## **Kinder Mountain Rescue Team** 

## **Annual Report and Accounts** 

## **April 2024 - March 2025** 

## **I ntroduction** 

Welcome to the 2024 Annual Report for Kinder Mountain Rescue Team. If you have any comments or feedback please contact us. 

## **Contents** 

1. Legal and Administrative Information 

2.  About the team 

3.  Message from the Chair 

4.  Operational update 

5.  Financial summary 

6.  5-year plan and fundraising aspirations 

7.  How to contact, follow and support us 

8.  Appendices - financial data and independent examiners report 



## **1.  Legal and Administrative information** 

## **Current  Trustees** 

Chair: Alison Wild Secretary: Jim Harries Team Leader: Alan Howarth Deputy Team Leader: Dave Eustace Deputy Team Leader: Dan Heighway Treasurer: Dave Cotton Medical Officer: Oliver Pratt Equipment Officer: Rich Johnson Training Officer: James Lee Communications Officer: Karl Tiffany 

## **Charity Number:** 1115933 

**Company Number:** 5853040 

**Registered Office:** Coach House Farm, Castle Edge Road,  New Mills, HIGH PEAK, Derbyshire, SK22 4QF 

**Independent Examiner:** Vivien Cross, Vivien Cross Accountancy  Services, Bracken Clough, Start Lane, Whaley Bridge, Derbyshire, SK23 7BR 

**Bankers:** CAF Bank Limited 25 Kings Hill Avenue Kings  Hill, West Malling, Kent, ME19 4JQ 



## **2.  About the team** 

Kinder  Mountain  Rescue  Team  (KMRT)  (https://kmrt.org.uk)  was  established  in  1971.  Our  base  is  in Hayfield  in  the  High  Peak  and  we  operate  mostly  within  the  UK  Peak  District  National  Park  and  in  the rural  and  urban  areas  of  north  Derbyshire,  Macclesfield  and  Stockport.  We  also  support  wider  local and national emergency response as required. 

## **What we do** 

The  team’s  primary  objective  is  to  support  the  community  24/7/365  providing  specialist  search  and rescue at the request of the emergency services, including: 

1. Searching all terrains, urban and rural, for injured, lost or missing vulnerable people. 

2.  Provision  of  first  on  scene  casualty  care,  to  protect  life  and  to  prevent  any  deterioration  for the  casualty,  including  the  packaging  and  extraction  of  the  casualty  through  to  handover  to ambulance services. 

3.  Assisting  water  rescues  (rivers,  lakes,  reservoirs  and  floods),  response  to  bad  weather  (e.g. traffic  and  ambulance  assistance  in  snow)  and  multi-agency  major  incident  emergency responses  (e.g.  the  partial  collapse  of  the  Whaley  Bridge  reservoir  dam  wall  in  2019  and moorland fires). 

## **Emergency services we work with** 

KMRT  is  one  of  seven  teams  within  the  Peak  District  Mountain  Rescue  Organisation  (PDMRO)  under the umbrella of Mountain Rescue England and Wales (MREW). 

We  primarily  work  with  the  Derbyshire  Constabulary  but  are  also  called  to  assist  Greater  Manchester Police,  East  Midlands  Ambulance  Service  and  North  West  Ambulance  Service.  This  means  we  work frequently  with  several  Air  Ambulance  Organisations  including  UK  Search  and  Rescue  as  part  HM Coastguard as well as Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Rutland Air Ambulance. 



**Fundraising** 

KMRT  receives  no  funding  from  central  or  local  government  and  so  we  rely  entirely  on  fundraising activities,  donations  and  grants.  It  costs  approximately  £50,000  a  year  to  run  the  team  on  top  of which  we  have  to  fund  significant  projects,  for  example  the  purchase,  maintenance  and  development of our base, new and replacement vehicles and equipment. 

We  are  very  grateful  for  the  support  and  grants  from  several  organisations.  Over  the  last  few  years these  include:  New  Mills  &  District  Model  Railway  Society,  the  Macnair  Trust  of  Marple  and Mountain  Rescue  England  &  Wales  (3  new  vacuum  mattresses),  Rotary  Club  of  New  Mills  and  Marple district,  ITV  (through  QSP  ATF  Ltd)  for  the  use  of  our  rescue  vehicles  in  the  filming  of  “After  the Flood”  TV  Series  2,  Staffordshire  Freemasons  (Stretcher  wheels),  Marple  District  Rambling  Club, Trafford  Ramblers,  Big  Exposure  Printing,  St  Matthew’s  Church  Hayfield,  High  Peak  Borough  Council Councillors  Initiative  (rope  rescue  equipment,  new  laptop,  water  team  helmets  and  hill  party rucksacks),  Whaley  Bridge  Over  the  Road  Charity  Shop,  Visit  New  Mills,  Marple  District  Rambling Club,  St  George’s  Parish  Council,  SK6  Spinners  Cycling  Club,  2nd  Bramhall  Cubs,  New  Mills  Wives, Marple  100  club,  Bollington  Skyline  race,  Torr  Vale  Mills  Makers  Market,  Total  Energies  E&P charitable  fund,  Bramhall  Runners,  Sale  Walking  Group,  Hayfield  and  District  WI,  High  Lane  WI,  High Lane  Village  Hall  Community  Coffee  Team,  Green  Farm  Marquees, Derbyshire  Wildlife  Trust  (High Peak  Group),  the  Puttenham  Bonfire  Fund  and  the  family  and  friends  of  Neil  Broady  who  organised  a sale of his artworks following his recent sad death. 

We  would  also  like  to  thank  various  organisations  for  donations  received  in  return  for  team  members support  at  local  events,  for  example  New  Mills  and  Chapel-en-le  Frith  Town  Councils,  the  organisers of  Hayfield  Apple  Day,  Hayfield  Garden  Trail,  the  Mount  Famine  /  Mark  Boulton  Fell  Race,  the organisers  of  Hayfield  May  Queen,  Hayfield  PTA  (the  Chicken  run  fell  race),  Pennine  Fell  Runners,  The Strines  Nightingale  Festive  Fundraiser  (musicians  The  Hayes  Sisters,  Oli  Pratt  and  Dave  Haddon),  Just Giving (St Ann’s Hospice Christmas tree collection) and many others. 

We  are  indebted  to  supporters  who  make  donations  in  memory  of  friends  or  family  who  have  died, including  in  memory  of  Dilys  Riley,  John  Barton,  David  Cooper,  Elizabeth/Becky  Longden,  John Shuttleworth and David Johnson. 



In  the  2024-25  financial  year  we  received  significant  donations  from  the  estates  of  Joan  Gostick, Walter and Vera Chatterton and Christopher Martin. 

We  are  also  very  grateful  to  each  and  every  one  of  our  numerous  supporters  who  have  undertaken incredible  missions  and  projects  to  raise  money  for  the  team.  There  are  too  many  to  mention everyone,  but  these  include  Gill  and  Dave  Soulsby,  the  Hayfield  Craft  Group,  Sue  McCall  (Derbyshire Arts  Trail),  Henry  Walsh  (W3W  art  sales),  I’d  rather  be  Outdoors,  Stockport  MAD  band  (Ian Hendersen),  Millers  Refillers,  Dave  &  Ursula  (Peep  O’Day  parking),  Niall  Ibbotson  (ultra  marathon challenge,  Stockport  Ukelele  players,  Gamesley  Primary  School,  Ferodo’s  “Last  man  Standing” competition,  Sam  Dungey  (100  mile  Snowdonia  race),  Alex  Berry  (Highland  Trail  550),  Mike  Stretton and Deepan Subbiah (who ran the London Marathon). 

To  help  our  community  and  raise  additional  funds  through  donations  we  assist  at  various  community events such as: 

- Marshalling  and/or  providing  first  aid  at  fell  runs  (e.g.  Kinder  Downfall,  Kinder  Trog,  Mark Boulton Memorial Race); 

- Arranging our own annual fell race (Cracken Edge); 

- Helping  at  and  attending  various  local  events  such  as  New  Mills  fireworks,  Hayfield  May Queen, Hayfield Apple Day; 

- Helping  Just  Giving  with  the  organisation,  spreading  awareness  and  running  of  the  annual  St Ann’s  Hospice  Christmas  tree  collection,  which  raises  funds  for  St  Ann’s  Hospice,  Francis House Hospice and 10 other local charities including Kinder Mountain Rescue Team; 

- Providing  talks  and/or  first  aid  training  to  various  schools  and  groups,  including  Mellor  WI, Hayfield WI, High Lane WI and numerous others. 

## **The community we are here to help** 

Our base is in Hayfield, a large village at the foot of Kinder Scout in the Peak District, but our operational area covers not just Kinder Scout but a wider area including urban locations.  The map below shows our operational area and the location of our callouts over the last 10 years: 



A  lot  of  people  live  close  to  and  visit  our  patch.  The  Peak  District  is  the  most  visited  and  most accessible  National  Park  in  the  UK,  close  to  the  cities  of  Manchester,  Sheffield,  Nottingham  and Derby.  An  estimated  20  million  people  live  within  an  hour’s  drive  of  the  Peak  District  and  more  than 13 million people visit the Peak District National Park each year ( https://www.peakdistrict.gov.uk/learning-about/news/70-years-of-the-peak-district-national-park/p eak-district-facts). 

People  flock  to  Hayfield  every  weekend,  whatever  the  weather,  to  enjoy  Kinder  Scout  and  its foothills.  Our  ‘patch’  covers  the  Kinder  plateau  which  includes  a  popular  part  of  the  Pennine  Way, numerous  Instagram  advertised  attractions  such  as  Kinder  Downfall  (as  a  waterfall  and  for  its renowned  icicles  for  winter  climbing),  air  crash  sites  (at  least  6  sites  on  our  patch  with  memorials  or wreckage).  It  is  the  location  for  Duke  of  Edinburgh  excursions,  numerous  fell  runs  and  long-distance walks, and is very popular with mountain bikers. 

## **Our interaction with the community** 

We work with and support our local community wherever we can. 

- The  Team  regularly  attends  schools,  and  local  groups,  such  as  Scouts,  WI,  U3A,  and  sports clubs,  to  promote  the  work  of  the  team  and  discuss  safety  in  the  mountain  and  to  give  basic first aid training, particularly in CPR and defibrillators. 

- We support and assist at various community events (see fundraising above). 

- We  provide  help  in  bad  weather  including  supporting  the  police  when  people  are  stuck  in  the snow,  transporting  people  when  a  road  ambulance  cannot  reach  them,  and  we  took  some people to their Covid injections when the weather was bad. 



We  are  also  grateful  for  the  support  of  several  organisations  who  provide  KMRT  or  team  members with  highly  discounted  or  free  goods  and  services  or  give  us  priority.  There  are  too  many  to  mention all  of  them  but  these  include  Jane  Newman  Planning,  Pete  Bland  for  fell  race  numbers,  Hallam’s garage  in  Hayfield,  Aiguille  Equipment,  James  Alpes  (Vehicle  conversions),  Outdoor  Active,  Tameside and  Glossop  NHS  trust,  Vivien  Cross  Accountants,  Pyramid  Doors,  Bateson  Trailers  and  numerous businesses and pubs who have our collection boxes. 

## **Sustainability** 

As  an  outdoor  organisation  we  are  acutely  aware  of  the  challenges  presented  by  climate  change.  In line  with  the  Charity  Commission’s  guidance,  we  have  integrated  sustainability  into  the  operation  and 

management of the team. We have a published sustainability policy which focuses on four key areas: 

- Having sustainability at the heart of everything we do 

- Aiming for net zero carbon emissions as an organisation 

- Sustainable purchasing 

- Reduce, reuse, repair, recycle 

We  are  at  the  beginning  of  this  journey  and  there  are  many  challenges  ahead.  Some  key achievements so far have been: 

- The generation of a sustainability group and a sustainability policy 

- Including  sustainability  into  all  officers’  job  descriptions  to  ensure  that  it  is  considered  at  all decision points 

- Increased  reuse  and  recycling  of  equipment.  Avoidance  of  acquiring  new  kit  unless  there  is  a need – even if the kit is free 

- Change of electricity supplier to a 100% renewable supply 



## **3.  Message from the Chair** 

As  well  as  responding  to  callouts,  the  team  relies  on  additional  hours  from  many  operational members.  This  includes  vehicle  checks  and  maintenance,  re-supplying  casualty  care  stocks,  the upkeep  of  base,  planning  and  executing  training,  co-ordinating  with  other  teams,  bodies  and organisations  to  share  knowledge  and  best  practice  as  well  as  create  and  run  events,  co-ordinating and  attending  fundraising  events,  finding  and  making  grant  applications,  delivering  talks  to  and hosting  local  groups  to  share  what  we  do.  There  is  a  real  level  of  commitment  within  the  team  over and above helping our casualties on callouts. 

We  continue  to  use  part  of  the  New  Mills  Fire  Station  which  is  rented  from  Derbyshire  Fire  and Rescue  Service  and  we  are  grateful  for  this  space  to  store  all  our  water  kit  and  a  vehicle.  We  have spent  the  last  couple  of  years  trying  to  increase  the  size  of  our  Base  in  Hayfield  in  one  way  or  another and  after  going  through  the  pre-planning  process  we  are  exploring  whether  an  expansion  of  our current  location  may  be  possible.  Ideally  we  want  all  our  equipment  and  assets  central  to  Hayfield where  we  deploy  from  for  the  majority  of  our  callouts.  This  would  give  us  security  and  peace  of mind  that  we  can  continue  to  operate  quickly  and  efficiently  and  have  the  space  to  train  and  meet with our 50+ team members. 

Without  the  continued  generosity  of  the  public,  and  those  people  and  organisations  who  value  our work,  we  would  struggle  to  finance  the  ongoing  needs  of  the  team,  we  would  be  unable  to  keep  up with  developments  in  techniques,  equipment,  and  be  unable  to  meet  the  expectations  of  the  people we  rescue.  On  behalf  of  the  Team  Members  and  the  people  we  have  to  rescue  in  the  future  I  would like to say thank you to everyone who has given us a donation of any size. 

We  would  also  like  to  thank  our  neighbouring  Mountain  Rescue  teams  who  respond  when  we  need extra  personnel  to  assist  with  search  and  recovery,  particularly  including  the  Teams  at  Glossop, Buxton  and  Edale.  For  our  members  to  respond  to  callouts  we  rely  on  the  continued  support  of  their employers.  We  give  our  thanks  to  those  businesses  for  granting  this  time  and  adapting  to  the inconvenience  this  can  create.  Finally,  thanks  to  the  families  of  the  Team  Members  who  are  probably the  greatest  to  be  affected,  not  only  the  time  for  training,  meetings  and  call  outs,  managing  to  deal with  wet  and  muddy  kit,  as  well  as  the  call  out  alerts  going  off  in  the  night,  during  dinner  and  on birthdays. 

Alison Wild, Chair 

## **4.  Operational update** 

2024  –  25  has  been  a  very  busy  year  for  the  team,  with  79  incidents  and  was  our  busiest  year  ever. The  team  has  had  to  contend  with  a  higher  than  usual  number  of  incidents  in  addition  to  the challenging  nature  of  some  of  these  callouts.  There  have  been  some  exceptionally  difficult  and emotionally draining incidents for the team. 

## **Callouts April 2024 – March 2025** 



## **Callouts per calendar year** 

The  team’s  principal  response  area  covers  the  western  and  southern  areas  of  Kinder  Scout,  which  is the  highest  point  in  the  Peak  District  National  Park.  This  is  one  of  the  busiest  National  Parks  in  the country,  mainly  due  to  its  proximity  and  ease  of  access  from  both  the  Manchester  and  Sheffield areas. 



Kinder  Scout  is  a  large  area  which  is  notoriously  difficult  to  navigate  in  poor  conditions.  Visitors  are regularly caught out by the severity of the conditions and the featureless nature of higher areas. 

Almost  half  of  our  callouts  are  for  lost  /  benighted  and  injured  walkers,  which  reflects  the  terrain  the team covers. 

In 2024 the Team was made up of 53 members: 

|Role|Number|
|---|---|
|Hill members|42|
|Probationary members|0|
|Operation support & drivers|4|
|Non-operational members|7|



Many team members take on additional roles which require extra hours of training: 

|Role|Number|
|---|---|
|Off-Road Trained Drivers|23|
|Off-Road Driving Instructor|4|
|Water Team, Swift Water Rescue Technicians (DEFRA MOD3)|10|
|MREW Casualty Care Qualification|24|
|Rope Rescue Instructors|2|





The  team  also  deals  with  a  range  of  requests  for  our  assistance  including  attending  flooding  incidents and searches for missing vulnerable people. 

Many  team  members  committed  significantly  more  time  than  this  for  no  financial  reward,  often  in addition to their full time paid employment and family commitments. 

Our  training  programme  is  key  to  being  a  successful  mountain  rescue  team,  so  we  are  also  ready  to respond to a request for help in a search and rescue operation. 

All team members are expected to attend a high percentage of our standard training which covers casualty care and mountain rescue skills every month, supplemented by monthly weekend exercises where we put this into practice and carry out exercises covering subjects such as rope rescue incidents, missing walkers on Kinder Scout, high risk missing vulnerable person searches and the like.In addition to this standard training, we must also carry out specialist training depending on our own individual specialist areas such as working with helicopters, off road driving skills, water rescue skills, search management planning skills, IT skills, leadership skills and much more. 

The Team Leader is supported by two deputy team leaders and six assistant team leaders, all of whom are skilled and trained to a level where they can take a request for help and run a callout from start to finish.  The team is fortunate to have such a group of dedicated leaders. 

The  other  aspect  of  our  operational  work  are  the  meetings  and  liaison  groups  with  colleagues  in other  mountain  rescue  teams  in  both  the  Peak  District  and  the  Greater  Manchester  areas.  The  work that  quietly  goes  on  in  the  background  with  the  statutory  services  ensures  that  we  have exceptionally  good  working  relationships  with  a  vast  array  of  partners  including  Derbyshire  Police, Greater  Manchester  Police,  Cheshire  Police,  East  Midlands  Ambulance  service,  North  West Ambulance  Service,  Derbyshire  Fire  &  Rescue  Service,  Greater  Manchester  Fire  &  Rescue  Service,  HM Coastguard Rescue and various Air Ambulance charities. 

My  thanks  go  to  every  team  member,  their  families,  their  employers  and  every  single  person  who supports  us  in  the  work  that  we  do.  Without  you  all  supporting  us,  we  could  not  respond  to  requests for  help  from  those  who  need  our  help  within  our  local  communities  or  all  those  who  visit  our  area. Thank you. 

Alan Howarth, Team Leader 



## **5.  Financial summary** 

The  team  has  had  another  successful  financial  year,  during  which  we  have  again  benefitted  from several  legacies  and  donations,  and  also  continued  investments  to  maintain  and  improve  our  Search and  Rescue  capabilities,  specifically  the  purchase  and  conversion  of  two  replacement  Landrover Defenders, and purchases of a new Bell rescue stretcher and vacuum body splints. 

Income  for  the  year  was  £106,936  and  expenditure  was  £105,568.  So  we  have  received  a  net  cash income  of  £1,368  over  the  year.  The  balance  of  funds  at  the  end  of  the  year  was  £373,830,  £228,970 of  this  as  cash  in  the  bank  and  at  hand.  This  means  we  retain  £163,970  over  our  fixed  reserve  of £65,000,  which  ensures  we  retain  sufficient  funds  to  cover  one  year’s  running  costs  or  any  uninsured events that would severely impact our operational capability. 

We  have  policies  in  place  for  Financial  Controls  and  Financial  Governance.  These  are  reviewed annually  to  ensure  the  trustees  meet  their  obligations  for  responsible  management  of  KMRT’s financial  resources  and  that  KMRT  finances  are  managed  in  accordance  with  UK  regulations governing  charities  and  companies.  We  have  buildings  and  contents  insurance  cover  for  both  the main  base  at  Hayfield,  and  our  additional  storage  space  at  New  Mills  Fire  Station. We  keep  our  cash balance  across several  different  banks  to  ensure  all  our  funds  are  covered  by  the  Financial  Services Compensation Scheme. 

That  we  have  had  a  good  financial  year  is  once  again  primarily  due  to  the  continuing  efforts  of  the fundraising  team,  Pete  and  Amanda,  who  have  successfully  found  several  lucrative  sources  of  grants and  funding.  Our  thanks  go  to  all  members  of  the  team  and  our  to  our  wonderful  supporters  who have  rallied  round  and  supported  us  through  a  number  of  imaginative  fundraising  activities.  We  have listed  major  supporters  of  the  team  earlier,  so  will  not  repeat  them  here,  but  again,  thanks  to  each and everyone of you however large or small your donation. 

Major  items  of  expenditure  in  the  year  include  £71,819  on  our  rescue  vehicles  (including  £63,362  on a  replacement  vehicle  with  the  parts  needed  for  the  conversion);  £9,655  on  equipment;  £4,100  on communications;  £4,676  on  premises;  £3,378  on  training;  £2,6142  on  insurance;  £2,049  on  medical supplies, and £1,350 on fundraising. 

Dave Cotton, Treasurer 



## **6.  5 year plan and fundraising aspirations** 

The  Trustees  and  Leadership  have  introduced  financial  budgets  for  the  various  aspects  of  the  Team  to allow us to foresee and better plan for financial challenges the Team routinely faces. 

Over  the  last  few  years  they  have  also  implemented  robust  organisational  processes  to  continue  our mission  to  have  the  highest  levels  of  professionalism  across  all  our  operations  and  activities  and  in our financial controls and governance.  This includes: 

- having  a  robust  business  case  and  plan  for  all  projects,  to  ensure  we  fully  assess  what  we  are allocating  funds  to,  the  reasons  for  the  need,  why  the  project  is  an  appropriate  response  to the need and research into the quality and price of alternative solutions. 

- Taking  into  account  our  risk  management  and  health  &  safety  policies  in  all  decisions  we make. 

Based  on  this  forward  look,  we  maintain  a  rolling  five-year  expenditure  plan,  which  includes  all routine  running  costs,  training  costs,  and  maintenance  and  renewal  of  team  equipment  and  personal issue  kit.  Increased  inflation  is  an  important  factor  which  will  increase  costs  on  all  aspects  of  our operations,  and  we  have  included  inflation  forecasts  into  our  forward  look  and  have  taken  action  to mitigate the impact by moving some funds into restricted access higher interest earning accounts. 

Major  items  of  expenditure  for  the  next  5  years  include  a  further  replacement  of  one  of  the  team’s rescue  vehicles,  renewal  of  clothing  for  our  hill  party  team  members  and  replacement  defibrillators. These costs are in addition to the projected £50,000 “normal” annual cost of running the team. 

## **7.  How to contact, follow and support us** 

If you would like to know more about us and follow us, we have a website and an Instagram, Facebook and Twitter page: 

https://kmrt.org.uk/ 

https://www.instagram.com/kinder_mrt/ 

https://www.facebook.com/KinderMountainRescueTeam/ 

https://twitter.com/_KMRT 

You can also view our popular callout videos on YouTube: 

https://www.youtube.com/user/alanhowarth1/videos 

If you would like to help raise money for us or donate we have a JustGiving page: 

https://www.justgiving.com/kmrt 



If you prefer to donate directly this can be done to the following bank details. 

Account name - Kinder Mountain Rescue Team 

Sort Code - 40-52-40 

Account Number 00028522 

Bank: CAF Bank Ltd, 25 Kings Hill Avenue, Kings Hill, West Malling, Kent ME19 4JQ 

Or through PayPal with this QR code: 

If you have further questions or specific queries please email the Team Secretary at secretary@kmrt.org.uk  who will forward your email  to the most appropriate team member. 

REMEMBER – IF IN DIFFICULTY ON THE HILL OR ELSEWHERE – CALL THE POLICE ON 999 OR 112, AND EXPLAIN THE SITUATION. THEY WILL TASK MOUNTAIN RESCUE. 



# **8.  Appendices - financial data and independent examiners report** 



**A - Financial Report - Statement of Financial Activities** 



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KINDER

|**Kinder Mountain Rescue Team**|**Kinder Mountain Rescue Team**|**Charity No**|**1115933**|**1115933**||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|||**Company**<br>**No**|**5853040**|||
|Annualaccountsforthe period||||||
|Period start date|**01/03/2024**|**To**|Period end<br>date|**28/02/2025**||



## **Section A   Statement of financial activities (including summary income and expenditure account)** 

|**Expenditure (Notes 6)**<br>**Expenditure on:**<br>Tax payable<br>Net gains/(losses) on<br>investments<br>**Extraordinary items**<br>Other gains/(losses)<br>**_Reconciliation of_**<br>**_funds:_**<br>Raising funds<br>Separate material item of income<br>Other<br>Other<br>**_Total_**<br>**Recommended categories by activity**<br>**Income (Note 3)**<br>**Income and endowments from:**<br>Donations and legacies<br>Investments<br>Charitable activities<br>Other trading activities<br>Gains and losses on revaluation of fixed assets for the<br>charity’s own use<br>Charitable activities<br>Separate material expense item<br>**_Total funds carried forward_**<br>**_Total_**<br>**Net income/(expenditure) after tax**<br>**before investment gains/(losses)**<br>**Net income/(expenditure)**<br>**Transfers between funds**<br>**_Net movement in funds_**<br>Total funds brought forward<br>**Other recognised** **gains/(losses):**<br>**Net income/(expenditure) before tax for**<br>**the reporting period**|**Unrestricted**<br>**funds**<br>**Restricted**<br>**income**<br>**funds**<br>**Endowment**<br>**funds**<br>**Total funds**<br>**Prior year**<br>**funds**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>F01<br>F02<br>F03<br>F04<br>F05|**Unrestricted**<br>**funds**<br>**Restricted**<br>**income**<br>**funds**<br>**Endowment**<br>**funds**<br>**Total funds**<br>**Prior year**<br>**funds**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>F01<br>F02<br>F03<br>F04<br>F05|**Unrestricted**<br>**funds**<br>**Restricted**<br>**income**<br>**funds**<br>**Endowment**<br>**funds**<br>**Total funds**<br>**Prior year**<br>**funds**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>F01<br>F02<br>F03<br>F04<br>F05|**Unrestricted**<br>**funds**<br>**Restricted**<br>**income**<br>**funds**<br>**Endowment**<br>**funds**<br>**Total funds**<br>**Prior year**<br>**funds**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>F01<br>F02<br>F03<br>F04<br>F05|**Unrestricted**<br>**funds**<br>**Restricted**<br>**income**<br>**funds**<br>**Endowment**<br>**funds**<br>**Total funds**<br>**Prior year**<br>**funds**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>**£**<br>F01<br>F02<br>F03<br>F04<br>F05|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
||59 090|1500|-|60 590|48 316|
||-|-|-|-|-|
||-|-|-|-|-|
||7 452|-|-|7 452|5 359|
||18 894|-|-|18 894|13 645|
||20 000|-|-|20 000|-|
||105 436|1 500|-|106 936|67 320|
|||||||
||1350|-|-|1350|745|
||102 719|1500|-|104 219|49 879|
|||||||
||-|-|-|-|-|
||104 068|1 500|-|105 568|50 624|
|||||||
||1 368|-|-|1 368|16 696|
||-|-|-|-|-|
||1 368|-|-|1 368|16 696|
||-|-|-|-|-|
||1 368|-|-|1 368|16 696|
||-|-|-|-||
||-|-|-|-|-|
|||||||
||-|-|-|-|-|
||-|-|-|-|-|
||1368|-|-|1368|16 696|
|||||||
||372 462|-|-|372 462|355 766|
||373 830|-|-|373 830|372 462|





## **Independent examiner's report** FOR ENGLAND AND WALES **on the accounts** Ra AoWal ~~ee~~ **Section A                        Independent Examiner’s Report** 

|**Report to the**<br>**trustees/directors/**<br>**members of**|Charity Name<br>Kinder Mountain Rescue team||
|---|---|---|
||||
|**On accounts for the year**<br>**ended**|28 February 2025||
||||
||**Charity no.:**<br>111593<br>Company no.:|5853040|
||||
|**Set out on pages**|Trustees Report, SOFA, Balance Sheet, Related Notes<br>(remember  to include the page numbers of additional sheets)||
||I report to the charity trustees on my examination of the accounts of the||
||Company for the year ended 28/02/2025.||
|**Responsibilities and**|As the charity’s trustees of the Company (who are also the directors of the||
|**basis of report**|company for the purposes of company law), you are responsible for the||
||preparation of the accounts in accordance with the requirements of the||
||Companies Act 2006 (“the 2006 Act”).||
||Having satisfied myself that the accounts of the Company are not required||
||to be audited for this year under Part 16 of the 2006 Act and are eligible for||
||independent examination, I report in respect of my examination of your||
||charity’s accounts as carried out under section 145 of the Charities Act 2011|charity’s accounts as carried out under section 145 of the Charities Act 2011|
||(“the 2011 Act”).  In carrying out my examination, I have followed the||
||Directions given by the Charity Commission (under section 145(5)(b) of the||
||2011 Act.||
|**Independent**<br>**examiner's statement**|[The company’s gross income exceeded £250,000 and I am qualified to<br>undertake the examination by being a qualified member of [insert name of||
||applicable listed body]]. Delete [  ] if not applicable.||
||I have completed my examination. I confirm that no material matters have||
||come to my attention (other than that disclosed below *) which gives me||
||cause to believe that:||
||• accounting records were not kept in accordance with section 386 of the||
||Companies Act 2006; or||
||• the accounts do not accord with such records; or||
||• the accounts do not comply with relevant accounting requirements under||
||section 396 of the Companies Act 2006 other than any requirement that the||
||accounts give a ‘true and fair’ view which is not a matter considered as part||
||of an independent examination; or||
||•the accounts have not been prepared in accordance with the Charities||
||SORP (FRS102).||



**October 2018** 

1 

**IER** 



I have no concerns and have come across no other matters in connection with the examination to which attention should be drawn in this report in order to enable a proper understanding of the accounts to be reached. 

* _Please delete the words in the brackets if they do not apply._ 

**Date:** 28/07/2025 **Signed:** ~~—~~ **Name:** Vivien Cross **Relevant professional** FCA **qualification(s) or body (if any):** ~~oe~~ **Address:** Bracken Clough, Start Lane, Whaley Bridge, SK23 7BR **Section B                           Disclosure** ~~es~~ Only complete if the examiner needs to highlight material matters of concern (see CC32, Independent examination of charity accounts: directions and guidance for examiners). **Give here brief details of any items that the examiner wishes to disclose** . 

**October 2018** 

2 

**IER** 



IER
October 2018