funding from central to local government control next year. This is unsurprising given that Sure Start money makes up half of its income.

"We are still unsure of how the funding mechanisms will work come April 2006, which makes us a little nervous," Norman admits.

He says a letter from the Department for Education and Skills in February saying the money would be ringfenced when it transfers is reassuring, but adds: "We have no warranty that that will be the case after 2006/2007."



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