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2021-12-31-accounts

MEARS FOUNDATION Annual Report 2021 "part ng£urb

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 1

Contents

Contents
Our Vision / Our Mission
Our guiding principles
2
3
Our activities 4
Strategy / Forward look
Operating environment
14
14
Grant strategy
Structure, Governance & Management
17
18
Financial review
Responsibilities of the trustees
Small company provisions
19
19
19
Accounting policies
Statement of fnancial activities
20
22
Balance sheet 23
Notes to the fnancial statements 24

The Mears Foundation is the independent, charitable arm of Mears Group plc.

Hello

The Mears Foundation is a grant-making trust. It seeks to harness the goodwill, talents and skills within Mears to raise money through charitable donations and fundraising activities. The income is then used to directly benefit the like-minded charities and good causes that provide practical support to vulnerable people and communities across the UK.

Registered Charity Number: 1134941 Company number 07021016

1390 Montpellier Court, Gloucester Business Park, Brockworth, Gloucester GL3 4AH

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Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 3

Our Vision

To see a world where everyone can be an active member of their local community so they can flourish and actively contribute to society.

Our uidin rinci les: g g p p

Our Mission

To empower and assist people so that they can develop their own skills and abilities to their maximum potential.

We work to improve the lives and life chances of the many groups and individuals that share our values. We provide opportunities and skills that enable them to become stronger and more self-reliant.

Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 5

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Our activities in 2021

The Foundation received 68 applications for support, all of which were acknowledged. The Foundation was pleased to award 58 grants to charities offering support to their communities, in addition to volunteer support by Mears staff.

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Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation

Herts Youn Homeless g

Hatfield

Herts Young Homeless offer many different services to support those facing difficult times at a young age. They offer the Homeless Hub, a front door to homeless prevention services in Hertfordshire, an outreach service for those 18 and over to provide mediation, health advice, and education.

How we are helping:

Mears Foundation are helping this amazing charity with their Live Life Project. This project is for young people who have experienced homelessness (e.g. sofa surfing or staying in temporary accommodation). The Foundation grant will cover the costs of running this project allowing a Live Life member who has reached out to Herts Young Homeless for regular support throughout the year, including transport to and from regular Live Life meetings, training, employment and social skills plus signposting to any other services such as mental health support or counselling.

The Foundation looks to build strong, long-term relationships with likeminded charities such as Herts Young Homeless ensuring support is available for those who need it the most.

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 9

Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

The Health and Wellness Hub

Motherwell

The Health and Wellness Hub is a community organisation in Motherwell that provides a range of health and wellbeing activities (including holistic therapies, classes -yoga, tai chi, Pilates, Zumba, chair-based exercise and peer support groups). In addition, the hub provides volunteering opportunities to our most vulnerable community members, including people with a long-term condition, those who are long-term unemployed, people with a disability and people with a mental health condition.

How we are helping:

The Mears Foundation has awarded a grant to The Health and Wellness Hub in Motherwell helping them to continue to offer services that alleviate social isolation and loneliness in their local community.

The befriending service has been a great lifeline for me and gives me contact with the outside world, it's been great receiving the calls but it would be nice to do something face to face with other people

In most cases, those accessing the hub live in areas of

deprivation and inequality including within the top 10-20% Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation (SIMD) Datazone categories.

With the grant the Hub will be able to fund their ‘Buddies’ project ensuring they can provide sufficient volunteers and telephone-based support to their service users, helping local people connect and transition back into wider group and community life after long periods of social isolation and exclusion due to Covid restrictions.

The project supported 35 local people who required befriending support (both directly at social distance and by telephone) regarding mental health and wellbeing. This service enabled people to take part in group activities, allowed others on low income to get involved, increased confidence and wellbeing and made those in the group feel valued and in a better position to seek training and employment opportunities. Plus signposting to any other services such as mental health support or counselling.

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Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation

The Curve Food Pantr y

Octavia Housing, RBKC & Hammersmith & Fulham support people affected by ill health, social isolation, low income or unemployment in Central and West London.

The charity delivers a young people’s programme which offers a wide range of innovative, inclusive and creative activities to provide opportunities for young people to try new activities in arts and digital media.

They also have an employment and training team who offer one to one information, advice and guidance to empower individuals to reach their goals, and to provide them with the tools and resources to successfully search, apply for and gain paid employment.

How we are helping:

The Mears Foundation has helped Octavia add to their services by awarding a grant that will be used to support those on low income and in food poverty. The stigma of using a traditional foodbank was proving a barrier to their residents accessing the very basic of needs – food.

The grant awarded by the Foundation will help Octavia to set up their own ‘Food Pantry’, giving a more dignified approach to accessing vital food items, offering residents more choice and value. They planned to use a space in their community centre which is at the heart of their community that has more than 2,000 Octavia residents, plus those of Hammersmith & Fulham.

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Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 13

Cleland Miners Boxing & Communit Club y

Motherwell

Cleland Miners Boxing Club is a boxing and community club for both male and females from the local area aged from age 8 to 40. The club currently opens three nights a week for training and keep fit classes, a dance class is also available one night a week. The club is run purely on a voluntary basis, with most of the coaches in 4 or 5 nights a week between 5pm – 10pm. The club feel that people should be able to train, keep fit, dance, and socialise without having to a pay a fee and therefore all classes are free. Anyone and everyone is welcome.

How we are helping:

The Mears Foundation saw a great opportunity to help a community in a deprived area, where community activity was difficult to come by. Joining forces with Mears supply chain and friend of the Foundation, CEF, we were able to make a difference to this community’s meeting place.

The Foundation instantly saw a great opportunity to involve CEF, electrical experts and one of Mears top suppliers, in helping this isolated community by getting involved in helping to update the clubs heating.

This has been such a heart-warming project to come through the Foundation. It's very difficult to understand how isolated a community can be where a village has very few facilities for the residents to get together. It was such an easy solution and one that will have a huge impact. ”

Heather Tyrer / General Manager / Mears Foundation

By working together, the Foundation and CEF donated 10 new efficient heaters. This allows the club to stay open during the colder months and encourages the communities to get involved, which combats social isolation.

14 Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation

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Strate / Forward look gy

Operating environment

2021 has been another challenging year for everyone. The COVID-19 pandemic continued to lead to unprecedented challenges faced by society, healthcare, food systems and the world of work.

In the UK, the success of the vaccination programme promises a better operating environment for 2022. However, the impact of last two years on the most vulnerable members of society will be felt for years to come.

1. Poverty in the following forms:

Food

Nearly 6 million adults and 1.7 million children were struggling to get enough food between September 2020 and February 2021, according to a report from the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs committee.

For the poorest in our society, up to 35% of disposable income will now be needed for food, compared to less than 9% for the more wealthy. This will increase reliance on cheap, highly processed, high fat, high sugar, high salt, and calorie-dense, unhealthy foods. Re-emerging problems of poor public health nutrition such as rickets and malnutrition in the elderly are also causes for concern.

Fuel

In the latest estimates, around 13% of households in England were classed as fuel poor, 25% in Scotland, 12% in Wales, and 18% in Northern Ireland.

Fuel poverty often leads to other problems. For example, cold homes can have negative impacts on both mental and physical health, potentially adding demand to the NHS and social care providers, and directly contributing towards excess winter deaths. Health impacts of cold homes include increased risk of heart attack or stroke, respiratory illnesses, poor diet due to heat or eat choices, mental health issues, and worsening or/slow recovery from existing conditions.

In general, fuel poverty relates to households that must spend a high proportion of their household income to keep their home at a reasonable temperature.

Fuel poverty is affected by three key factors: a household’s income, their fuel costs, and their energy consumption (which in turn can be affected by the energy efficiency of the dwelling).

Those most at risk of ill health from fuel poverty include children the elderly, and long-term sick and disabled people.

16 Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 17

Strate / Forward look gy

Digital

Digital poverty is the inability to interact with the online world fully, when, where, and how an individual needs to. It exacerbates and is exacerbated by other socio-economic, educational, racial, linguistic, gender, and health inequalities. It is both the product and the cause of other forms of socioeconomic disadvantage.

Over the past year and a half, the COVID-19 pandemic has irrevocably thrust digital poverty into the national spotlight, as many aspects of everyday life moved online to mitigate the spread of Coronavirus.

The pandemic crisis simultaneously exposed how much of our life has already been digitised, how damaging digital poverty can be for individuals and society, and the need to urgently plan for a future in which people are simply unable to participate in society without access to devices and data.

The Foundation will look to support programmes that help with Device and Connectivity (Affordability, Data, Infrastructure) Access (Accessibility, Availability) and Capability (Skills, Education and understanding).

2. Social Isolation and Loneliness

We all feel lonely at times – it’s a normal human emotion. We are biologically wired for social contact, and loneliness is our signal that we need more.

Most of us will experience loneliness at some point in our lives, regardless of age, circumstance, and background. We all experience loneliness differently.

Loneliness and social isolation have been linked to early deaths and an increased risk of heart disease, stroke, depression, cognitive decline and poor sleep. It’s as harmful to our health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day.

Social Isolation has also been found to cause several mental health issues including depression, anxiety, low self-esteem, sleep problems and increased stress.

People who feel lonely are more than twice as likely to develop Alzheimer’s (and other forms of dementia) than those who do not feel lonely.

The Foundation will support direct interventions focussed on helping people maintain existing relationships and develop new ones. This includes supporting group activities such as lunch clubs and walking groups, one-to-one approaches like befriending schemes, access to psychological support for people for whom loneliness is part of broader mental health issues as well as developing volunteering, including people who might not ordinarily volunteer, mobilising peer support, and intergenerational support in neighbourhoods.

Grant strategy

The Mears Foundation awards grants to projects in the UK only.

The Foundation exists to support the vulnerable in our communities by awarding grants to charities and projects who are offering people and those communities a lifeline.

The Foundation awards grants that are submitted /endorsed by a member of Mears Group plc workforce. The projects we look to support are ones that alleviate:

e Poverty in the following forms:

e Food

e Fuel

e Digital

e Social Isolation and Loneliness

Grant requests received and supported by a Mears Group plc employee are reviewed in March and September, and awarded in May and November annually.

Digital exclusion is a key driver of social isolation

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Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation

Structure, Governance and Mana ement g

The charity was incorporated on the 16 September 2009 and is controlled by its governing document, a deed of trust, and constitutes a limited company, limited by guarantee, as defined by the Companies Act 2006.

The Foundation is managed by its General Manager, Heather Tyrer, under the guidance of the Chair and the Board of Trustees.

Registered Office: 1390 Montpelier Court Gloucester Business Park Brockworth Gloucester GL3 4AH

Registered Charity Name: The Mears Foundation

Charity Number: 1134941

Company Number: 07021016 (England and Wales)

Bankers:

Chair:

Barclays Bank PLC 18 Southgate Street Gloucester GL1 2DH

Ms Christine Losecaat MBE

Company Secretary/Treasurer: Mrs Judith Herbert

Trustees:

Ms Karen Duncan

Effective 25/03/21 Ms Diana Green

Mr Patrick Grace

Mrs Judith Herbert

Ms Diane Keay

Mr Kevin Morrow

Ms Alison Wilkinson

Effective 25/05/21

Executive Staff: Heather Tyrer

Financial review

During the year, the charity raised funds in the amount of £124,085.

Heather Tyrer General manager

Responsibilities of the trustees

Small company provisions

This report has been prepared in accordance with the special provisions for small companies under Part 15 of the Companies Act 2006.

On Behalf of the Board:

Christine Losecaat mbe Chair

22nd February 2022

20 Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation

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Accountin olicies g p

Basis of accounting

The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention, as modified by the inclusion of current asset investments at market value, in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard for Smaller Entities (effective January 2015), the Companies Act 2006 and the recommendations in the Statement of Recommended Practice: Accounting by Charities (the SORP).

Incoming resources

Donations and gifts

All monetary donations and gifts are included in full in the statement of financial activities when receivable, provided that there are no donorimposed restrictions as to the timing of the related expenditure, in which case recognition is deferred until the pre-condition has been met.

Grants receivable

Revenue grants are credited as incoming resources when they are receivable provided conditions for receipt have been complied with, unless they relate to a specified future period, in which case they are deferred.

Grants for the purchase of fixed assets are credited to restricted incoming resources when receivable. Depreciation on the fixed assets purchased with such grants is charged against the restricted fund.

All other income is included in the statement of financial activities when received or when the charity is legally entitled to the income.

Fund accounting

Restricted funds are to be used for specified purposes laid down by the donor. Such purposes are within the overall aims of the organisation. Expenditure for those purposes is charged to the fund, together with a fair allocation of overheads and support costs.

Unrestricted funds are donations and other incoming resources received or generated for expenditure on the general objectives of the charity.

Designated funds are unrestricted funds which have been designated for specific purposes by the Trustees, for necessary work in connection with the ongoing provision of services yet fail to meet the stringent criteria of contractual obligation set out in FRS12 (Provisions, Contingent Liabilities and Contingent Assets).

Resources expended

Grants payable

Grants payable are accounted for in the period in which the performance conditions attaching to the grant payment are met or, where no performance conditions apply, when a legal or constructive obligation arises.

Other expenditure

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Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 23

Statement of financial activities

Unrestricted Unrestricted
Funds 2021 Funds 2020
Note £ £
Incoming resources
Voluntary income 1 81,401 9,466
Activities for generating funds 2 39,606 3,546
Incoming resources from
charitable activities 3 3,078 674
Total incoming resources 124,085 13,686
Resources expended
Cost of generating funds 7 2,638 1,057
Charitable activities 4 68,569 9,410
Salaries 8 36,028 7,665
Total resources expended 107,235 18,132
Net incoming resources for
the period 16,850 (4,446)
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds brought forward
34,201 38,647
Total funds carried forward 51,051 34,201

The Statement of Financial Activities includes all gains and losses in the year and therefore a statement of total recognised gains and losses has not been prepared.

All of the above amounts relate to continuing activities.

The accompanying accounting policies and notes form part of these financial statements.

Balance sheet

Unrestricted Unrestricted
Funds 2021 Funds 2020
Note £ £
Current assets
Cash at bank 62,079 35,601
Debtor – Mears Group match funding 22,292
84,371 35,601
Creditors: amounts falling due
within one year 9 (33,320) (1,400)
Net assets 51,051 34,201
Funds
General funds 51,051 34,201
Total funds 10 51,051 34,201

These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the special provisions for small companies under Part 15 of the Companies Act 2006 and with the Financial Reporting Standard for Smaller Entities (effective January 2015).

For the year ending 31 December 2021 the company was entitled to exemption from audit under section 477 of the Companies Act 2006 relating to small companies.

Trustee's responsibilities:

These financial statements were approved by the trustees and authorised for issue on 22nd February 2022 and are signed on their behalf by:

Christine Losecaat MBE

Chair

Judith Herbert

Treasurer

24 Mears Foundation Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021

Annual Report and Accounts for the year ending 31st December 2021 Mears Foundation 25

Notes to the financial statements

Total Funds Total Funds
2021 2020
£ £
1. Voluntary income
Donations 81,401 9,466
81,401 9,466
2. Incoming resources from activities
for generating funds
Funds raised for Mears Loneliness project 2,995
Amazon website link 5
Sponsored events 13,115 40
Mears fundays 1,480
Collections / rafes 25,006 511
39,606 3,546
3. Incoming resources from charitable activities
Gift aid 3,078 674
3,078 674
4. Costs of charitable activities by fund type
Mears Loneliness project 3,299
Auctions and rafes 206 167
Sponsored events 5,456 444
Mears fundays 279
Donations 62,628 5,500
68,569 9,410
Activities
undertaken
directly
Activities
undertaken
directly
Support
costs
Total Funds
2021
Total Funds
2020
£ £ £ £
5. Costs of
charitable activities
by activity type
Mears Loneliness project
3,299
Mears fundays 279 279
Auctions and rafes 206 206 167
Sponsored events 5,456 603 6,059 444
Donations 62,628 62,628 5,500
Direct costs 9,410 9,410 19,066
6. Governance costs
Governance costs were met by Mears Group PLC.
7. Analysis of support costs
Charity giving administration fee 1,008 257
Job advert fees 800
Staf expenses 992
Compliance fees 35
Merchandise 603
2,638 1,057
8. Staf costs and emoluments
Salaries 36,028 7,665
36,028 7,665
9. Creditors: Amounts falling due
within one year
Other creditors 33,359 1,400
33,359 1,400

10. Analysis of net assets between funds All funds are designated as general funds

For more information about the Mears Foundation please contact Heather Tyrer, General Manager on: heather.tyrer@mearsgroup.co.uk