Press release

Eligibility for Community Ownership Fund expanded

More community groups will be able to rescue prized local assets, such as sports clubs, music venues and historic buildings, following the expansion of levelling up funding.

This was published under the 2019 to 2022 Johnson Conservative government
  • Even more strong community projects will be able to apply for funding through reforms to government Community Ownership Fund

  • COF prospectus published outlining new eligibility criteria along with easier to use expression of interest process and support for prospective applicants

  • Pubs, historic buildings and sports facilities included in projects to be taken over by community groups, following 39 assets across UK already saved by fund

More community groups will be able to rescue prized local assets, such as sports clubs, music venues and historic buildings, following the expansion of levelling up funding.

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities has today (27 May 2022) published the prospectus for the second round of its £150 million Community Ownership Fund. Building on the successful launch of pilot finding last year, which saved 39 assets across the UK, changes to the fund will ensure it is more inclusive and flexible, following feedback from previous applicants.

Allocations from the first round of funding included £1 million for Bury fans to rescue Gigg Lane stadium, £90,000 for The Queen’s Ballroom in Tredegar, Wales, and £96,000 for The Racehorse Inn Community pub in rural Suffolk.

Changes made for the second round mean even more community groups will be able to take control of venues and other assets in their area that are at risk of being lost forever. This is all part of the government’s drive to level up local communities across the country, creating more jobs for local people, boosting local businesses and building up local economies as a result. As a part of this, the recent introduction of the Levelling Up and Regeneration Bill, presented plans to transform struggling towns and cities, supporting local leaders to take back control of regeneration, ending the blight of empty shops on their high streets and delivering the quality homes that communities need.

The prospectus sets out updated, widened, eligibility criteria. This includes removing the requirement that assets have had a use within the last 5 years and will now consider any asset which has had a previous community use, massively expanding the projects eligible to apply. Applicants who have a minimum of a 15-year lease on an asset would now also be considered for funding. Previously, leases were restricted to a minimum of 25 years.

Minister for Levelling Up, the Union and Constitution, Neil O’Brien MP said:

From community centres to music venues, the Community Ownership Fund is a vital tool for communities to take on projects that will benefit their area and rescue assets which would otherwise have been lost forever.

We want even more communities to benefit from the fund and that’s why we are reforming the application process and expanding the eligibility criteria.

We will continue to grow this fund to empower local people, restoring their pride in the places where they live and levelling up communities across the United Kingdom.

The fund is already helping communities across the country seize ownership of prized local assets that are at risk, including the UK’s most remote pub in Scotland and Gigg Lane, home of Bury FC and also:

  • Leigh Spinners mill, the largest building in Leigh, in Greater Manchester, which has been vacant for many years. The £250,000 of funding is transforming the space into a hot spot that offers support to community groups and creating more employment opportunities.

  • Ballymacash sports academy in Northern Ireland which has received £300,000 for creating state-of-the-art sports facilities and improving the club with a brand new 3G sports pitch – a specialised pitch for football comprised of three different turfs.

  • The Queen’s Ballroom in Tredegar, Wales, has been saved thanks to £90,000 in funding, The historic building was originally one of Wales’s first purpose built electric cinemas. Today it houses a fully funded programme which will provide young people, aged 7-18, with the opportunity to learn fundamental skills for working in film in future following its refurbishment.

  • A community in rural Suffolk successfully bought their local pub, the Racehorse Inn, through a £96,000 grant from the Community Ownership Fund in March 2022. The pub will hopefully be transformed into a local hub to serve the residents of Westhall and the surrounding area.

The first round of successful projects was announced at the Spending Review in autumn last year. Applications to bid for round 2 of funding through the Community Ownership Fund will open in June this year.

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Updates to this page

Published 27 May 2022