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2023-04-30-accounts

Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd Trustees' Report and Accounts For the year ended 30 April 2023

Company No: 08494953 Charity Number: 1155032

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Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd

Trustees' Report and Accounts

Contents Page
Officers and Financial Advisors 3
Trustees' Report 4 - 10
Independent Examiners Report 11
Statement of Financial Activities 12
Balance sheet 13
Notes to the accounts 14 - 15

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Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd Officers and Financial Advisors

Trustees Abdulla Choudhury (Chairman)
Abdul Hamid
Muhammed Muhit Miah
Kerry Mannan
Charity No. 1155032
Registered Office 64 St Margarets Avenue
Luton
England
LU3 1PQ
Accountants MMK
960 Capability Green
Luton
LU1 3PE
Bankers Barclays Bank Plc

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TRUSTEES' ANNUAL REPORT

For the year ended 30[th] April 2023

The directors, who are the Trustees of the charitable company for the purposes of charity law, present their annual report and financial statements of YMO Trust for the year ended 30th April 2022. The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in note 1 to the accounts and comply with the charitable company's governing document, the Companies Act 2006, and charities regulations. Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice (SORP 2015), applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland published on 16 July 2014 (FRS102).

STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT

Governing document

YMO Trust is a company limited by guarantee, registered with Companies House on 18[th] April 2013, and registered as a charity with the Charity Commission in England and Wales on 5[th] Dec 2013. The Charity is governed by its Memorandum and Articles of Association as amended by special resolution registered at Companies House on 5[th] Dec 2013.

Recruitment and Appointment of Trustees

When it is necessary to appoint new Trustees, due to either a Trustee stepping down or a gap of expertise in the board is identified, recruitment will initially begin by an open call and through the networks of the Board and management team. Applicants will be reviewed by the Trustees and successful applicants will be invited to attend a Trustee meeting. Following this, on the provision that the Board are satisfied and the applicant still wishes to join the Trustee Board, they will be appointed.

No other person or external body is entitled to appoint any Trustees of the charity. There were no changes to the listed Trustees in the period.

Induction and training of Trustees

The charity provides new Trustees with an induction with the existing Trustees. No new Trustees have been appointed in the time period.

Trustees

The directors of the company are its Trustees for the purpose of the Charity Law and are referred to collectively as Trustees in this report.

The Trustees serving during the year and since the year-end were as follows:

Muhammed Muhit Miah Abdul Hamid Kerry Mannan Abdulla Choudhury

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Related party relationships

The Charity has considered the disclosure requirements of the SORP for related party relationships, and believes that there are no related party relationships other than the Trustees and their close connections. All related party transactions have been reported in the Notes to the financial statements.

Risk management

The Trustees have assessed the major risks to which the charity is exposed, and are satisfied that systems are in place to mitigate exposure to the major risks.

Remuneration of key management personnel

All Trustees provide their services on a voluntary basis.

Purposes and aims

1.TO ADVANCE EDUCATION AND WORK SKILLS FOR THE PUBLIC BENEFIT IN PARTICULAR BUT NOT EXCLUSIVELY OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN BANGLADESH. 2.THE PREVENTION OR RELIEF OF POVERTY FOR THE PUBLIC BENEFIT IN PARTICULAR BUT NOT EXCLUSIVELY OF YOUNG PEOPLE IN BANGLADESH.

3.TO PROVIDE OR ASSIST IN THE PROVISION OF FACILITIES IN THE INTERESTS OF SOCIAL WELFARE FOR RECREATION OR OTHER LEISURE TIME OCCUPATION OF INDIVIDUALS WHO HAVE NEED OF SUCH FACILITIES BY REASON OF THEIR YOUTH, AGE INFIRMITY OR DISABILITY, FINANCIAL HARDSHIP OR SOCIAL CIRCUMSTANCES WITH THE OBJECT OF IMPROVING THEIR CONDITIONS OF LIFE.

Principal activities of the charity

YMO Trust Ltd continued its current main strands of work.

  1. Provision of booster classes for children of an education age at two sites in Greater Sylhet continue for 98 children. The booster classes are additional early morning and evening classes for these children, to supplement their normal government schooling. The two locations are in the areas known as Jagannathpur and Gulapganj. The 98 children were originally selected from local government school registers by our admin staff employed in Bangladesh, following a predetermined criteria of poverty set-up by the Trustees. The government school registers would have shown that these children were either not able to pay for basic books and fees, as required in Bangladesh, even though these fees are small nominal amounts. Inevitably these children were/would have dropped out of school, due to living in poverty. The children and their families were identified by our admin staff in previous years and would have been interviewed to assess meeting our guidelines of poverty, and thus would have qualified for charitable support.

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The charity had set up at the two locations, facilities from where day to day extra activities of teaching and training are delivered. There is provision for teaching subjects such as English, Maths and IT, with a functional IT classroom set-up. The charity employs 5 teachers and 2 support/admin staff across these two locations. The two sites were selected for their known network connections with the Trustees here in the UK, and have the unmet need to help advance the education and welfare described in the principle activities as above;

  1. Provision for vocational training for young people in these two locations, to train and upskill people to help support local industry and provide a potential source of income for our recipients. Currently we have provided training in sewing skills and motor engineering. These vocational courses were determined from evaluation by local intelligence, gathered by our admin staff, and the courses are of a fixed duration for a selected number of people;

3) YMO had in 2022 entered into the Family Sponsorship Programme to experiment the viability and sustainability of such a project to evaluate and expand reach into impoverished families through network links. This is now into its second year and this in fact will continue into 2024. Due to local manpower it has been hard to identify and evaluate new families.

The previous two families known to the Trustees through local networks and links were quickly identified as test grounds for this type of sponsorship and Trustees Abdulla and Muhit came forward to sponsor these families. The situation remains the same for these families with rising costs to contend with. Summary for these are as below:

Family 1

Nasima Khatoum is a woman in her 60s living in the greater Sylhet district within a cheap housing estate. Her husband is now in his 70s and in need of kidney dialysis. She also lives with her older sister and elderly mother. She also supports her sister as she is visually impaired. Nasima works as a domestic help which barely gets her through the week and with mounting medical demands for both her husband and mother makes her a prime candidate for sponsorship support. Nasima has an older daughter but she has her own family and can on occasions support financially but this is no way significant nor consistent.

Nasima is known to YMO through family and friends. Risk Assessment:

Nasima’s is an identified case to receive sponsorship from a UK donor(s).

Nasima’s monthly needs financially have been worked out and assessed at around 23,000 taka,

around £230 per month which will enable medical and basic food provisions for her and the extended

family. This is equivalent to approximately £230 per month.

This assessment has been worked out using local expertise and direct contact with the family and the sponsor to ascertain the costs highlighted below.

The breakdown of costs UK equivalent per month are as follows which: Rent: £25

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Dialysis: £150 Medical Needs for mother: £25 Food Provisions: £30 Funding was initiated and will continue for an indefinite time until either individual or YMO deem it no longer necessary

Family 2:

The funding for Moneer Zaman will also continue into 2024. Moneer is a man aged 36 married with two children and is a guardian of his family and an extended family of approx 10 individuals. They all live in close

proximity dwellings and are currently struggling to make ends meet after the death of their father, an income earner. The needs of this family include basic subsistence, medical and educational needs. A planned sponsorship amount was evaluated for him at £1290 for the calendar year based on his needs for the family. YMO has thus made one transfer for this amount to Bangladesh for this payment to be made to Moneer Zaman to help him manage his costs for the year. Future funding for this individual will continue indefinitely and will continue for an indefinite time until either individual or YMO deem it no longer necessary

ACHIEVEMENTS AND PERFORMANCE: REVIEW OF ACTIVITIES

FOR THE YEAR Public benefit

The Trustees have referred to the guidance contained in the Charity Commission's general guidance on public benefit when reviewing the charity's aims and objectives and in planning its future activities. In particular, the trustees consider how planned activities will contribute to the aims and objectives that have been set.

The year focused on:

a. Bangladesh Flood Relief As the name states this was emergency funding that was raised

to help a

Remote Region with aid

b. The Koreem Mesab Project

This was an Initiative to commemorate the life of a community teacher in Luton Koreem Mesab. The aim was to raise funding to support 5 Orphans for 2 years at the Firduas Boarding School in

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Gambia. The Gambia was chosen as a result of the links with the Gambian community through this charity’s director Muhit Miah. This money would provide a full board for these 5 orphans. In addition funds were used to build a water well.

This was an initiative where a single donor from the community Dr. MF Suleman approached YMO to help facilitate a multipurpose building to allow needy people to access complementary services under one roof. This included a prayer facility, teaching and training facility to meet local needs, a free meal centre, respite for the elderly, medical centre and house orphans. Dr Suleman wanted YMO to help facilitate the project to include sourcing the land although he had already started that work and help procure the services using the YMO’s network in Sylhet, Bangladesh. It was hoped that the positive reputation of YMO would also ensure the project run as smoothly as possible as this was a long term commitment.

Overview:

SISC support ceased in 2022-23 due to local government involvement, which ultimately mean that SISC do not require the anticipated financial support going forward. YMO plans to divert and use the remaining funds appropriately into a similar project within the same district of Sylhet with another orphanage, which is currently being researched and evaluated for their needs

Funding raised in financial year ending 31st March 2023:

PROGRAMME OF ACTIVITY:

PLANS FOR FUTURE PERIODS

2023-2024 and onwards:

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FINANCIAL REVIEW

Financial performance and position

Total income for the year amounted to £36,617 (Donations for our regular courses amounted to £7,837 and monies raised through campaigns including Just giving was £28,780) and the total expenditure amounted to £36,433.

The Charity incurred a net profit for the year of £184. Details of charity’s financial results are shown in the Statement of Financial Activities.

Going Concern

The Trustees have considered the Charity's reserves and projected income and expenditure, and have the expectation that the charitable company has adequate resources to continue in operational existence for the foreseeable future. For this reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in preparing the financial statements.

Reserves Policy

The charity currently has a 3 year reserve. In the Trustees’ view, the reserves should provide the charity with adequate financial stability to meet the working capital requirements of the charitable work and the Trustees are confident that at this level they would be able to continue the current activities of the charity with a view of securing further future funds in 2023 for its principal activities.

The Trustees review the amount of reserves that are required to ensure that they are adequate to fulfil the charity’s continuing obligations on a yearly basis at their finance meeting. At the year end, the restricted funds balance was £50,848, which was primarily collected through the Just Giving platform, for transparency.

Of the £12,000 transferred to Bangladesh for the current period, all of the amount was unrestricted.

STATEMENT OF TRUSTEES RESPONSIBILITIES

Company and Charity Law requires the Trustees to prepare financial statements that give true and fair view of the state of affairs of the charity at the end of the financial year and of its surplus or deficit for the financial year. In doing so the trustees are required to:

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The Trustees are responsible for keeping proper accounting records which disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charity and to enable them to ensure that the financial statements 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.

The Trustees are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the charity and financial information included on the charity's website in accordance with legislation in the United Kingdom governing the preparation and dissemination of financial statements.

PREPARATION OF THE REPORT

In preparing this report, the Board of Trustees have taken advantage of the small companies exemptions provided by section 415A of the Companies Act 2006.

15 Mar 2024

This report was approved by the Board of Trustees on …………………………… and signed on their behalf by:

……………………………………………

Trustee Abdulla Choudhury

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Independent examiner’s report to the trustees of Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd For the year ended 30 April 2023

I report on the accounts of the company for the year ended 30 April 2023, which are set out on pages 12 to 15.

Respective responsibilities of trustees and examiner

The charity's trustees are responsible for the preparation of the accounts. The charity’s trustees consider that an audit is not required for this year under section 144 of the Charities Act 2011 (the Charities Act) and that an independent examination is needed.

It is my responsibility to:

Basis of independent examiner’s report

My examination was carried out in accordance with general Directions given by the Charity Commission. An examination includes a review of the accounting records kept by the charity and a comparison of the accounts presented with those records. It also includes consideration of any unusual items or disclosures in the accounts, and seeking explanations from the trustees concerning any such matters. The procedures undertaken do not provide all the evidence that would be required in an audit, and consequently no opinion is given as to whether the accounts present a ‘true and fair’ view and the report is limited to those matters set out in the statement below.

Independent examiner’s statement

In connection with my examination, no matter has come to my attention apart from the above

  1. which gives me reasonable cause to believe that in, any material respect, the requirements:

  2. to keep accounting records in accordance with section 130 of the Charities Act; and

  3. to prepare accounts which accord with the accounting records and comply with the accounting requirements of the Charities Act

have not been met; or

  1. to which, in my opinion, attention should be drawn in order to enable a proper understanding of the accounts to be reached.

Misbahul Karim FCCA

MMK Chartered Certified Accountants 15 George Street West Luton LU1 2BJ Date: 15 March 2024

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Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd Statement of Financial Activities For the year ended 30 April 2023

Notes
Incoming Resources
Grants & Donations
1
Total Incoming Resources
Resources Expended
Charitable activities
2
Governance cost
3
Total Resources Expended
Net incoming/ (outgoing
resources)
Reconciliation of Funds:
Total funds, brought forward
Total funds, carried forward
Unrestricted
Funds
£
7,837
7,837
12,548
600
13,148
(5,311)
26,020
20,709
Restricted
Funds
£
28,780
28,780
23,285
-
23,285
5,495
45,353
50,848
2023
£
36,617
36,617
35,833
600
36,433
184
71,373
71,557
2022
£
44,549
44,549
21,196
600
27,796
16,753
54,620
71,373

The notes on pages 14 to 15 form part of these accounts.

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Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd

Balance Sheet As At 30 April 2023

----- Start of picture text -----
Notes 2023 2022
£ £ £ £
Current Assets
Cash in hand and at Bank 74,705 73,908
74,705 73,908
Creditors
Amounts falling due within one
year 4 3,148 2,535
Net Current Assets 71,557 71,373
71,557 71,373
The Funds of the Charity
Restricted funds 20,709 26,020
Unrestricted funds 50,848 45,353
----- End of picture text -----

The Trustees (Directors) acknowledge their responsibilities for:

a) ensuring that the company keeps accounting records which comply with Sections 386 and 387 of the Companies Act 2006 and

b) preparing financial statements which give a true and fair view of the state of affairs of the company as at the end of each financial year and of its profit or loss for each financial year in accordance with the requirements of Section 394 and 395 which otherwise comply with the requirements of Companies Act 2006 relating to financial statements, so far as applicable to the company.

Approved by the board of Trustees on 15 March 2024 and signed on their behalf:

________Abdulla Choudhury (Chair of Trustees)

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Young Minds Organisation Trust Ltd Notes to the Accounts For the year ended 30 April 2023

1. Accounting Policies

1.1 Basis of Accounting

The financial statements have been prepared under the historical cost convention and in accordance with the applicable Accounting Standards , the Statement of Recommended Practice “Accounting and Reporting by Charities” published in March 2005 . The principal accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the financial statements are set out below.

1.2 Incoming Resources

Voluntary income and donations are included in incoming resources when they are receivable, except when the donors specify that they must be used in future accounting periods or donors’ conditions have not been fulfilled, then the income is deferred. The income from fundraising ventures is shown gross, with the associated costs included in fundraising costs.

1.3 Resources Expended

Resources expended are included in the Statement of Financial Activities on accruals basis, inclusive of any VAT that cannot be recovered.

Expenditure that is directly attributable to specific activities has been included in these cost categories. Where costs are attributable to more than one activity, they have been apportioned across the cost categories on a basis consistent with the use of those resources.

1.4 Going Concern Basis

The financial statements have been prepared on the going concern basis, as in the opinion of the director and trustees, there are no issues arising which would suggest any other basis as being more appropriate.

1. Grants and Donations

Donations
Other projects
4 Khalifas
Just Giving
Unrestricted
£
7,837
-
Restricted
£
-
2,625
10,000
16,155
2023
£
7,837
2,265
10,000
16,155
2022
£
13,232
-
-
31,317

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2. Cost of Charitable activities

2. Cost of Charitable activities
Cost directly allocated to activities:
Events and Activities - Bangladesh
Advertising and PR
Fund Raising Costs
Legal and Professional fees
3. Governance Cost
Accountancy fee
Restricted Unrestricted
12,000
500
-
48
Unrestricted
2023
£
35,285
500
-
48
2022
23,285
-
£
19,000
7,901
295
35,833 27,196
2023
£
600
600
2022
£
600
600
4. Creditors: amounts falling due within one year
Accruals
Qarde Hasana
999
2,149
3,148
386
2,149
2,535

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