Community Rural England Prosperity Fund
Test Valley Borough Council (TVBC) has been awarded just over £500,000 of Rural England Prosperity Fund (REPF) money to support its rural communities and businesses.
Rural areas often face specific challenges including:
- lower productivity rates
- poorer connectivity
- poorer access to key services.
The REPF supports the aims of the Government’s Levelling Up White Paper and Future Farming Programme. It funds capital projects for small businesses and community infrastructure. This will help to improve productivity and strengthen the rural economy and rural communities.
Guidance for Community Grants
Contents
1. Background to the Rural England Prosperity Fund
3. Eligibility
4. Projects and organisations that cannot be funded
6. Evaluation
7. Timeline
8. Financial and approval requirements
10. Submitting your application
1.Background to the Rural England Prosperity Fund
Rural areas often face specific challenges including:
- lower productivity rates
- poorer connectivity
- poorer access to key services.
The REPF supports the aims of the Government’s Levelling Up White Paper and Future Farming Programme. It funds capital projects for small businesses and community infrastructure. This will help to improve productivity and strengthen the rural economy and rural communities.
The REPF is integrated into the UK Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF) which supports productivity and prosperity in places that need it most. It supports activities that specifically address the particular challenges that rural areas face. It is complementary to funding used to support rural areas under the UKSPF.
The REPF sits alongside existing schemes from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), including:
- The Farming in Protected Landscapes programme
- The Farming Investment Fund
- The Platinum Jubilee Village Hall Improvement Grant Fund
REPF grants must be used for capital projects. This means that the grants must be spent on lasting assets such as a building or equipment.
Grants must be for local rural businesses or for community purposes.
Funding is available to rural businesses and communities. The total amount available is £514k to be split equally between business and community grants.
2.Our priorities
Rural Communities
- Local arts, culture, heritage and creative activities.
- Creation of or improvement to rural green space.
- Impactful volunteering and social action projects.
Grants to rural community projects will have a minimum value of £3k and a maximum value of £20k. They should support new and improved community infrastructure, providing essential community services and assets for local people.
3.Eligibility
Any organisation with legal status can get funding to deliver a REPF intervention. Organisations may include:
- local authorities
- public sector organisations
- higher and further education institutions
- voluntary organisations
- registered charities
- arms-length bodies of government.
Projects must be in a rural area. For REPF purposes, rural areas are:
- towns, villages and hamlets with populations below 10,000 and the wider countryside
- market or ‘hub towns’ with populations of up to 30,000 that serve their surrounding rural areas as centres of employment and in providing services.
You can check the areas that are eligible for REPF, through DEFRA’s Magic Map . Under ‘Table of Contents’, select ‘Administrative Geographies’ then ‘Other Administrative Boundaries’ then select ‘Rural England Prosperity Fund’.
Search for the location by entering the postcode within the search bar (top left of page) or manually zoom in on a location.
You will find a toolbar of icons above the map. Select the ‘Identify’ icon. Move the cursor (a cross) onto the map and click on the location of your project. A pop-up box will appear confirming whether or not the area is considered rural for the purposes of the REPF.
4.Projects and organisations that cannot be funded
We cannot fund the following:
- Revenue costs such as running costs or promotional activities – this is a fund for capital projects only.
- Domestic property improvements.
- The purchase of private vehicles.
- Organisations located outside the eligible Test Valley REPF area that cannot demonstrate that the grant funded investment will benefit the Test Valley area.
- Projects that have received funding from other DEFRA schemes. These include:
- The Farming in Protected Landscapes Programme - funding for farmers and land managers to work in partnership with National Parks and Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty bodies to deliver projects on climate, nature, people and place.
- The Farming Investment Fund - grants to improve productivity and bring environmental benefits, covering two funds - the Farming Equipment and Technology Fund and the Farming Transformation Fund.
- The Platinum Jubilee Village Hall Improvement Grant Fund - grant funding over 3 years (to 2025) to support capital improvement projects for village halls, covering extending buildings and modernising facilities.
- Projects for which the capital asset would be on land or property not owned or leased by the applicant.
- Projects for which the necessary planning consent has not been secured at the time the work is done.
- Projects or costs where there is a statutory duty to provide them.
- Projects that could be fully funded using private finance.
- Organisations in financial difficulty or that have ceased trading.
- Projects with a total cost of less than £4,000.
- Projects which may be construed as radicalising or encouraging people into terrorism, to ensure compliance with the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015[1].
5.Match Funding
Rural community projects will be expected to secure alternative funding equivalent to a minimum of 25% of project costs. Other UKSPF grants cannot be used for match funding.
TVBC Councillor Community Grants or Community Asset Funds can be combined with the REPF funding for rural community projects, if the projects are eligible, however the total Council contribution cannot exceed 75% of total project cost and must be in line with the match funding requirements of the other schemes. For further information on those schemes, see: Councillors Community Grant Scheme and Community Asset Fund.
Examples of match funding levels are provided below:
Type of project |
Total cost |
REPF contribution |
Minimum match funding |
Rural community projects |
£3k |
Not eligible – minimum project cost £4k due to match funding requirement |
N/A |
£4k |
£3k (minimum grant) |
£1k (25%) |
|
£20k |
£15k |
£5k (25%) |
|
£30k |
£20k (maximum grant) |
£10k |
6.Evaluation
Eligible applications will be scored, and the scores weighted against the following criteria:
Assessment Area |
Evidence to be considered |
Weight |
Achievement of REPF strategic objectives |
Fit of project to objectives Evidence of need Anticipated impact – eg amount of green or blue space created or improved (m2); improved perception of local facilities, amenities, infrastructure or events; cultural or heritage assets created or improved; community-led arts, cultural, heritage or creative programmes created; number of events or participatory programmes held; number of volunteering opportunities or community led programmes created. |
40% |
Value for money* and additionality |
Finance plan Value for money of the project Engagement with other rural partners |
25% |
Deliverability |
Project plan Project leadership Monitoring and evaluation plan |
25% |
Contribution to net zero and nature recovery objectives |
Reduction in greenhouse gases Fit with 25 year environment plan Wider environmental considerations |
10% |
*Value for Money:
- Achieving value for money can be described as using public resources in a way that creates and maximises public value.
- Public value is defined as the total well-being of the UK public as a whole. This covers all the economic, social and environmental impacts of a proposal.
- The aim of value for money assessments is to help decision-makers judge whether the expected costs of a proposal are justified by its expected benefits to the UK public as a whole, including both positive and negative impacts of the proposal on the economy, society, environment, and public accounts.
Each area will be scored from 0-5 based on the following framework:
0
|
Unacceptable |
No detail, or a totally unacceptable level of detail that does not allow for the bid to be assessed against the criteria, such that the applicant should be failed at this point and not considered further. |
1 |
Inadequate |
Substantially unacceptable response that does not meet the scheme’s requirements. An inadequate level of detail. Considerable reservations about the capacity of the project to meet the criteria. |
2 |
Weak
|
Weak response that does not fully meet the scheme’s requirements. Response may be minimal with little detail or evidence given to support and demonstrate the capacity of the project to meet the criteria. |
3 |
Satisfactory |
Response that largely covers the scheme's requirements Brief evidence given to support and demonstrate the capacity of the project to meet the criteria. |
4 |
Good |
Good evidence provided to demonstrate the capacity of the project to meet the criteria. |
5 |
Excellent |
Exceptional response that inspires confidence and indicates that a high level of commitment and benefits will be provided. Full and comprehensive evidence provided to demonstrate the capacity of the project to meet the criteria. |
All applications will be independently scored by two officers from Test Valley Borough Council. A Panel Report will be prepared for eligible applications and shared with REPF Grants Panel members. This will be presented at the next REPF panel meeting. Panel members will discuss each proposal, raise any queries or concerns, and make decisions. Where necessary, queries and concerns will be shared with the applicants and their answers will be fed back to the panel members so that a decision can be reached.
The Council may use discretion to award a different grant amount to that requested depending on the number of applications received and what it considers appropriate to enable the fund to support more community organisations.
7.Timeline
The funding is limited. The grant application window will close on 31 August 2024 or when the allocated budget has been awarded in full, whichever is sooner. Applications will be assessed at regular Panel meetings.
All REPF funding awards must be paid out by 31 March 2025.
8.Financial and approval requirements
Procurement of products and services must meet the following minimum procedures:
Value |
Minimum procedure |
Up to £2,499 |
Single quotation - Direct award |
£2,500-£25k |
Three written quotations or evidence of current market price from relevant suppliers of such goods, works and/or services  |
More than £25k |
Formal tender process |
Approval must be granted before expenditure is incurred; grants will not be paid for any expenditure incurred before the date of the Grant Offer letter.
Organisations must hold adequate Third-Party Public Liability Insurance, and Employers’ Liability Insurance if applicable. A current child protection and adult safeguarding policy will be required if the project will involve children or vulnerable adults. A copy of the organisation’s constitution will also be required.
You are responsible for arranging all relevant consents, permissions, exemptions and written advice needed. You will not be paid for any work undertaken without all the necessary consents and permissions being in place.
Grant monies are paid on receipt of an invoice and to the organisation’s bank account only, not to contractors or suppliers. Community grant claims can be submitted as soon as you have received an invoice for the goods or work.
An updated spend, output and outcome report, and a project narrative will be required quarterly.
All project expenditure must be auditable.
If your organisation is registered for VAT, you cannot claim the VAT element of any expenditure in your REPF grant claim. If your organisation is not VAT registered, you are entitled to claim against the gross cost. We may ask for evidence to support your VAT status.
9.Supporting information
Together with your application form, we will need:
- A copy of the organisation’s constitution or other governing document.
- A copy of the organisation’s child protection and/or adult safeguarding policies where the project will involve children and/or vulnerable adults.
- Any additional information you want to include to support your application.
- A copy of the most recent statement from the organisation’s bank account. The statement must be dated within two months of the application date and show the bank account name and organisation address.
- A copy of the most recent full statutory audited / unaudited accounts for the organisation, with any ring-fenced money identified, if applicable.
- Valid, detailed quotes or catalogue listings for the proposed expenditure. The number of quotations required will be determined by the value of the quotation as described in Section 8.
- Written confirmation from your landlord of permission to undertake the project (if applicable).
- A copy of your current lease if applicable. We normally expect a minimum of five years remaining.
Your personal information will be used only for the purposes of assessing your application. Information on the Council’s use of your data can be found here: GDPR Privacy Statement | Test Valley Borough Council.
10.Submitting your application
Applications must be made via the online application form found on this page. We can only accept digital copies.
Application form (docx, 515kb)
The guidance document should help you to complete the form; if you require any additional support, please contact pfunds@testvalley.gov.uk. Please email your completed form together with supporting documentation to pfunds@testvalley.gov.uk.
On submission of your application, you will receive an acknowledgement. Your application will be checked for eligibility and reviewed for completeness. You will be contacted if there are any outstanding queries. If eligible and complete, your proposal will be considered by the next Panel review meeting.
We will let you know the outcome of your application by email using the contact details that you have provided.
If your application is successful, we will send you a grant offer letter which details the agreed project and your ongoing obligations under the terms and conditions of the grant. If you want to accept the grant offer letter you must sign and return the declaration within 20 working days. If you do not accept your offer in this time period, it will be withdrawn.
If your application is unsuccessful, we will explain the reasons for this. There are no appeals rights for the grant; our decision is final.
[1] Any activity which may be construed as radicalising or encouraging people into terrorism must be reported. Should any allegation be received, or if the Council has reason to suspect noncompliance, the Council will investigate and may decide to cancel, modify or withdraw any offer or grant made to ensure compliance with the Counter-Terrorism and Security Act 2015.
The UK Shared Prosperity Fund is a central pillar of the UK government’s Levelling Up agenda and provides £2.6 billion of funding for local investment by March 2025. The Fund aims to improve pride in place and increase life chances across the UK investing in communities and place, supporting local business, and people and skills. For more information, visit https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/uk-shared-prosperity-fund-prospectus