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Embedding Commissioning for Sport & Leisure : the Community Sport Activation Fund Joel Brookfield London CLOA Conference 6 th November 2012 . The challenge.
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Embedding Commissioning for Sport & Leisure: the Community Sport Activation FundJoel Brookfield London CLOA Conference 6th November 2012
The challenge Traditionally culture and sport have been seen by commissioners as co-funding partners or the deliverers of short term activity or projects. The challenge is to position culture and sport more strategically in the whole commissioning process. LGA: Engaging in Commissioning • Needs and evidence base • Clear priorities and outcomes • Translating local national local • Widening our range of delivery partners • LA no longer delivers? ‘accountability and co-ordination’ role?
Whole Sport Plans (NGBs) over £450 million 2013-17 Schools & School Games Up to £150 million (Including Education,& Health funding) Access Transition to Clubs WSPs start at age 14 Focus on 14-25 for relevant sports • Mandatory growth targets • Payment by results • Enhanced governance • Talent development Supported by CSP Club Link Makers Higher Education Rewards Mid-range/Improvement e.g. pools/artificial pitches Further Education Governance Door Step Clubs & Get On Track Facilities Up to £250 million Community Sport Pot New capital Local Investment Over £250m Health pilot Iconic Inspired Playing fields CSPs: Coaching (Sportivate) Volunteering (Sport Makers, Club leaders) Disability Market development
You told us…. • Accessing capital funds is good BUT • We need access to revenue for local delivery • Medium to large scale investments • Outcomes focused – Sport England AND our own • Widest definition of sport • Re-invest in what works
CSAF – How will it work The Essentials • £40 million between 2013-16 • Five funding rounds - Round 1 open Jan 2013 • Awards £50,000 - £250,000 Some principles • Increasing participation 1x30 but local focus& priorities • Partnership approach essential e.g. CSPANs • New or existing projects both eligible • Local authorities are central to this fund • Competitive process
CSAF – helping us to embed? Top 10 lessons • A ‘sophisticated understanding of need’ • Developing relationships CSAF approach • Clear needs and evidence base • Mixture of strategic and local sources • 25% of assessment criteria • Effective partnership is key to a successful application – 30% • No single sport, club, other silo... • Show us how you work together • Mix of roles – strategic and delivery
Top 10 lessons • Clarity of outcomes and impact • Value for money • Building capacity • Pick up on other people’s agendas (“best bets”) CSAF approach • Focus on link between evidence, priorities, focus and scale of impact • Robust delivery planning • 30% of assessment • Develop local delivery partners – third sector, clubs etc • Key to securing partnership funding and sustainability – 15% • Measure and evaluate delivery of other social outcomes is a must
Questions? joel.brookfield@sportengland.org