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Spark Ignition – Fifteen finalists chosen Congratulations to the 15 finalists that have been chosen to compete for a share of the Spark prizes - £500,000 of cash and hundreds of thousands of pounds of in-kind support – to build their social enterprise to get more people off the streets. Read the story of each of the finalists and follow their progress by signing up to the fortnightly updates. Regards Richard Litchfield and the Spark team
FIFTEEN TO COMPETE FOR £500,000 PRIZE FUND A bicycle recycling project and a flat pack furniture workshop that provides employment to homeless people are among the fifteen organisations that have been chosen to compete in the Spark social enterprise competition in May, Junior Housing Minister Iain Wright announced today. The finalists will pitch their business ideas to a panel of leading entrepreneurs, including Nigel Kershaw, Big Issue Invest chief executive, at an event in May. The best organisations win a share of a £500,000 prize fund provided by Communities and Local Government, mentoring and a two-day 'enterprise makeover'. All fifteen finalists will receive coaching to help them develop their social enterprises to help more homeless people into training, volunteering and jobs. The announcement follows the launch in December of the £1.5 million competition which challenged the homelessness sector to go beyond standard homeless services like providing food and accommodation to offer more training and employment opportunities for homeless people. The Spark competition is part of a major refocusing of Government homelessness strategy, challenging hostels and charities to promote greater entrepreneurial spirit and give homeless people opportunities to develop the skills and confidence and move onto sustained independent living. Homeless services have an important role in providing food and shelter to society’s most vulnerable but should also be a springboard to jobs and opportunity. Iain Wright said: “We’ve made great progress reducing homelessness but we need to see a greater emphasis on providing routes into training and employment for homeless people. “The Spark competition has lit a fire in the homelessness sector. The quality of applications shows there is a real appetite for change and it’s been tough to choose the best fifteen. The finalists will now start a ten month journey to develop their businesses and their examples will show how social enterprise can help end the ‘revolving door’ of persistent long term homelessness.” Nigel Kershaw, Big Issue Invest chief executive, said: “We know we can make a difference to homeless people’s lives by investing in businesses that create financial and social opportunity. We want to champion the best 15 social enterprises to help them increase their impact and this is the first exciting step in that process.” John Montague, The TREES Group chief executive, said: “The competition among applicants has been fierce and it was a very difficult decision to decide which 15 went through to the next round. It is inspiring to see how Spark has ignited social enterprise through the homelessness sector.” The competition is part of a major new partnership between Government, the private and third sectors. It aims to increase the number of social enterprises in the homelessness sector to give homeless people opportunities to enter training, volunteering and employment opportunities as well as provide a sustainable source of income for homeless services. The TREES Group, Big Issue Invest, Eastside Consulting, PricewaterhouseCoopers and property and regeneration group Places for People are working alongside the Department to deliver Spark. The fifteen Spark finalists are:
The scheme follows the success of the Department’s £160 million investment into improving hostels which has funded social enterprises like the Crisis Café in Newcastle which is giving homeless people a route into catering.
SPARK PARTNERS Spark has been developed by Communities and Local Government and three social enterprise champions - TREES Group, Big Issue Invest (part of The Big Issue group) and Eastside Consulting. It aims to build and inspire social enterprise to prevent and tackle homelessness. Spark is the first partnership of its kind between the public, the private and the third sectors for homelessness. We welcome PricewaterhouseCoopers and Places for People as corporate partners. Read more about the seed of the Spark idea. |
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