POP ideas April Newsletter













POP ideas Newsletter

Welcome to our April newsletter! Local news, funding, information and advice, and details on our forthcoming workshops.

Cover Image Take Over:  
To be our cover image next month, please email us to send your photos through: CLICK 

POP Membership changes
Following our POP membership consultation survey in January, we’re now introducing a membership renewal (with a low fee option as voted by members). Membership remains free for many grassroots organisations including those with a turnover under £1,000. Please see our FAQ page for more info including banding levels: Click to find out more  
Why should you renew or become a member? 
Only POP members will receive benefits including free POP ideas training places; 3 hours free of 1:1 POP ideas advice; receiving the POP ideas and POP newsletters (this will be the last newsletter edition to our non-members) and a whole host of other benefits – Including a new members’ area on the website for easy access to our funding, support and other opportunities. You can also submit to our newsletters, events calendar and POP pages at any time!
We are introducing membership renewal on a rolling annual basis, so you will receive an email from us soon. If you are currently not a POP member, then please sign-up to become a member in order to continue receiving POP ideas support and the wider offer from POP. 
What do I need to do:
To check if you’re a POP member click here: Click to find out more  
To become a POP member click here: Click to find out more  
If you have any questions then please let us know! 
Lloyds Bank Foundation Funding Programmes
National Influencing Programme 
Open to charities and CICs (including those currently funded by the Lloyds Bank Foundation) seeking to influence and achieve change in national policy and practice around specific issues within accommodation, social security, and refugees and asylum seeker support. Charities can apply for grants of £30,000 – £150,000. The deadline for initial expressions of interest is 5pm, 19 May 2023. 
Racial Equity Programme
This programme is for small local charities and community interest companies (CICs) with an income between £25,000 – £500,000 working with people who have faced inequity because of their race or ethnicity. Organisations can apply for a three year unrestricted grant of £75,000. The deadline for applications is 5pm on Wednesday 31 May 2023. Please note that applicants must not have a live grant with Lloyds Bank Foundation with more than twelve months to run at the time of the programme closing.  
£100 million of support for charities and community organisations in England
What will the funding support?
Around three quarters of the funding will be used to deliver grants, targeted at frontline charities and community organisations most impacted by increased demand for their services from vulnerable people and increased delivery costs. This is likely to include those organisations providing the most vulnerable people with emergency support including accommodation, warmth and food. 
Approximately one quarter of the funding will be used for measures over the next two years to increase the energy efficiency and sustainability of voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE) organisations. This could include new boilers, heat pumps and insulation, allowing them to deliver more efficient services for vulnerable individuals.  
Plymouth Celebrating the King’s Coronation
Residents living in over 30 Plymouth streets are preparing to celebrate the King’s Coronation together, with plans to organise epic street parties for the Bank Holiday weekend.
The streets will be closed to traffic for the parties at some point over the extended Bank Holiday weekend which runs from Saturday 6 May.
Residents had to ask permission from the Council to close their road to make sure closures do not have a significant impact on traffic. Party organisers have been asked to make people who live along the street aware of their plans, including the length of time the road will be closed for.
To view the list of street closures 
POP ideas workshops
Our training schedule for 2023 is live and ready to accept your bookings. Watch this space for more to come:
  • Proving your Impact
  • Plan on a Page
  • Simplifying Your Social Media
  • Finding & Refiing the Words – Writing a Funding Application
  • Understanding your Community Needs
  • ChatGPT Play & Learn 
  • Demystify, Simplify & Save Time on Your Social Media 
  • Good Governance 
Click on this link to find out more and to BOOK your place.

Our online webinars can be accessed at anytime.  Learn at your own pace: Click

Please let us know if you have a training need that we’ve not considered either through our workshops or webinars.

How to write engaging charity emails in 5 easy steps 
Top tips to get you started.
CLICK to find out more
NCVO Monthly Update
Relevant sector news, funding, policies and events.
Civil Society and Youth Update:
Monthly update about funding and relevant sector news.
Charity Comms
How can charities make impactful films which do justice to their cause, engage audiences and represent beneficiaries well? We look into the big questions around filmmaking for charities and invite you to feed into the conversation. 
Volunteer Week 2023
Download free resources and templates to help you have a Volunteers’ Week to remember. 
National Lottery Awards 2023 Open
The National Lottery Awards celebrate the inspirational people and projects who do extraordinary things with the help of National Lottery funding.  
Trails Workshop
Do you have an idea for a walk, tour or trail? Join the workshop to find out how you could be included on a new Plymouth Trails App.
Access Plymouth
Bus trips for people aged over 65 or disabled and living in Plymouth. This is a great way to reduce isolation and boost confidence.  

Plymouth and Devon Racial Equality Council 
The Plymouth and Devon Racial Equality Council (PDREC) is calling upon all young people between the ages of 11-18 and people in Plymouth and Devon to share their experiences of racist abuse at school. We believe that your voice is essential to make a difference and create a more inclusive and respectful school environment for all.
Click to find out more

Marketing workshop
Plymouth Business School brings you a Digital Marketing Workshop from 6-8pm on Wednesday 7th June 2023 for small businesses, social enterprises and not-for-profit organisations in Rolle Building, University of Plymouth campus.  
Click to find out more

Grant News
We have collected a range of funding opportunities for you to explore, ranging from small to large grants. Click the link below to find out more. 
CLICK for more info
POP ideas impact
Each quarter we report on our impact and level of work we have done.  You can now see a snapshot of the work we do each quarter. 
CLICK for more info
Your events, news and promotions
Please get in touch if you would like to promote your news, events and activities with us via this newsletter.
CLICK for more info



POP ideas impact

“Having POP & POP ideas around to support sharing and collaboration with special events & valuable advice is of huge benefit to Plymouth.”

POP ideas Impact: October 2014 – March 2023

”We firmly believe we are stronger together. The kind of services POP & POP ideas offers really helps charities to collaborate and remain a cohesive and positive force within the city, to ensure we can all help those who need it most in the best possible way.”

Quotes

“Fantastic training, thank you so much.”
Writing a Funding Application workshop delegate

“A very productive, positive and extremely rewarding session.  Many thanks.”
Writing a Funding Application workshop delegate

“Wonderful warm presentation and atmosphere.”
Presenting with Confidence workshop delegate

“Really useful and I took away a lot of good information and ideas to research.”
The Difference We Make workshop delegate

“Excellent supporting tools in understanding legal structures, thank you.”
Legal Structure workshop​ delegate

Our Reach (up to March 2019)

See below our ward map highlighting the areas we have worked in.  Below that you can download the individual wards information to find out more!

Ward Maps & Information

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Street-to-Scale (round 1)

Thank you to everyone who has shown an interest in the Street-to-Scale fund; to those willing to try something new and to those who have collaborated to bring about change in their communities. You have helped to trial a radical way of enabling funding to reach citizens.

POP+, working with Ratio, a CIC based in London, set up Street-to-Scale to test a method of funding based on trust, believing that local people know best about how to tackle local issues.  

Street-to-Scale funding opened in 2019 and within weeks, POP+ had received more than fifty expressions of interest. Twenty five projects were completed with a further seven, youth-led, projects made possible with funding via Ratio CIC from the Tudor Trust. 

Learning Champions Kim & Charlotte would like to thank the projects involved for their time and conversation which has helped POP+ to start to understand how this funding can reach and support grassroots community action. 

After feedback, a new welcome ‘envelope’ (replacing the box) has been designed, with six postcards offering step-by-step instructions. Street-to-Scale is designed to work with minimal contact and involvement by organisations, there are only a few rules and it operates on trust and relationships between group members.   

Street-to-Scale Update May 2020

More details of how to get involved will be posted on the Facebook pages of community groups across Plymouth. There will be a pot of funding set aside each month to stimulate action among small groups of people who may never have thought of applying for funding. 

What is Street-to-Scale?

Street-to-Scale funding is for up to £1000 to help people bring about postive change in their communities, for their communities.    

The money must be spent within eight weeks; anything not spent will be recycled into other S2S projects.

There is no application form;  there are no targets and no need for written outcomes.   

Who is it for?

People keen to support change in their community:  

Anyone can form a Street To Scale group, and connect with those in their community who share an interest in the same community mission.  

Informal groups of people: it is not necessary to be a constituted group.  

You may gather and work together for just the eight weeks of the project with no obligation to continue beyond this.   

However, should you wish to continue beyond the eight weeks, support is on offer through the POP ideas Ideas into Action workshop

Why Street-to-Scale?

We know that people have ideas about their communities; we know that people are ready to put them into action and that they may just need a little bit of money to get things started.   

POP+ wants to enable funding to get into the heart of our communities. POP+ believes that people can be trusted to make the right decisions with, and for, the communities in which they live.   

Street-to-Scale has been set up to pioneer ways of funding within (and for) communities and to test and learn from these new methods. 

Getting Started

Please keep an eye out for our Facebook posts. We’re posting in Facebook groups across Plymouth. This is so we reach out to people that POP+ would not normally be in contact with and perhaps would not normally consider being active in their community.

Here’s a taste of the fantastic community action made possible by Street-to-Scale across Plymouth so far:

  • Rock the Block – A silent disco event for community residents to come together in Stoke
  • Adelaide Angels – Litter picking, gardening group and events in Adelaide Street to increase community engagement. Click here for Plymouth Herald article
  • Arabic School – A school led by volunteers teaching Arabic to Arabic and non-Arabic speakers improving social cohesion 
  • Collective Good – Creating personal welcome hygiene packs for homeless people in hostels  
  • Free Radical Creations – Art, photography and social opportunities using different spaces  
  • Madness with WonderZoo (Mental Health Arts Day) – A Mental Health awareness event for artists to share work and perform  
  • North Star Study Group – Looking at the impacts of colonialism through a Monuments Walk, a book club, film screenings and raising awareness of the group  
  • No Whey Plymouth – Vegan food and marketplace celebration in Stonehouse 
  • PAP Project (Blue Plaque Project) – 40 blue plaques designed to celebrate the positive history of Plymouth   
  • ReadEasy Plymouth – Training coaches to work 1-1 with adults to improve literacy  
  • Royal Cinema Trust – Saving the Reel Cinema through raising awareness 
  • St. Matthias Community Garden – To buy tools to improve the gardening group at St Matthias church  
  • Banking for Change – Creating art spaces for children and adults in Stonehouse and building a grotto for Santa when he came to Stonehouse last Christmas   
  • Fish is Fun – Teaching children about fish, their habitats and sustainability   
  • Street Meets – North Stonehouse – Bringing residents of North Stonehouse together through ‘street meets’, events, food and gatherings   
  • Medicine through Time (Medifest)– developing the idea of Science & Health Exploratory through display areas and an event in Plymouth Guildhall
  • Greenbank – Onward House – Housing Estate Summer Activities 
  • Spaceforce – Workshops to build and then launch Space Balloons into near space   
  • THINQTANQ – Improving the environment of a community workspace in PL1  
  • Another World Farm – establishing a demonstrator indoor urban farm 

Young people’s Street-to-Scale Projects 

  • PZL Small Press (YEA Plymouth) – workshops with young people, setting up a small zine printing press and producing zines  
  • Infinity Festival (Ernesettle Community Day) – Youth Music festival in Ernesettle
  • Youth Community Garden – creating a green space and pizza oven at Redeemer Church 
  • Traversing Wall – Scouts and Leaders, planning, designing and building a climbing wall on the Scout Hut in Keyham 1st Keyham (St.Mark) Scout Group 
  • New4You (Youth Communal Area and Fire Pit) – Firepit and extension of communal area for Youth Group  
  • Big Wills Memorial Garden – Southway Youth Centre 
  • Diversity Project – Whitleigh Youth Group exploring different cultures and religions 
  • In other Words (Routeways) – Celebration Ball arranged by and for young people experiencing mental health challenges 
  • Growing Together – making and selling goods at a community market and a pop-up Christmas Shop along with a business run by young men with additional needs.  
  • OK Boomer – Literary Arts event planned and delivered by young people at Leadworks Factory – Rendle Street, Stonehouse

Coming Soon

  • Stiltskin Creative Arts & Theatre Company – Community Event run by the youth people’s board at Soapbox Theatre Devonport Park 
  • Bee Project – Exploring ideas to tackle the decline of bees. Set up by students from Plymouth High School for Girls 

Links

https://q.health.org.uk/event/street-to-scale-learning-from-trust-based-funding-for-citizen-action-matt-bell-michael-little-zoom/ 

https://www.instagram.com/streettoscale/ 

https://www.facebook.com/streettoscale/ 

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Positive People

Inspiring you to build a brighter future

Everyone should have the chance to succeed in life, to develop skills and build a career. Positive People is a flexible community programme designed to help you take positive steps towards building your confidence, gaining new skills, and eventually move into work or training.

Help with everyday life:

  • Personal development – help to build your confidence, health and well-being.
  • Help to master digital technology – including computers, tablets, phones, software and the internet.
  • Signpost you to benefits, advice and financial advice

Improve your qualifications and help you to find work:

  • Help to access training – anything from basic skills to vocational and professional qualifications.
  • Help to prepare for work – including clubs and work trials so you can try out jobs and gain experience.
  • Job search – preparing CVs, applications and interview practice. We will also help you to approach employers.
  • Access to computers, internet, printers and photocopiers.
  • Advice on apprenticeships and self-employment.

Positive People (part of the Building Better Opportunities programme) is a project jointly funded by the Big Lottery Fund and the European Social Fund and is funded up until September 2022.

If you would like to join the programme or have any specific questions about the project, please contact Chris Maccullie on the office phone number 01752 395131, mobile 07951 313163 or email: chris.m@plymouthoctopus.org.

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Belong in Plymouth

Belong in Plymouth is a network of organisations and individuals who wish to see Plymouth become a city where no one feels forgotten.

We want people to take the time to notice one another and to see everyone as having something to give. We want to ensure that each individual feels connected – whether that is through families, friends or communities – and, that in doing so, they belong.

Isolation, loneliness can affect us all. We know that feeling lonely and cut-off from other people can have a significant impact on both our physical and mental health. There is amazing work happening through the actions of neighbours and organisations across Plymouth but we know that by working together we achieve so much more.

Click here to visit the Belong in Plymouth website.

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SIMPL

The Social Investment Market Place Learning (SIMPL) v1.0 collaborative programme was designed to develop understanding of the barriers to developing the social investment market and raise awareness of the opportunities, risks and potential benefits of social investment.

As the first year progressed it became clear that whilst social investment should remain important, if we were truly focussed on social impact, for social investment to be maximised, we had to work out how it could sit alongside other forms of finance, collaboratively.

Exeter Co-Lab, Torbay Community Development Trust, POP, Essence, PSEN and Local Spark Torbay form this strong collaborative around a common purpose of growing a robust social economy across Devon (and beyond).

Our view is that tackling complex issues via a traditional grant funded/social investment approach through individual organisations is not enough. We need to take a wider view of the whole social-economic-political system that causes these issues – a system that currently fails to tackle them effectively.

To begin to tackle these issues, we believe that we need a philosophy that is:

  • Human – showing more empathy, creativity, passion and trust
  • Learning – using data to learn, accountable, striving to improve
  • Systemic – thinking about the whole rather than the symptoms.

We believe that by creating the conditions for effective social investment more wisely using a Human, Learning, Systems philosophy we can begin to tackle the wicked issues more effectively.

Growing the social economy – the crucial role of networks

From relationships to collaborations to creating the conditions for innovation and positive change.We believe that for a social economy to flourish and shine even brighter, we need more collaboration and collective action – i.e. more network development and support.

We’re a group of six organisations: Exeter Co-Lab, Torbay Community Development Trust, POP+, Essence, Plymouth Social Enterprise Network and Local Spark Torbay. We formed our strong collaborative around a common purpose of growing a robust social economy across Devon (and beyond). Originally focussed on creating a healthy market for social investment, we quickly learned that the formal and informal networks that connect social economic actors creates the conditions for connection, collaboration, and innovations to emerge, and ultimately this creates the conditions for social investment. This is a system-based approach to catalysing the development of a resilient and robust social economy.

We have witnessed for many years, and particularly during the last six months, that collaboration is vital. Yet it does not emerge naturally; charities, social enterprises, grassroots organisations and other fellow travellers are time poor and operate on very tight margins. They often find it difficult to connect to others, to organise across boundaries of geography or interest and to campaign on wider issues. These and other actors often find themselves in silos, disconnected from information, new perspectives and, sometimes, unable to fully understand the common issues we collectively face. When networks and network weavers – the roles that each of us on our collaborative play – offer light touch, easy to engage, diverse, fluid and information-rich relationship, silo walls break down, learning becomes easy, new perspective become clear, and new possibilities are illuminated.

This is where formal network organisations and network weavers can play an important role in creating the ground conditions for the social economy to know itself, connect and collaborate, grow and become more resilient. Some of our shared activities include:

  • Networking: We connect individuals and organisations with similar social and ecological ambitions to one another, sometimes providing the key introductions that lead to new possibilities. As network conveners, we have greater visibility and network intelligence, allowing us to reach and create bridges between unconnected spaces, places, and people. This is fundamental for any convening, advocacy and brokering.
  • Convening and co-design: We support people to engage, to bring the context, to feel like equal partners and foster deep listening and observation to inform and shape solutions across sectors. Local businesses, academia, local government, citizens and more all need to be involved in the weaving of regenerative local economics. This convening capacity enables new connections, increased peer-to-peer learning, new collaborations, and innovations.
  • Advocacy and representation: We represent our members by having a direct relationship with those that don’t have the resource to make themselves heard by themselves. This way we are able to convey opportunities and needs of a diverse group of organisations and people to other parts of society that don’t have direct links into our communities.
  • Providing and/or supporting enterprise development: Networks – our formal and informal relationships – mobilise the knowhow for the business support and investment needed for social enterprise success, which drives sustainable development of the social economy. Networks are often a first point of contact for entrepreneurs and changemakers – those starting community projects, socially enterprising organisations, etc.
  • Information and learning: Networks create the conditions for learning, capacity building, linking information, experts, institutions, toolkits – and crucially, unlocking the peer learning and support developed by network members themselves. Networks also play an important role in distributing news, updates and other information such as government support measures in times of crises. This significantly helps smaller organisations to keep up to date with relevant developments.

These activities are not always covered by one organisation but rather an ecosystem of network support. For example, one network support agency might focus on social enterprise, another on grassroots community organisations whilst yet another might focus on social entrepreneurship within Black, Asian and other Minority Ethnic communities.

We need to value networks.

The time has come to understand and value the vital role that networks and network weavers play in creating the conditions for innovation and development of the social economy. We – as a society – need:

  • A new ‘social economy contract’ among the major financial and policy enablers of the social economy – the foundations, funding bodies and government policymakers.
  • A new understanding of how economic change happens ‘on the ground’ and the change dynamics that move through the medium of networks. Networks enable flow, connection, innovation, and change.
  • To recognise that the resultant value doesn’t just sit with those being connected: value is created for the statutory sector, for funders and social investors, communities and society.
  • Statutory sector partners, funders and social investors to work with us to create a future where a fairer, more sustainable economy is supported through a rich ecosystem of infrastructure and support.
  • A conversation with partners and stakeholders about how we create a healthy balance between long-term support, impact and accountability for networks.

Where network development and support is strong, the voluntary, community and social enterprise sector is strong. Where this works well the social economy flourishes.

Impact & learning

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Learning & Collaboration Fund

The Learning & Collaboration Fund is now closed and has been replaced by POP Collectives.

POP incentivised and enabled collaboration by supporting eight projects with up to £5000 each, over two rounds of funding awarded in December 2019 and April 2020.  Funding was decided by a panel from the Network of Networks, a group of people representing the Networks across the city. 

Why Learning and Collaboration?

Relationships are fundamental for resilience. Collaboration and relationships build stronger organisations. It makes joint funding bids more possible, easier recruitment of volunteers and finding skills for your organisations and may even bring about lasting, meaningful and purposeful change in Plymouth.  Learning from each other, sharing the things which went well, also those which didn’t go as planned, helps us all to learn, saves time and valuable resources. 

L&C Round 1 Projects (December 2019)

  • Repair, Make and Mend: Borrow Don’t Buy, Timebank, Scrapstore, Makers HQ
  • Culture and Integration Through Food: Based at the Plot on Union Street, Diversity Business Incubator, Food Plymouth and Miriam&Miriam
  • Creative Natures: Deb Hoskin – Horticultural Therapy Trust and Thomas Loveder – Free Radical Creations
  • The Eclective Network: Leadworks Factory CIC, The Kintsugi Project, Flyinghead Studios Community Arts project, Cawfee Community Café, Pride in Plymouth, Empowering Hidden Voices, Imperfect Cinema, WonderZoo, Mothership Audio

L&C Round 2 Projects (April 2020)

  • Positively Diverse Action: City of Sanctuary, DBI, Stephane Kolinsky, Ptown Radio
  • Precious Plastics Plymouth: Plymouth Play Scrapstore & CIC, Rob West and Kate Crawfurd, Precious Plastics Tavistock and more
  • Street Meets / Street Eats: Friends of Wyndham Square, Feeds n Seeds and Helen Moore, PCC – Natural Infrastructure Team and Sovereign Housing
  • Plymouth Literary Research and Pilot Project – WonderZoo, Soapbox Culture, Imperfect Cinema and supporting organisations
 
 
Repair, Make and Mend
 
What this project aims for is a stronger and more resilient community in Plymouth.  
 
The repair, Make and Mend Collective aims to learn about the repair/mending scene in Plymouth, its specific needs and challenges, how we can overcome them together and share this information with the local community. By working together we will develop organisational skills to enable other groups to co-organise and host “repair, make and mend” events. 
 
Our goal is to bring back repairing and skills share to the city, promote social cohesion and reduce isolation by connecting with neighbours in a friendly and low-key “repair, make and mend” event. Ultimately, we want to support everyone in Plymouth to have more, share more and connect more. Our first steps will involve finding and connecting with other organisations in Plymouth who share similar beliefs around the circular economy ethos.  
 
It is important for us to consult and collaborate with the community we will serve in order to co-design successful and needed events.  We will explore barriers and attempt to isolate strengths in the partners to resolve them. Some of the potential challenges we’ve already identified are practical such as tools required, space, skills, volunteers, capacity. But we believe that with exploration and communication we can work together to produce a ready-repair, make and mend kit for organisations. 
 
Initially, we have identified a small group that is interested in being a part of a conversation, we do envisage that group growing, the project is ongoing, we’d love to hear from you. 
 
To find out more, contact admin@plymouthplay.org or sol@borrowdontbuy.co.uk  
 
 
Culture and integration through Food
 
The project is to co-develop a food enterprise skills development module for refugees in Plymouth and Devon wishing to venture into Catering and Hospitality business or convert their food-related talents into employability skills.   
 
Diversity Business Incubator and Food Plymouth will collaboratively establish the framework for the skills development module, to ensure it covers all the aspects required for e.g. catering and hospitality career and successful food business start-up. 
 
Our Collaboration today should include, an Inspirational visit to one or more farms and growing projects (e.g. The Black Farmer and the growing projects in the Tamar Valley) to exchange knowledge and stories of the place of food in e.g. East and West African and English cultures. This activity reflects the fact that the food grown in an area informs the culture of that area (plantains in Uganda, high moorland sheep on Dartmoor). The value to the refugee participants is both that it re-affirms in them the value of their own culture (even in the UK), and that they form a bond with Devon and Cornwall farmers and growers. This can underpin the use of local ingredients in traditional dishes from other countries. When the refugee participants start their businesses, they will be able to substitute such local ingredients for those which would need to be imported. 
 
To find out more visit Jabulani at the Plot, Food Plymouth or contact Jabo@dbi.org.uk  
 
 
Creative Natures 
 
Facilitate young people from Plymouth Foyer and adults/young people from Devonport Lifehouse, homeless residencies, in separate age appropriate sessions, under 25’s and over 25’s, to design this project, bringing in, discovering and growing their own skills, but also self-esteem, self-worth and a sense of value within the community, towards resilience.  Our joint experiences, shows us that all the above are the route towards motivation for change, it takes bravery to join in with something when most will lack trust due to past trauma.  
 
The project basis is through creativity, which is also time away from pressures, as one young person put it ‘I’d be able to be calm’, Through the media of photography and other art forms in the landscape including growing small 1 metre square, beautiful gardens, likened to a mini Chelsea Flower show, but without winners. The photography will be used by participants to create large pieces of art to add vibrancy to the centres. Lives with skills often not learnt in childhood that many of us take for granted.  
 
For many they will have to self-parent, unlearning unhelpful ways of being that until now have allowed them to survive. This project aims to empower participants to begin the path of reaching potentials and self-care, self-manage, etc. This is as much for the adults as the young people, this is not an age related issue. The sessions will be facilitating improved holistic wellbeing through the 5 Ways to Wellbeing, which are core to supporting mental health improvements. HTT’s benefits to a participant has been used as a Case Study by THRIVE Plymouth, due to these being central to what we offer. Providing safe, mentored space to talk through issues in the groups once trust is formed with facilitation, both HTT and FRC find to be beneficial to ‘individual unique recoveries’ but also to being able to collaborate. 
 
The whole project is designed by participants and this in itself is something much needed, as engagement is low, especially in Plymouth Foyer, where new staff changes to the ways of working aim to engage young people in better ways, we found in our first conversation with staff, so this project has come at a good time. 
 
Recognised need for participants to have opportunity to join in, in ways that they choose, to become more empowered and self-caring in their own lives by recognising their value. 
 
The project ran successfully during lockdown and has now ended.  
 
To find out more contact deb@horticultural-therapy-trust.org or freeradicalcreations@gmail.com  
 
 
The Eclective Network
 
Leadworks has been established after identifying the need to offer community organisations and individuals a place to work, to be and to share. These spaces will be affordable, inclusive, accessible, multi-use spaces, to bring the community and individuals together.  
 
Stonehouse is a diverse area with a rich past that needs supporting and acknowledging as the area is developed, the importance of assisting those that need it while these developments are undertaken to hold on to this rich cultural diversity that is already established in the communities and enabling them to continue building the area together.  
 
The Leadworks Factory vision is to create a place and home, to support, encourage and celebrate these differences, not as a leader but as a supportive and creative collaborator to build appropriate spaces in which this can be facilitated and learnt from to enable Stonehouse to continue to progress and grow its grass roots community.  The warehouse is the first incredible space to pilot this formation and to learn what colloborations can take place.  
 
Leadworks, and its emerging Eclective network, is a unique initiative set up to offer both space enabling a range of communities to be bought together under one roof and to bring together a range of communities in different ways, both socially and through project work and services that will be available at the Warehouse location. It will bring together a range of organisations both grassroots and more established organisations as well as organisations and individuals with a range of interests, for them to collaborate, share and find a home.  
 
Leadworks recognises that a space or home can make a huge difference to organisations and individuals; helping them to have a base, to share and to grow their organisations.  
 
The Leadworks, warehouse space is a pilot vision and learning a practice that will work to create this vision of bringing project and people together to work, to share and to be. 
 
Click here to find out more about Leadworks  
 
 
Positively Diverse Action 
 
Change making and community building often happens in isolated bubbles, even though a lot of time and energy is invested on broadening collaboration and inclusion;  
 
this is true within the BAME community where small groups with shared nationalities do their own thing and try and make change happen in silos. Its also true outside of the BAME community where place-based groups, or groups of particular interest also do their own thing, advocating for their own interests without stepping into other people’s shoes, finding joy in difference and genuinely letting new things be created through relationship.  
 
This funding will help people explore what then happens outside their bubble, connect with the positive intentions of others, identify shared interests that cross cultural boundaries and lay the groundwork for people to build relationship and collaborate in new ways.  
 
The project adapted and continues, a little differently due to Covid restrictions. 
 
To find out more contact info@plymouth.cityofsanctuary.org or stephane@sky-space.co.uk  
 
 
Precious Plastics Plymouth
 
We can’t actually claim to have come up with this excellent idea ourselves! Precious plastic is a global community initiated in the Netherlands by a group, who in the true spirit of social enterprise, put their idea out there for us all to use. You can view all the designs, products and community correspondence here: Precious Plastics 
 
Basically, it involves recycling plastic by shredding it, heating it and remoulding it into new useful/artistic creations.  
 
The plans for building the machines are open source and they are simple and quite cheap to build. The Plymouth Play CIC, Scrapstore building on Union Street would be a perfect location for this as there is space and a supply of clean waste plastic. We would be thinking of using this to recycle plastic which is otherwise difficult to recycle. It would also reduce transport and other costs associated by recycling locally.  
 
We think of this as a fun project to bring the community together, engage with recycling and plastic waste issues and get creative. Even better, this process can create high quality plastic products which can be sold.  
 
Find out more visit the PPP page on Kate Crawfurd’s website 
 
 
Street Meets / Street Eats
 
Is a project to develop community gardening and future food related pop-ups. The project will see two local residents employed to develop growing as a community resource and wellbeing opportunity, initially making use of The Talk Shop on Stoke Road as a place to get seeds propagating.  
 
The work has been inspired by Seeds n Feeds which has been a local gardening project run by Gin Farrow-Jones and now joined by Helen Moore – who is giving gardening tips under the guise of The Gardener in Residence. 
 
The project will support the group’s ongoing development of a new community business and support ambition to utilise any spaces where growing could happen. The project builds on Plymouth City Council’s recent Enrich programme where new opportunities for enhancing green space and a healthier environment were explored. 
 
Gin and Helen will start off with a ‘Nature Take Away’, offering salads, herbs and tomatoes as means to connect people to the project. Working with Sovereign Housing and residents at Notre Dame House the project will be a chance to hear about how food was grown at home in the past. 
 
The group will also get to go and see another urban agriculture project and when possible visit Rooted in Hull to learn how communities can grow together and provide edible spaces in a city environment. This research will interest Food Plymouth CIC who will look to see how the group develop the project in months to come. 
 
We want to sustain monthly pop-up events in the neighbourhood and the funding will provide these ‘street eats and meets’ for free. We’ll be working towards finding new ways to connect people, while socially distancing and taking care of vulnerable people at this time. 
 
The project creatively adapted to Covid restrictions, building relationships and making new connections. 
 
Find out more here or email info@friendsofwyndhamsquare.co.uk
 
 
Plymouth Literary Research and Pilot Project
 
We intend to establish a working group consisting of literary and event organization groups in Plymouth, including those with previous involvement in literary festivals in Plymouth. We will then contract an independent researcher to investigate why festivals in Plymouth have had poor attendance and low levels of community engagement, as well as to look into other, more successful events in other places like Bare Lit London, Bath Festival, Charleston Festival, Hay Festival or the Edinburgh Fringe Festival.  
 
The group will work regularly with the researcher throughout the project to use this body of research to inform two pilot events, which will be a collaboration between different groups.  
 
Working with an independent researcher will enable the partner organisations and supporters to take an objective view of action needed to develop connections within the city as well as leading towards a productive and successful literary festival in 2021.  
 
Covid adaptations – the first virtual festival Lost Time in May 2021 
 
Find out more here or contact Caitlin, the researcher working on this project:  wonderzooarts@gmail.com  

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Esmée Fairbairn Year 1

The Esmée Fairbairn foundation has given POP and Plymouth a five-year grant to help make change happen in the city. It has given the city £1.3m for a five-year investment to spend on whatever we in Plymouth think will make a real difference to our city and our ways-of-life.

In June 2018 we allocated £141,000 to more than twenty projects across the city. Each of these projects was successful and received between £2,000 and £10,000:

  • CASSPLUS
  • Community Arts & Events Network
  • Community Criminal Justice Network
  • Diversity Business Incubator CIC
  • End Of Life Compassionate Network
  • Environment Plymouth
  • Food Plymouth Partnership CIC
  • Friends of Wyndham Square
  • HITH CIC & LifePlay Learning
  • Honicknowle Commnet Ltd.
  • Hope In The Heart CIC
  • Horticultural Therapy Trust
  • New4You Youth Group
  • Plymouth Area Disability Action Network (PADAN)
  • Plymouth Law Clinic
  • Plymouth Mental Health Network
  • Plymouth Tree Partnership
  • Revolutionary Women, Harbour, Trevi & Broadreach
  • Seadream Education CIC
  • Stiltskin Arts & Theatre CIC
  • The Ark Community Project Ltd.
  • The Mount Batten Centre Charity Trust CIO
  • The Salvation Army

Background to Plymouth’s successful EF Bid:

Before the £1.3m was awarded to Plymouth there were two big consultation events which brought together a huge wave of ideas, visions and dreams… as well as outlining the practicalities and risks involved. There is a lot to read, but the reports are here:

February 2017 – Esmee Fairbairn Visit Notes

May 2017 – Workshop Consultation

The outcomes for the five year change programme are:

  • Better Services for People
  • A Stronger Voluntary and Community Sector
  • Better working with other sectors in the city, so that we are all working together towards the same aims.

Year 1

The heart of this change is that decisions happen bottom up, not top down. So, as in the consultations above, everything will be openly discussed and decisions on spending will be taken by the sector, or representatives of the sector. There have been six months of discussion.

Now we are on to six months of “exploring and experimenting”.

Exploring:

There will be a series of visits to other parts of the country to see what they are doing, and gather ideas and inspiration.

Experimenting:

We are investing in a partnership across the city for an ‘Our Plymouth’ website, so that everyone can be informed and take part.  Other partners here are the private sector (Chamber of Commerce), statutory sector (Plymouth City Council) and all supported by the Plymouth Herald. £20k.  There is another £10k for cross sector working.

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Ideas into Action (formerly Street-to-Scale)

Ideas into Action is now OPEN for any YOUTH-led group in Plymouth to take action.

What is Ideas into Action?

We believe young people hold the future in their hands and have amazing energy and ideas to create a positive future. 

But almost all funding is designed for adults, creating an organisation to ‘do good’. We want to spread this out. 

POP has been working with Ratio, a CIC based in London, who set up Street-to-Scale to test a method of funding based on trust and relationships. We have now taken this on board and made it for Plymouth. 

We offer up to £1000 to help people bring about positive change in their communities, for their communities.    

You decide on how you wish to bring about change in your community, and seek other like-minded individuals to get ideas flowing, trust and momentum building as you gather around a social mission which you all care about.  

We do not need to know a spending plan – we trust you to decide. 

This fund is designed for groups of individuals not for existing organisations or established groups.

Getting started 

Message: (+44 7402 340797). Ask for a starter pack to be sent to you. 

That simple? YES!
 

Useful information

  • Are you youth led?
  • You have to be 16+. 
  • Decide on a mission – what would you like to do to improve your community? The money must be spent within eight weeks.
  • If you have anyone 16-18 years old in your bank (group) you will need a trusted adult to be invited into your WhatsApp group. We can help with this if you need. 
  • All communication is via WhatsApp.
  • There is no application form.
  • Ideas into Action is designed for individuals and informal groups of people keen to take action to support change in their community.
  • Ideas into Action is designed to enable you to work with minimal contact and involvement from organisations such as POP.
Why Ideas into Action? 

We know that people have ideas about their communities; we know that people are ready to put them into action and that they may just need a little bit of money to get things started.    

POP wants to enable funding to get into the heart of our communities. POP believes that people can be trusted to make the right decisions with, and for, the communities in which they live.    

History so far

Street-to-Scale funding opened in Plymouth in July 2019 and within weeks, POP had received more than fifty expressions of interest. Twenty-five Street-to-Scale banks were set up and completed, with a further seven, youth-led banks made possible with funding via Ratio CIC from the Tudor Trust.  

Street-to-Scale is designed to reach deeper into communities to citizens and it’s all about trust. 

Links 

https://q.health.org.uk/event/street-to-scale-learning-from-trust-based-funding-for-citizen-action-matt-bell-michael-little-zoom/  

https://www.instagram.com/streettoscale/  

https://www.facebook.com/streettoscale 

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POP Collectives (currently paused)

POP Collectives is currently closed for applications but will re-open on 4 September with a revised process. The process below currently refers to applications prior to September 2023 and will be updated soon.

Click here to read a blog on the upcoming changes.