Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Business Plan
2009-2014
Our ambitious vision and objective is to establish NECDAF Intercultural Arts as the focus
for the development of the expression of the art and cultures of minority ethnic
communities in North East England, to maximise their impact on the economy, and
contribute to the social cohesion of our region. We will;
- ensure that organisations and agencies with a regional remit understand the needs
of intercultural arts practitioners and the importance of interculturalism to regional
development;
- make sure that minority ethnic artists receive appropriate recognition and support
and that events and venues recognise the importance of Intercultural Arts and
reflect it in their programming;
- make sure that there is support available for minority ethnic artists and for
innovative Intercultural Arts events across the region;
- support the use of Intercultural Arts to facilitate understanding, build identities and
break down barriers between cultures.
We have a 3 stage plan for growth over the next five years;
2. In the following two years (up to 2012) we will develop ourselves as a resource
centre, with a comprehensive programme of activities and services to support
individual artists. Our focus will be on promoting the sector and developing the
professionalism of its members;
3. In the final two years of the plan (up to 2014) we will seek to become a building-
based centre for Intercultural Arts, promoting intercultural understanding through
the medium of arts.
All of our activities require an appropriate financing plan. Our current development is linked
to the amount of funding we can secure. Core funding from the Arts Council remains a vital
part of the picture and if this does not continue after the end of the current RFO agreement
then it will limit our ability to expand. Our future development is to be geared to generating
more income earned from commercial activities e.g. providing diversity awareness
services to public sector agencies and larger companies.
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Contents
Introduction.......... 7
4.0 Strategy………. 17
4.1 Principals………. 17
4.2 Stages of Growth………. 17
4.3 Work Plan………. 18
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Introduction
This is a business plan for NECDAF Intercultural Arts.
The plan shows our ambitions and intentions for the next five years in the following ways:
b. Our understanding of where we are now both in terms of our achievements to date,
and in terms of how the needs of the sector are changing;
c. What we want to achieve over the next five years and how we will know we have
got there;
As annexes we present:
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1.0 Our Vision and Objectives
Our vision for Intercultural Arts is that:
- The concept of Intercultural Arts will be recognised, including its contribution to the
economy of North East England;
- The arts will be used to facilitate understanding, build identities and break down
barriers between cultures;
- There will be an effective voice for minority ethnic artists in the region which will
promote diversity, equality and justice and bring about change in the arts and
cultural sector;
- We work with and support both strategic and delivery organisations and agencies to
develop their own remits to promote diversity;
- We seek to build and widen the audience for Intercultural Arts generally across
the region;
- We organise activities across the whole of North East England and preferably
those with a region wide impact;
- We seek to deliver projects which have a wide impact and do not duplicate those
which could be organised by individual artists or local organisations.
a. Advocacy for the sector, ensuring that key organisations understand the
sector’s needs and importance, and that they give it appropriate promotion and
support;
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b. Promotion of the sector and its values, making sure that minority ethnic artists
are given appropriate recognition and that venues recognise the importance
of Intercultural Arts and the way in which minority ethnic artists support this;
c. Capacity building for the sector, making sure that there is support available to
minority ethnic artists and innovative Intercultural Arts events across the
region;
e. Appropriate mechanisms for identifying and engaging with minority ethnic artists
across the region. We need to analyse their needs and the ways of addressing
these needs. We aim to generate credibility and buy-in from the sector;
f. Research into the sector in order to provide evidence to support our proposed
lobbying and other activities for its development;
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2.0 Where We Are Now
2.1 NECDAF Intercultural Arts
NECDAF Intercultural Arts was set up in 2004 to provide practical services to the cultural,
arts and community organisations serving minority ethnic communities in North East
England. We employ a Director and Project Coordinator and work closely with the Arts
Council England North East, other funders, voluntary and public sector agencies to
develop a sustainable infrastructure for diverse arts in North East England.
There has been a generally held misconception amongst our target audience that
NECDAF Intercultural Arts was created “from the top down” by the Arts Council in order to
meet their strategic need, rather than as a result of analysis of the needs of the sector and
a vision for how development will be achieved. This reinforces our view of the need to
actively engage with minority ethnic artists to listen to their concerns and present our
services and activities.
NECDAF Intercultural Arts plans to build on the networks and relationships that it has
established in the last five years. However, this does not mean that all structures and
functions will necessarily continue as before; the business plan charts a process of
development which will cause the organisation to adapt to the changing needs of the
sector it serves and the stakeholders involved.
The current minority ethnic arts sector in North East England is small but growing steadily.
It supports a limited number of organisations related to particular cultures which are of a
size that allows them to have their own voice, but there is a greater need for a voice for
Intercultural Arts in North East England than some other regions of the country because of
the comparatively small proportion of minority ethnic people living in the region (2.5%
against a national average of 7.9%1).
- The different ethnic groups do not necessarily recognise a common cause and
naturally concentrate on promoting their own culture or careers rather than
Interculturalism;
- The distribution of different cultures in North East England has changed in recent
years, in particular through incoming asylum seekers and refugees and by people
1
ONS: 2003 census data
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from the European Union’s new member states. Many, though not all of these new
groups do not link to existing organisations and structures, and include artists
whose presence is entirely unknown to support organisations.
Organisations outside the arts sector often have a poor understanding of the sector and
the impact it can bring to objectives in other sectors. For example:
- There is poor understanding of the influence of arts on the economy, and the
opportunities presented by artists from the region;
- The role of arts in education, training, and therapy is poorly explored and is often
perceived as “ticking boxes” rather than a mainstream activity.
Almost all minority ethnic artists who were consulted in focus groups for this plan saw
advertising and promotion as a key barrier (second only to finance) to professional
development. This relates to the following factors:
- visibility (people forget about local minority ethnic artists very quickly and there isn’t
a critical mass of activity to bring the sector back to their attention);
- lack of knowledge of the range and quality of minority ethnic artists in our
region;
- the fact that venues are linked to a series of touring artists/ events and
therefore local artists are ignored;
- diversity of audiences: there tend to be minority ethnic audiences for minority ethnic
artists which limits the size and penetration;
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In terms of approaches for reducing the risk to venues and therefore promoting local
artists, areas which may be of assistance are:
- promotion of local artists in other parts of the country where there are larger
minority ethnic communities/more diverse audiences;
Promotion is important and NECDAF Intercultural Arts needs to be proactive: i.e. more
than just a provider of information, even if this is how we start.
There is a wide range of different needs, though many artists need basic material support.
Capacity-building can be at a range of different levels:
- Material support to allow the artist to develop themselves: basic materials, space for
experimentation, ability to take time off from earning money;
If we consider the broad range of people that NECDAF Intercultural Arts might support,
capacity building can also encompass those who are not likely to be mainstream artists but
have a role in developing Interculturalism. Promoting Interculturalism is a talent in itself
and is not necessarily related to the quality of the art involved.
Asylum seekers and refugees represent an opportunity for NECDAF Intercultural Arts to
assist already skilled artists who do not fit into the prevailing culture and who do not
understand how to deal with existing institutions. We will work closely with refugee and
asylum seeker support organisations to have an effective way of recognising professional
refugee or asylum seeker artists and their needs, which may be different from those of
established local artists.
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Part of the role of capacity building is that of being a resource centre, retaining information
on artists themselves, venues, events/festivals, opportunities for support/training, funding,
identity of support professionals.
Artists need personal development plans or a clear route for producing one i.e. capacity
building should be tailored to the individual and should have a clear goal/direction.
Capacity building does not only apply to artists, but also to venues, to cultural
organisations and to agents and event organisers. NECDAF Intercultural Arts needs to
identify where assistance is needed and provide targeted support. It should be possible to
secure funding for this and even earn income on a consultancy basis.
2.2.4 Education
NECDAF Intercultural Arts has a role in promoting Interculturalism through the medium of
the arts, which is broader than that of supporting individual artists. Educational activities
represent an opportunity for NECDAF Intercultural Arts, specifically in:
- Linking art to existing expressions of minority ethnic culture Black History Month,
UNESCO World Day for Cultural Diversity etc;
- Providing a service of tuition to adults who are interested in learning a new art form
and possibly the representation of the artist’s culture through their art.
For NECDAF Intercultural Arts’s operations above, and its own credibility, it is clear that it
needs to have as much contact with minority ethnic artists as possible. This relates to two
aspects:
- Active engagement with individual minority ethnic artists; more than keeping them
on a passive list in order to recognise development opportunities and fully
understand their needs.
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This is not an easy process and is likely to be labour intensive. Clearly with limited
resources it is important to work through intermediaries, which will include:
NECDAF Intercultural Arts needs to have appropriate research capabilities to lobby and
promote the sector effectively. This means being able to demonstrate economic value and
to provide the background for audience development work.
It is acknowledged that North East England does not always operate as a single area for
the arts and that there is a concentration of arts funding in Tyneside. Consequently the
needs and the institutions in Tees Valley have different characteristics and it is important
that NECDAF Intercultural Arts has an appropriate local presence there.
We do not seek to duplicate work which has already been done elsewhere, but rather to
learn from the experience of other organisations and parts of the country.
2.2.6 Resources
It is clear that expectations and ideas for activities outpace resources and that
development of appropriate resources will need to be a major part of the plan. Resources
relate both to finance and to people.
Finance
In the current economic situation it seems likely that funding for RFOs will not increase.
While the decisions on which organisation gets what grant are not transparent, and
NECDAF Intercultural Arts is not a major recipient, we cannot expect a major growth in this
source of funding.
Business sponsorship has been suggested as an avenue, but its should be noted that
this is likely to be longer term, for specific activities (and therefore likely to be project
based and restricted), and difficult to obtain in the current economic circumstances.
Nonetheless we have decided to initiate a “Friends” scheme to raise funds form
individual donors.
The degree to which artists can be expected to pay for services is extremely limited and in
any case may be a disincentive for the degree of outreach which NECDAF Intercultural
Arts requires to fulfil its mission. There may be ways of providing services to other
stakeholders (venues, cultural officers) which would help to subsidise services to artists
themselves.
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Grants for projects in the arts sector are increasingly competitive, and the current strategy
of seeking a wide range of small grants is likely not to be cost effective in the long term nor
is it likely to increase the budget above the current level.
There are areas where there is funding available which is not directly linked to the arts
(education, integration of refugees, heritage etc) and these need to be explored more fully.
- There is a need to look at ways of funding activities through grants from outside the
arts sector;
- We need to target a smaller number of large grants in order that fundraising does
not eclipse time for other activities;
- To keep our current profile, continued core funding from the Art Council is likely to
be significant. In the event that Arts Council core funding is not available then the
organisation will have to be run on a more commercial basis. As noted above the
scope to charge artists is limited, we will need to identify public and commercial
sector clients and subsidise services to artists from earned income.
People
There are only two staff at present, but most of the activities envisaged are significantly
labour intensive. This means:
- Mobilisation of any voluntary contributions that can be derived from sources related
to NECDAF Intercultural Arts, in particular using connections of the Trustees;
- Creating volunteer/trainee work placements for labour intensive, but less skilled
work.
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3.0 What We Want to Achieve in the Next Five Years
We aim to grow in a way which responds to the needs of the sector and to be the
development agency for Intercultural Arts in North East England.
- The development of venues with regard to the diversity of their events (figures
based on the number of venues who have used NECDAF Intercultural Arts
promotional services, outreach or consultancy, specific figures where available on
audiences for different types of event);
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4.0 Strategy
4.1 Principles
We will seek to grow in a stable and sustainable manner. This means that we will:
- employ additional staff on terms related to the funding for their jobs if they are
employed on project-based work;
- only undertake projects which are well-researched and clearly based on identified
needs.
We will seek to be a strategic organisation covering the whole North East. This means that
we will:
- actively seek to find members and clients across the whole region;
- seek to cover the gaps left by other organisations and not duplicate existing
services;
- be sensitive to the differing nature and needs of the sector in different sub regions,
in particular the needs of the Tees Valley as opposed to those of Tyne and Wear
where NECDAF Intercultural Arts is currently based.
We will seek to be as close to “the grass roots” as possible. This means that we will:
- undertake activities where appropriate that give direct benefit to our members;
- consult with our members when developing new projects and activities.
We recognise the importance of the Arts Council for core funding and will seek to maintain
the current level of support.
We will remain at the present size and seek to concentrate almost exclusively on strategic
priorities, acting as a lobby group and coordinator. Networking will be through
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intermediaries and passively using the website. Major funding is from the Arts
Council/RFO source with limited amounts of consultancy and smaller grants.
- We will continue to provide direct practical development support to artists and to act
as a signpost to resources and support available through other sources;
- We seek to learn from other organisations (and work outside the region) in planning
for expansion.
We will develop a more comprehensive set of activities and resources to support individual
artists, who remain our focus of all of our activities.
- Project based funding is secured for the purpose of programmes which develop or
benefit particular artists or sets of artists.
We will become the key agent for the development of Intercultural Arts in North East
England and seek to promote intercultural understanding through the medium of arts. This
means justifying arts funding through its impact on other aspects (education, community
cohesion, economy) and lobbying organisations which have an intercultural impact but are
not necessarily directly connected with the arts. Funding comes from a diverse set of
sources, mainly project-based. NECDAF Intercultural Arts will have extensive contacts and
credibility outside the region.
4.3.1 General
In outlining the work plan, we divide work between core work and project work. Core work
is the work done by the core staff (as outlined below) and should continue indefinitely.
Project work relates to the funding and implementation of specific projects. Projects would
be expected to be limited in scope and time, and to have staff attached to them who are
employed purely for their duration.
Clearly it is not possible to predict exactly which projects will receive funding, the exact
size of funding, nor what contribution projects will make to core costs, onetheless; we can
make a plan which shows what type of projects are necessary to reach our ambitions,
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what general level of funding this represents and the contribution such projects can make
to core costs. For the purpose of planning we assume that the core staff will be relatively
well engaged in projects and that the projects will contribute 30% of their turnover to core
costs.
We divide the rest of the work plan into the phases outlined above.
Core Work
- Holding a quarterly forum for minority ethnic artists, regional stakeholders and
cross-sector development partners to share views and guide NECDAF Intercultural
Arts’s development;
- Regular contact (at least quarterly) with all major venues in the region, to review
and assist their activities to engage minority ethnic communities, offer services,
remind them of NECDAF Intercultural Arts’existence, and if possible to monitor the
trends in cultural diversity in their programming;
- Mobilising Trustees and Associates to use their networks and contacts for the
benefit of NECDAF Intercultural Arts;
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- Fundraising and sponsorship for the strategic development of the sector e.g. to
create the Centre for Intercultural Arts or to secure equipment and other resources
for shared use;
- Maintaining the quality of our reactive responses to enquiries from artists and other
stakeholders.
Projects
Although there is limited scope for major project development in the first year there are a
number of projects that are currently underway:
- Cultural Calendar;
o A youth engagement project funded by Awards for All to produce a printed
and digital calendar of community events and religious festivals, illustrated by
digital photographs. The project aims to train young people to act as
“Community Photographers” for future events and activities.
We plan to use Black History Month (October 2009) as a lever for additional activities in
the major venues and for the promotion of individual minority ethnic artists who are part of
NECDAF Intercultural Arts’s database. We have secured a contract with the North East
Regional Museums Hub to coordinate and promote the diversity activities of the different
partners and market a programme of activities during Black History Month 2009.
It would be helpful to do (limited) research into where minority ethnic artists are under-
represented in the creative industries in our region and to create plans for change if
funding is secured.
Targets
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- Number of artists on the database: 100 (as per RFO agreement);
- Development of projects for year 2 including delivery plans, detailed budgets and
identification of core funders;
- A further two projects which bring in revenue on a consultancy basis (on the model
of work with Tyne and Wear Museums (above).
Core Work
Core work continues as before, but additionally would include funding a Tees Valley
worker with a specific brief to increase contact with minority ethnic artists in the southern
part of the region.
Projects
Target is that projects will have a turnover of at least £30,000 in year 2 increasing to
£45,000 in year 3.
- Promotion of North East minority ethnic artists and their work outside the
region: support to a limited number of artists to promote their work elsewhere in the
UK, including through coordination between NECDAF Intercultural Arts and other
corresponding organisations in other regions. Funding could come partially from
funds allocated to promoting North East England region;
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(TWAM) at the beginning of 2009 should be used as a model of a process/product
which can be “sold” to other organisations, agencies and venues;
- Work to develop the visibility of artists from the communities of asylum seekers
and refugees, and from the new member states who are living in North East
England. This would almost certainly be in coordination with existing organisations
such as NERS, possibly in order to raise funds from non-artistic sources such as
those related to support of education, community cohesion and economic
development;
Targets
- A number of North East artists performing outside the region: this will be difficult to
measure, but projects related to this should have a target for the number of artists
who will be supported.
Core Work
Core work continues as before, but additionally would include an extra worker with
responsibility for organising events and an expanded brief for the Tees Valley worker.
Projects
Target is that projects will have a turnover of at least £100,000 in 2012/2013 increasing to
£120,000 in 2013/2014. This ambitious target is necessary in order to generate the funds
required for the size of organsiation we aspire to be.
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Many previous projects will continue, but we will consider:
- Work with asylum seekers and refugees, using arts as therapy and to enhance
community cohesion;
- Work with schools to sustain and enhance the role of diverse arts into the
curriculum. We will remain aware of developments in the curriculum that present
opportunities for intercultural artists. We will broker contacts between artists and
schools, ensuring that artists are prepared for delivering participatory arts in schools
contexts. We will work in association with existing agencies introducing artists to
schools and colleges;
Targets
- Number of schools involved: at least one in each of the 12 local authority areas;
- A way to measure the diversity of audiences for minority ethnic art events in the
region.
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5.0 Management and Organisation
NECDAF Intercultural Arts is a not-for-profit organisation run by a Board of Trustees
elected at an Annual General Meeting. The Trustees have formed subgroups for specific
purposes which report back to the main Board.
Additional staff will be employed on a project basis. These staff will be employed on
appropriate temporary contracts and will report to the Director.
Through its work as a networking organisation NECDAF Intercultural Arts works with a
variety of associates and seeks to promote their work. This is done on an informal,
networking approach and without a formal contractual relationship.
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6.0 Financial Projections
6.1 Income and Expenditure
Within Annexe B we show two projections for the future, an optimistic one based on
continued support by the Arts Council at the same level as present under a new RFO
agreement, and a pessimistic one which assumes that Arts Council core funding will cease
in 2011.
Figures for the first year are based on existing budgets and commitments from the Arts
Council
Analysis of other comparable strategic organisations which receive Arts Council funding
shows the difficulty of reliance on grants for core funding. It is difficult to find any example
of a comparable organisation where the core costs are funded by unrestricted grants
outside the Arts Council, the main other source of funding being local authorities.
In the optimistic scenario, other figures are based on the following assumptions:
- We assume that the level of Arts Council funding will not markedly decrease given
that there is expansion and a higher level of activity and that this will give an
opportunity to raise a modest amount of project funding from them. The actual
percentage of the total will decrease as the organisation generates a greater
proportion of its funding from project sources;
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- Earned income should increase, (particularly if there are more staff) but there is a
limit to this owning to the limited staff resource involved;
- An extra member of staff is brought on board by 2012. A Tees Valley worker starts
part time (and hosted by a Tees Valley organisation) in 2010 and increases their
time allocation as funding (and work) increases;
- In the first year, and in subsequent years where there is RFO funding, there will be
a need to deliver a limited number of projects for which no funding is necessarily
available to cover costs. We have put in a figure of £10,000 for this;
The pessimistic scenario uses a similar set of assumptions but additionally that:
- In the absence of Arts Council core funding there is greater scope to find project
funding from them;
- Employing additional staff is delayed and so the amount of project funding which
can be generated is reduced;
In the current uncertain circumstances, it is also important to consider how to avoid risk,
and we look at this in the annex.
However, we also need to consider the positions with regard to capacity and variations in
actual demand during the year. In this case we note the following:
1. Capacity
There is the opportunity in the short term to divert core work from actual support to artists
towards activities which would raise more funds, at least in the short term. This means
specifically searching for grants and applying for them, and doing consultancy work.
Reserves are currently nil but we aim for a minimum 3 month reserve (based on core
costs). This is built into the current projections. Our ambition is to get to this stage within
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18 months through avoidance of spending funds which we generate ourselves. Projections
show that we can confidently get to this stage, even with expansion, by the end of 2011.
NECDAF Intercultural Arts’s cash flow is acutely dependent on the timing of grants relative
to expenditure. It will be important that all project plans take cash flow requirements into
account and this should be part of the planning and appraisal process.
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7.0 Evaluation and Control
Both for funding agencies and for our own work, we need to have factual information on
what happens to our clients and how successful we have been in addressing their needs.
We will set targets for monitoring purposes for all activities and actively seek to monitor
these. The business plan will be monitored by the Director on a regular basis, and
progress reported to the Board at regular meetings.
Evaluation will be focused on both outputs (what we have done), and outcomes (the
difference made). Hard figures will be sought and captured where possible, and surveys
will be conducted to gain qualitative feedback. We will establish a full and simple
‘QA’(question and answer) system so that we have also feedback in our commitment to
quality.
The effective delivery of the business plan will be evaluated by the following as example:
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Annex A – Reducing Risk
In order to reduce the operational risks inherant in the current business model we will do
the following:
2. Ensure any additional services pay their way from the first day;
3. Issue additional staff with contracts that include appropriate flexibility linking their
employment to continued funding.
We acknowledge that there are other very serious risks in the current economic and
political context, in particular with regard to:
It is not possible to determine what we can do to mitigate these risks in all circumstances,
rather we will seek to react to events as they happen. All of these problems can also be
seen as opportunities and it will be important that we make alliances and lobby appropriate
individuals and organisations. For the items above we note particularly:
- The need to keep in tune with Conservative policy on the Arts and with any relevant
political representatives in the region;
- The need to find evidence of the “diversity dividend” so that we can sell funding
applications to local authorities as an investment which will bring back returns in
terms of the economy and community cohesion. The conference in 2010 will be
important in this regard;
- The need to explain how our activities will be increasingly important if xenophobia
and racism become greater problems.
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Annex B – Financial Projections
Optimistic Scenario
Projects - net income from external projects £9,000.00 £15,000.00 £30,000.00 £40,000.00
(gross income required) £30,000.00 £50,000.00 £100,000.00 £133,333.33
Expenditure
Staffing
Salaries £40,000.00 £40,000.00 £40,000.00 £60,000.00 £60,000.00
On costs £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £24,000.00 £24,000.00
Tees Valley Worker £16,000.00 £25,000.00 £25,000.00 £25,000.00
Sub Total £56,000.00 £72,000.00 £81,000.00 £109,000.00 £109,000.00
Administration £10,000.00 £10,000.00 £10,000.00 £10,000.00 £10,000.00
Statistics
Cumulative surplus starting from £3,000.00 £16,000.00 £31,000.00 £33,000.00 £45,000.00
zero in 2009
Target reserve at 25% core costs £16,500.00 £20,500.00 £22,750.00 £29,750.00 £29,750.00
Difference between actual and
target reserves -£13,500.00 -£4,500.00 £8,250.00 £3,250.00 £15,250.00
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Pessimistic Scenario
Projects - net income from external projects £9,000.00 £15,000.00 £18,000.00 £21,000.00
(gross income required) £30,000.00 £50,000.00 £60,000.00 £70,000.00
Expenditure
Staffing
Salaries £40,000.00 £40,000.00 £40,000.00 £40,000.00 £40,000.00
On costs £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £16,000.00
Tees Valley Worker £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £16,000.00 £16,000.00
Sub Total £56,000.00 £72,000.00 £72,000.00 £72,000.00 £72,000.00
Administration £10,000.00 £10,000.00 £10,000.00 £10,000.00 £10,000.00
Statistics
Cumulative surplus starting from £3,000.00 £16,000.00 £30,000.00 £57,000.00 £87,000.00
zero in 2009
Target reserve at 25% core costs £16,500.00 £20,500.00 £20,500.00 £20,500.00 £20,500.00
Difference between actual and
target reserves -£13,500.00 -£4,500.00 £9,500.00 £36,500.00 £66,500.00
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NECDAF Intercultural Arts
www.necdaf.co.uk
www.ribble-consultants.co.uk
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