[WiLT] Lords vote confirms transfer of lottery funds to Olympics (Footnote)

WiL Admin admin at womeninlondon.org.uk
Wed Feb 6 14:08:24 GMT 2008


(Sorry - this Olympics Lottery footnote somehow didn't get
circulated - Deborah)

Olympic funding
- Between 2009 and 2012, £425m of BLF funds will be transferred to the
Olympic Delivery Authority.
- The BLF will therefore lose just over £100m a year.
- The BLF usually receives about £600m a year in lottery revenues, so
with £100m less this will work out at a total of about £500m a year.
- Not all the annual budget will be available for new projects. Some
of it will be used for ongoing funding on existing programmes.
- The Government's commitment to keeping voluntary sector spending at
60 to 70 per cent of the £600m means the sector can expect between
£360m and £420m during 2009 to 2012.
- BLF chair Clive Booth is confident the BLF will maintain the 60 to
70 per cent third sector commitment beyond 2012.
- New BLF projects won't start until late 2009/10 and some will
certainly not begin until 2010/11, Booth says.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "WiL Admin" <admin at womeninlondon.org.uk>
To: "WiLT egroup" <womeninlondontraining at freecharity.org.uk>
Sent: Wednesday, February 06, 2008 1:53 PM
Subject: [WiLT] Lords vote confirms transfer of lottery funds to
Olympics


Lords vote confirms transfer of lottery funds to Olympics

The House of Lords has voted in favour of transferring £1.085bn of
lottery good cause funds to help pay for the London 2012 Olympics.

The £1.085bn comprises an original allocation of £410m and an
additional £675m, which will be transferred in 15 quarterly
instalments from February 2009 to August 2012.

The vote, which took place on 30 January, follows an announcement last
March that the cost of the Olympics had risen to £9.35bn - almost four
times the original £2.4bn estimate.

During the debate, Lord Clement-Jones suggested an amendment calling
on the Government to guarantee that charities benefited from future
increases in land value in the Olympic site, but later withdrew it.

Lord Davies of Oldham said: "The Government has thought carefully
about these issues. We are concerned to minimise the impact upon good
causes, and to indemnify them and advance their interests after the
Games are over."

He also confirmed that the Government will re-examine the case for a
move to gross profits tax for the lottery, which could generate an
estimated £45m each year for good causes.

He also suggested that the Government ban commercial lottery games. He
said: "Independent experts have shown that if we can eliminate those
games so that players switch back to the National Lottery, it would
mean an extra £4m a year - more than £500m by 2019 - for good causes."

The House of Commons has already voted in favour of transferring the
£1.085bn to the Olympics. In a debate on 15 January, the Government
won by a majority of 357 to nine after culture secretary James Purnell
promised that there would not be a third lottery raid and that revenue
raised by lottery games introduced specifically to raise money for the
Olympics would be capped at £750m.

http://www.thirdsector.co.uk/channels/Policy/Article/781840/Lords-vote-confirms-transfer-lottery-funds-Olympics/



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