OpenCharities

This text was generated using OCR and may contain errors. Check the original PDF to see the document submitted to the regulator.

2022-03-31-accounts

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Charity number 1139555

A company limited by guarantee number 07202588

Annual Report and Financial Statements

for the year ended 31 March 2022

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Annual Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 31 March 2022

Contents Page
Trustees' report 2 to 9
Examiner's report 10
Statement of financial activities 11
Balance sheet 12
Notes to the accounts 13 to 17

Prepared by West Yorkshire Community Accountancy Service CIO

1

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report for the year ended 31 March 2022

Reference and administrative details of the charity, its trustees and advisors

The trustees during the financial year and up to and including the date the report was approved were: Name Position Dates Eleanor Broadbent Miriam Moss Sarah Howells Treasurer Lindsay Britton-Robertson Laura Brown Rosemary Carr Grace Sumner Rosalind Weaver Alina Wahab Resigned September 2021 Charity number 1139555 Registered in England and Wales Company number 07202588 Registered in England and Wales Registered and principal address Bankers 7 Eastgate CAF Bank Shawbrook Bank Limited Leeds 25 Kings Hill Avenue Lutea House LS2 7LY Kings Hill, West Malling Warley Hill Business Park, The Drive Kent. ME19 4TA Great Warley, Brentwood Essex. CM13 3BE

Independent examiner Simon Bostrom FCIE West Yorkshire Community Accountancy Service CIO Stringer House 34 Lupton Street Leeds LS10 2QW

Structure, governance and management

SARSVL registered with Companies House as a Company Limited by Guarantee (Company Number: 7202588) on 25th March 2010 and with the Charity Commission (Registered Charity Number: 1139555) on 29th December 2010. SARSVL’s governing document is a Memorandum & Articles of Association.

Method of recruitment and appointment of trustees

The trustees of the charity are also the directors for the purposes of company law and are appointed by the members at the AGM.

Volunteers

Volunteers have been central to SARSVL’s history and development and are still involved in many aspects of the organisation, from membership of the Board of Trustees, to offering direct services to women and girls, to fundraising. We had six volunteer counsellors and 23 helpline volunteers during this period.

2

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Paid Staff

The staffing structure at 31 March 2022 consisted of:

Chief Executive Officer (CEO) – 35 hours per week (full-time)

ISVA (Independent Sexual Violence Advocacy) Service Manager – 35 hours per week

Counselling Service Manager – 35 hours per week

Senior Helpline Co-ordinator – 35 hours per week

Young Person’s ISVA – 35 hours per week

ISVA – 28 hours per week

Counsellor – 35 hours per week Counsellor – 10 hours per week

Objectives and activities

The charity's objects

SARSVL’s objects as set out in the Company’s Memorandum and Articles of Association are:

Aims

Objectives

SARSVL has the following objectives to achieve these aims by:

3

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Trustees' Statement

This year has seen SARSVL expand our current services alongside developing ideas and projects for new ones, to better meet the needs of all women and girls in Leeds who have experienced sexual violence or abuse of any kind at any time in their lives. We are excited to see these developments, and are keen to ensure that progress is reflective, steady and sustainable, so that service users from all backgrounds and experiences can see themselves represented and welcomed at SARSVL.

As we have completed the first year of our new 2021-26 Business Plan, we have implemented the staffing restructure, including the introduction of a Senior Team covering each key area of service delivery. Alongside this, we have appointed SARSVL's first CEO, who has settled really well into the role and into representing the organisation at a strategic level. Her oversight has also enabled the Board to take more of a step back from some of the operational running of SARSVL, and has allowed us to streamline Board meetings and reports to enable a focus on strategic and core developments at SARSVL. Our CEO has also led in much successful income generation and sourcing of new income streams, including the fantastic work of the whole staff and volunteer team on our very successful Big Give campaign for International Women’s Week.

The growing team of staff in the counselling and ISVA services has enabled us to support more service users through increased capacity, although as the counselling and ISVA service section of this report demonstrate, demand for SARSVL continues to be much higher than our resourcing to deliver. As Trustees, we wish to develop SARSVL's capacity in partnership with the full staff and volunteer team, ensuring sustainability of our services and a focus on staff and volunteer wellbeing. The commitment, innovation and enthusiasm of our staff and volunteers are greatly appreciated by the Board, and it is a privilege to work amongst such kind-hearted, dedicated, and highly skilled women.

Part of SARSVL's growth this year has been in extending the age range of our ISVA service to young girls from age 13+, including appointing our first Young Person's ISVA. This has been an exciting development not least because in Leeds there is little other specialist support available for children and young people who have experienced sexual violence, and demand is high. We are also in the process of researching and developing a piece of outreach work, to better understand the barriers to all women, particularly those who are street homeless or sex workers, from accessing our services, and what we can do to become more accessible and remove structural and individual barriers.

We have been delighted to join the Women's Lives Leeds alliance this year, and to continue to work in close partnership with the other specialist organisations who are members, and with our sister Rape Crisis centres across West Yorkshire. Since appointment of our new CEO, we’ve increased our presence across the sector and across the public sphere, through media appearances, social media activity (including our TikTok debut!) and participation in campaigns, as well lots of joint working.

We look forward to the opportunities the next year will bring, and to continuing to honour the survival, strength and courage of SARSVL's service users as we hold them and their rights at the heart of all we do.

Public benefit

How our activities deliver public benefit:

All our charitable activities focus on supporting and helping women and girls who have been affected by rape and/or other forms of sexual violence or abuse at any time in their lives, and are undertaken to further our charitable purposes for the public benefit.

Who used and benefited from our service:

In 2007, the Equality & Human Rights Commission (EHRC) and End Violence Against Women Coalition (EVAW) published the first Map of Gaps report. This study identified Leeds, the second largest district in England with a population of nearly 800,000, as one of the many areas with no specialist sexual violence provision for women and girls. SARSVL was originally set up to fill this gap.

4

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Public benefit (continued)

Who used and benefited from our service (continued):

This year our main charitable activities have been providing: independent specialist advocacy to women and girls aged 13+, including support through the criminal justice process; specialist counselling and therapeutic support to women aged 18+; specialist emotional support over the Freephone telephone, e-mail and text helpline for women and girls aged 13+. We continued to deliver all our main services throughout the COVID19 pandemic, remotely via video call or telephone where necessary and appropriate, then increasingly on an in-person basis, in keeping with Government guidance on infection control. We provided direct, specialist services to 817 individual women during the year.

Specialist Independent Sexual Violence Advocacy (ISVA) Service

The ISVA Service offers emotional and practical support to women and girls aged 13+ who are considering reporting, or who have reported sexual violence to the police. The support is in place for as long as the case remains in the criminal justice system, and this can mean that a client will remain within the Service for years, particularly where a case proceeds to a trial. The ISVA Service offers face-to-face and online meetings, and email and text support, with the ISVAs tailoring the support they offer to best meet clients’ needs.

The key developments for the ISVA Service this year were:

There was a high demand for the ISVA Service over the reporting period with 205 new referrals, of which 17 were under the age of 18. 256 women were supported over the year.

The ISVA Service has remained open throughout the year, but a waiting list was introduced in May 2021 to manage increased demand. All new referrals are triaged so that those women and girls in most need of ISVA support are prioritised. The ISVA Service Manager monitors the waiting list on a regular basis using the weekly team meetings to ascertain capacity – as one client is closed to the Service, another is brought in from the waiting list.

The ISVAs have worked exceptionally hard over the year, often supporting clients at high risk, or with complex needs.

Feedback from clients has been very positive:

“Other Services I accessed in the past didn't understand and I felt judged. I appreciate SARSVL's specialism in sexual violence. I really valued learning about the impacts of trauma. I don't think I could have got through everything without you.”

Specialist Counselling Service

During the course of the year, the Counselling Service has significantly increased its capacity from 37 client sessions to 55 client sessions per month. This has been achieved through the recruitment of a new full-time member of the paid staff team and four new volunteers (bring the total number of volunteers involved in delivery of the Service over the year to six). One of the part-time Counsellors, supporting the Counselling Service Manager, continues to facilitate the growth of the volunteer team and their clinical support and supervision.

5

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Specialist Counselling Service (continued)

Over the year, the Counselling Service has delivered 1,650 counselling sessions to 151 women. Demand for the service continues to be very high, and the length of the waiting list requires careful management. The number of women on the waiting list has averaged at 114 over the year, with an average wait of 102 days for assessment.

In May 2021, the team gradually moved back to a mixed delivery of in-person sessions and remote working. There continues to be clear benefits to clients of offering such flexibility.

A new system of managing the waiting list, by capping the number of external referrals taken per month, is enabling the waiting list to be open more and has also been welcomed by referrers.

A new counselling referral form, which captures significant detail around risk and complexity with which clients present at referral, has also been introduced. Data continues to illustrate the high levels of risk and complexity that the service is increasingly working with.

The Helpline and the Counselling Service have piloted a new initiative, whereby support calls provided by the Helpline have been offered to women who have referred themselves since January. The Counselling Service Manager and Senior Helpline Co-ordinator have worked together to plan and evaluate this new initiative.

Specialist Helpline Service (emotional support by Freephone telephone, text (SMS) and email)

The SARSVL Helpline this year has had 23 volunteers contributing to its operation over the financial year, with 15 active volunteers as of 31 March 2022. This year we have been able to support 410 individuals through 1,440 overall contacts by text, email and telephone.

In addition, this year the SARSVL Helpline has staffed three shifts per week on the national Rape Crisis England & Wales (RCEW) Live Chat emotional support service, receiving continually good feedback from RCEW and survivors.

The Helpline has seen some significant and exciting changes over this year. This includes changing our helpline age limit to 13+ and revamping our working with children guidelines, adding professional group external clinical supervision for helpline volunteers as part of our well-being offer to our wonderful volunteers, and a successful pilot of a waiting list call-back service to support the Counselling Service. These key changes have been made possible only by the efforts of all women involved in the helpline and their continuing commitment to SARSVL and their own reflective practice.

Plans for Future Activities

SARSVL’s future plans include:

6

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Plans for Future Activities (contined)

Financial review

SARSVL made a surplus of £52,736 in 2021-2022 (2021: a surplus of £129,989). Total income is comparable with 2020-21 and expenditure increased in line with plans to use the additional funding received from the West Yorkshire Combined Authority and continued added support from the Ministry of Justice to expand our key services in the year. Two new funding streams (one restricted and one unrestricted) came on line in March 2022.

In 2021-22 SARSVL’s unrestricted reserves increased by £17,329. During the year £25,000 was received from the People’s Postcode Lottery in March 2022 and will be used in 2022/23 to fund ongoing services. The rest of the surplus for the year relates to restricted funds and will be spent on our services in 2022-23.

Funding Sources

In 2021-22 SARSVL’s main sources of funding were:

Future plans

2021-22 is the first year of SARSVL’s new five-year business plan.

We continue to operate in a difficult and challenging environment, especially in terms of funding, along with other voluntary, community and social enterprise (VCSE) organisations. We have noticed an ongoing increase in competition for funding, which could have an impact on our future sustainability. The need for SARSVL’s specialist services continues to be reflected in the very high demand we experience from women and girls wanting to access them.

Notwithstanding the above SARSVL has been successful in early 2022-23 in applying for additional funding to sustain and expand our services, donations remain strong and our short/medium term financial position is robust. At the time of signing these accounts the charity has been impacted by the global COVID-19 virus. The trustees have reassessed the charity’s ability to continue for at least 12 months from the date that the accounts areapproved and conclude that no material uncertainties exist that cast significant doubt on the charity’s ability to continue as a going concern.

7

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Reserves policy

In considering the reserve requirements for SARSVL the Trustees have considered the needs of the women we work with, our legal obligations and identified risk to our income and expenditure.

As an organisation that provides services to vulnerable women and girls the trustees believe that a level of reserves should be maintained to ensure a stability and continuity of service provision and if required, a managed service closure, with time to enable alternative support provision to be arranged and all legal obligations covered. Trustees have reviewed the required level of reserves and in early 2022-23 updated their reserves policy as a result, taking account of recent financial history, the current financial situation of the charity and the broader current financial climate.

The charity's free reserves, excluding fixed assets, at the year end were £222,951.

Mindful of the challenging environment in which charities operate, and that monthly cash requirements are approximately £42,000, trustees feel that the right level of unrestricted reserves is between £150,000 and £200,000. Whilst free reserves were above this at 31 March 2022, the £25,000 received in March 2022 and the balance of funds from the Lloyds Foundation are designated to day to day operations in 2022/23. Excluding these funds, free reserves stand at £177,519 at 31 March 2022.

8

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL) Trustees' report (continued) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Statement of trustees' responsibilities

The trustees (who are also the directors for the purposes of company law) are responsible for preparing the Trustees report and the financial statements in accordance with the applicable law and UK Accounting Standards.

Company law requires the trustees to prepare financial accounts for each financial year which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charitable company and of the incoming resources and application of resources, including the income and expenditure, of the charitable company for the year. In preparing these financial statements, the trustees are required to:

prepare the accounts on a going concern basis unless it is inappropriate to presume that the charitable company will continue in operation.

The trustees are responsible for keeping proper accounting records which disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and to enable them to ensure that the financial accounts comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charity and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

This report has been prepared in accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice: Accounting and Reporting by Charities (Charities SORP (FRS102)), and in accordance with the special provisions of the Companies Act 2006 relating to small companies.

Signed on behalf of the board of trustees on 23/08/2022

Sarah Howells (Trustee)

9

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Independent examiner's report to the trustees of Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

I report to the charity trustees on my examination of the accounts of the charitable company for the year ended 31 March 2022, which are set out on pages 11 to 17.

Responsibilities and basis of report

As the charity's trustees of the charitable company (and also its directors 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 charitable company are not required to be audited 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 ('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 examiner's statement

Since the charitable company's gross income exceeded £250,000 your examiner must be a fellow of a body listed in section 145 of the 2011 Act.

I confirm that I am qualified to undertake the examination because I am a fellow of ACIE which is one of the listed bodies.

I have completed my examination. I confirm that no material matters have come to my attention in connection with the examination giving me cause to believe that in any material respect:

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.

Simon Bostrom FCIE

31/08/2022

West Yorkshire Community Accountancy Service CIO

Stringer House 34 Lupton Street Leeds LS10 2QW

10

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Statement of Financial Activities

(including summary income and expenditure account) for the year ended 31 March 2022

Notes
2022
Unrestricted
funds
£
Income from:
Grants and donations
(2)
70,125
Sales and fees
15,008
Other income
5
Total income
85,138
Expenditure on:
Staffing costs
(3)
43,830
Payroll and recruitment
-
Staff travel and training
216
Volunteers expenses
212
Rent, rates and utilities
16,079
Repairs, renewals and cleaning
220
Depreciation
-
Telephones, mobiles and internet
1,141
Website and IT
173
Equipment
257
Printing and publicity
100
Stationery, postage and books
27
Insurance
1,784
Freelance support
2,550
Professional fees, memberships and donations
375
Interpretation services
117
Refreshments
63
Cost of generating funds
324
Miscellaneous expenses
-
Trustee and governance costs
171
Independent examination
-
Monitoring and evaluation
(61)
Service user direct costs
27
HR support
-
Total expenditure
67,605
Net income / (expenditure)
17,533
Fund balances brought forward
205,418
Fund balances carried forward
(4)
222,951
2022
Restricted
funds
£
371,959
-
-
371,959
258,310
2,018
3,452
415
29,571
1,483
-
10,975
5,323
2,336
3,474
881
180
10,890
1,103
419
7
562
96
13
1,440
3,081
727
-
336,756
35,203
40,848
76,051
2022
Total
funds
£
442,084
15,008
5
457,097
302,140
2,018
3,668
627
45,650
1,703
-
12,116
5,496
2,593
3,574
908
1,964
13,440
1,478
536
70
886
96
184
1,440
3,020
754
-
404,361
52,736
246,266
299,002
2021
Total
funds
£
471,098
9,301
373
480,772
225,192
3,759
3,232
566
45,410
3,281
746
11,954
5,785
12,449
4,342
688
2,199
15,831
1,920
1,230
126
418
249
15
1,440
990
7,887
1,074
350,783
129,989
116,277
246,266

All incoming resources and resources expended derive from continuing activities.

11

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Balance sheet

as at 31 March 2022
2022
Unrestricted
£
Current assets
Debtors and prepayments
(5)
5,875
Cash at bank and in hand
(6)
227,955
Total current assets
233,830
Current liabilities:
amounts falling due within one year
Creditors and accruals
(7)
10,879
Total current liabilities
10,879
Net current assets / (liabilities)
222,951
Net assets
222,951
Funds
Unrestricted funds
222,951
Restricted funds
-
Total funds
222,951
2022
Restricted
£
42,988
32,964
75,952
(99)
(99)
76,051
76,051
-
76,051
76,051
2022
Total
£
48,863
260,919
309,782
10,780
10,780
299,002
299,002
222,951
76,051
299,002
2021
Total
£
46,182
202,492
248,674
2,408
2,408
246,266
246,266
205,418
40,848
246,266

For the year ending 31 March 2022 the charitable company was entitled to exemption from audit under section 477 of the Companies Act 2006 relating to small companies.

The members have not required the charitable company to obtain an audit of its accounts for the year in question in accordance with section 476. The trustees (who also the directors for the purposes of company law) acknowledge their responsibilities for complying with the requirements of the Act with respect to accounting records and the preparation of accounts.

These accounts have been prepared in accordance with the provisions applicable to companies subject to the small companies’ regime and with FRS 102 (effective January 2019).

The financial statements were approved by the board of trustees on 23/08/2022

Sarah Howells (Trustee)

12

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Notes to the accounts

for the year ended 31 March 2022

1 Accounting policies

Basis of accounting

These accounts have been prepared under the historical cost convention with items recognised at cost or transaction value unless otherwise stated in the relevant note(s) to these accounts. The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the Statement of Recommended Practice: Accounting and Reporting by Charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) (effective 1 January 2019) and with the Charities Act 2011.

The charity constitutes a public benefit entity as defined by FRS 102. There has been no change to the accounting policies since last year. No changes have been made to the accounts for previous years.

Going concern

The trustees are satisfied that there are no material uncertainties about the charity's ability to continue.

Incoming resources

All incoming resources are included in the Statement of Financial Activities (SOFA) when the charity becomes entitled to the resources, it is more likely than not that the trustees will receive the resources and the monetary value can be measured with sufficient reliability.

Grants and donations

Grants and donations are only included in the SOFA when the charity has unconditional entitlement to the resources.

Where grants are related to performance and specific deliverables, they are accounted for as the charity earns the right to consideration by its performance.

Expenditure and liabilities

Expenditure is recognised on an accrual basis as a liability is incurred. Liabilities are recognised where it is more likely than not that there is a legal or constructive obligation committing the charity to pay out the resources and the amount of the obligation can be measured with reasonable certainty.

Taxation

As a charity the organisation benefits from rates relief and is generally exempt from income tax and capital gains tax but not from VAT. Irrecoverable VAT is included in the cost of those items to which it relates.

Tangible fixed assets

Tangible fixed assets costing more than £1,000 are capitalised and included at cost including any incidental expenses of acquisition. Gifted assets are shown at the value to the charity on receipt. Depreciation is provided on all tangible fixed assets at rates calculated to write off the cost on a straight line basis over their expected useful economic lives as follows: Fixtures and Fittings: over 5 years IT equipment: over 3 years

Pensions

The charity operates a defined contribution scheme for the benefit of its employees. The costs of contributions are recognised in the year they are payable.

13

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Notes to the accounts continued

for the year ended 31 March 2022

1 Accounting policies continued

Fund accounting

Unrestricted funds are available for use at the discretion of the trustees in furtherance of the general objectives of the charity.

Restricted funds are subjected to restrictions on their expenditure imposed by the donor or through the terms of an appeal.

Further explanation of the nature and purpose of each fund is included in the notes to the accounts.

Leases

Rents under operating leases are charged on a straight line basis over the lease term or to an earlier date if the lease can be determined without financial penalty.

2 Grants and donations
Ministry of Justice
Peoples Postcode Lottery
The Big Give Trust
The Brook Trust
The Henry Smith Charity
The Pilgrim Trust
West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA)
Brelms Trust
Charities Aid Foundation (CAF)
Leeds City Council (LCC) Digital Inclusion
Lloyds Bank Foundation
MIND
NHS England
Donations
3 Staff costs and numbers
Gross salaries
Social security costs
Pensions
Redundancies
2022
Unrestricted
funds
£
-
25,000
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
45,125
70,125
2022
Restricted
funds
£
131,610
-
700
15,000
40,000
15,000
111,798
-
-
-
-
-
57,851
371,959
2022
Total
funds
£
131,610
25,000
700
15,000
40,000
15,000
111,798
-
-
-
-
-
-
102,976
442,084
2022
£
266,491
19,160
9,961
6,528
302,140
2021
Total
funds
£
163,981
-
-
15,000
40,000
15,000
73,169
4,680
8,755
1,000
58,892
40,847
4,000
45,774
471,098
2021
£
207,353
10,142
7,697
-
225,192

The average number of employees during the year was 11.9, being an average of 8.2 full time equivalent (2021: 10.5, 6.4 FTE). There were no employees with emoluments above £60,000.

Defined contribution pension scheme 2022 2021
£ £
Costs of the scheme to the charity for the year 9,961 7,697
Amount of any contributions outstanding at the year end 44 -

14

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Notes to the accounts continued

for the year ended 31 March 2022

Restricted funds
The Brook Trust
MIND
The Henry Smith Charity
Ministry of Justice
The Pilgrim Trust
WYCA
The Big Give
Balance b/f
£
2,725
10,123
28,000
-
-
-
-
40,848
Incoming
£
15,000
-
40,000
131,610
15,000
111,798
58,551
371,959
Outgoing
£
10,225
10,123
58,000
131,610
15,000
111,798
-
336,756
Transfers
£
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Balance c/f
£
7,500
-
10,000
-
-
-
58,551
76,051

4 Restricted funds

Fund name

Purpose of restriction

The Brook Trust MIND The Henry Smith Charity Ministry of Justice

The Pilgrim Trust WYCA

The Big Give

To support the counselling service. To fund a Coronavirus mental health response. For provision of a specialist counselling service.

Towards the provision of specialist support services for adult female victims of rape and sexual abuse.

For provision of a specialist counselling service. To provide emotional and practical support to victims of sexual violence. To provide additional support to SARSVL’s ISVA service.

Outreach and support work to extend delivery to women underserved by SARSVL services, specifically street homeless women and sex workers.

Debtors and prepayments
Debtors
Prepayments
Accrued income
Cash at bank and in hand
Cash at bank
Cash in hand
Creditors and accruals
Creditors
Accruals
2022
£
4,509
4,886
39,468
48,863
2022
£
260,785
134
260,919
2022
£
2,241
8,539
10,780
2021
£
31,422
14,760
-
46,182
2021
£
202,295
197
202,492
2021
£
80
2,328
2,408

5 Debtors and prepayments

6 Cash at bank and in hand

7 Creditors and accruals

15

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Notes to the accounts continued

for the year ended 31 March 2022

8 Related party transactions

Trustee expenses

During the year 1 trustee was paid a total of £3 in respect of travel (previous year: 2 trustees and £10).

Trustee remuneration and benefits

No trustee received any remuneration or benefit during this or the previous year.

Remuneration and benefits received by key management personnel

All the Trustees/Directors of the governing body are key personnel for the charity although they are unpaid. During 2021/22 the Charity completed a staffing restructure and recruited a CEO for the first time. The Charity classes all of its staff team as key personnel but for the purpose of this disclosure the charity has a small senior staff team comprising of a full time Senior Counsellor, full time Senior ISVA, full time Senior Helpline Co-Ordinator and a new full-time CEO.

The total employee benefits received were £167,875 (previous year: £151,637).

No trustee received any remuneration or benefit in this capacity during this or the previous year.

Other related party transactions

Other transactions with trustees or related parties

9
**10 **
Other transactions with trustees or related parties
Grace Sumner
Operating leases
Within one year
In the second to fifth years inclusive
Over five years from the balance sheet date
Tangible assets
Cost
£
At 1 April 2021
7,083
Additions / disposals
-
At 31 March 2022
7,083
Depreciation
At 1 April 2021
7,083
Charge for year
-
At 31 March 2022
7,083
Net book value
At 31 March 2022
-
At 31 March 2021
-
IT
equipment
Expected future minimum lease payments over the remaining life of the
lease, analysed into the period in which the commitment falls due:
Trustee
Contract for outreach
project work
Name of trustee
or related party
Relationship to
charity
Description of transaction
2022
£
1,250
1,250
2022
£
24,110
5,700
-
29,810
£
8,234
-
8,234
8,234
-
8,234
-
-
Fixtures &
Fittings
2021
£
-
-
2021
£
25,942
31,743
-
57,685
Total
£
15,317
-
15,317
15,317
-
15,317
-
-

16

Support After Rape and Sexual Violence Leeds (SARSVL)

Statement of Financial Activities including comparatives for all funds (including summary income and expenditure account) for the year ended 31 March 2022

2022
2021
Unrestricted Unrestricted
funds
funds
£
£
Income
Grants and donations
70,125
95,774
Sales and fees
15,008
9,301
Other income
5
373
Total income
85,138
105,448
Expenditure
Staffing costs
43,830
3,822
Payroll and recruitment
-
-
Staff travel and training
216
630
Volunteers expenses
212
-
Rent, rates and utilities
16,079
-
Repairs, renewals and cleaning
220
-
Depreciation
-
746
Telephones, mobiles and internet
1,141
375
Website and IT
173
-
Equipment
257
-
Printing and publicity
100
-
Stationery, postage and books
27
285
Insurance
1,784
-
Freelance support
2,550
795
Prof. fees, m.ships and donations
375
803
Interpretation services
117
-
Refreshments
63
-
Cost of generating funds
324
47
Miscellaneous expenses
-
180
Trustee and governance costs
171
-
Independent examination
-
360
Monitoring and evaluation
(61)
-
Service user direct costs
27
-
HR support
-
-
Total expenditure
67,605
8,043
Net income / (expenditure)
17,533
97,405
Fund balances brought forward
205,418
108,013
Fund balances carried forward
222,951
205,418
2022
Restricted
funds
£
371,959
-
-
371,959
258,310
2,018
3,452
415
29,571
1,483
-
10,975
5,323
2,336
3,474
881
180
10,890
1,103
419
7
562
96
13
1,440
3,081
727
-
336,756
35,203
40,848
76,051
2021
Restricted
funds
£
375,324
-
-
375,324
221,370
3,759
2,602
566
45,410
3,281
-
11,579
5,785
12,449
4,342
403
2,199
15,036
1,117
1,230
126
371
69
15
1,080
990
7,887
1,074
342,740
32,584
8,264
40,848
2022
Total
funds
£
442,084
15,008
5
457,097
302,140
2,018
3,668
627
45,650
1,703
-
12,116
5,496
2,593
3,574
908
1,964
13,440
1,478
536
70
886
96
184
1,440
3,020
754
-
404,361
52,736
246,266
299,002
2021
Total
funds
£
471,098
9,301
373
480,772
225,192
3,759
3,232
566
45,410
3,281
746
11,954
5,785
12,449
4,342
688
2,199
15,831
1,920
1,230
126
418
249
15
1,440
990
7,887
1,074
350,783
129,989
116,277
246,266

17