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2022-10-31-accounts

RG Spaces

Trustees’ Annual Report & Financial Statements

for the year

1 November 2021 to 31 October 2022

Trustees’ Annual Report for the year ended 31 October 2022

Reference and administrative information

The name of the charity: RG Spaces

Other names by which the charity makes itself known: rgspaces

Charity Commission number: 1160023

The address of the registered offices of the charity: 33 Alexandra Rd, Reading RG1 5PG

The names of the charity’s trustees:

Jenny Halstead Annette Haworth Paul Johnson Adam Koszary Mark Stanley

Bank: Barclays, Broad Street, Reading

Insurance: Zurich

Structure, Governance and Management

The nature of the governing document: Constitution

How the charity is constituted: as a Charitable Incorporated Organisation (CIO)

Methods for new trustee recruitment: personal knowledge of relevant professionals

Methods for new trustee appointment: by trustees as laid down in the Constitution.

Public Benefit Statement

The Trustees confirm that they have complied with their duty under section 4(6) of the Charities Act 2006 to have due regard to the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit and that the public benefit requirement has informed the activities of the charity in the year covered by this report.

Risks

Trustees are confident that financial risk is insignificant due to their reserves policy, and that choice of

projects to support, and their subsequent management through the Board, will result in the effective and efficient use of resources.

Strategy

The Trustees have adopted a strategy of seeking projects which can be worked on jointly with other local organisations having similar cultural and/or heritage interests. The Trustees’ Board acts as Project Board where RG Spaces takes the lead management role in any project.

Trustees

Induction: Potential new trustees will be invited to meet with trustees and to attend Board meetings. All the Charity’s policies are made available and activities described through the website, together with reference to the Charity Commission’s ‘The Essential Trustee’ documentation.

Training: A Trustee/Volunteer actively monitors the charity press and Charity Commission communications. Relevant local training opportunities are monitored mainly through subscribing to Reading Voluntary Action newsletters.

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Objectives

Activities

Activity began to pick up this year after 2 years of pandemic-induced restrictions, though some events such as the University’s community festival are not due to restart until 2023. The info tricycle attended a few events, we were able to liaise with and subsequently give grants to three community organisations and the Really Local Company and a volunteer has been involved with enhancing a website for a community space.

Trustees transacted business mainly via email this year.

Summary of activities (a) (b) (c)
Grant giving
Website support

Activity for 2023

We will:

Charitable activities in 2021-2022

Grants – we gave a grant for a bench in a community garden, incorporating steel from the now demolished gasometer which had become an icon of the Newtown area and wood from a large cedar tree within the nearby Reading Old Cemetery. We supported the purchase of two hanging systems, in the Progress Theatre and the recently opened Biscuit Factory community space, and gave a grant for the a small publicly accessible garden space in front of the Grade II listed St Luke’s Church.

Huntley and Palmers bicentennial celebrations: – the info tricycle in biscuit-tin livery took part in some events: Joseph Huntley blue plaque unveiling, Museum of English Rural Life ‘visit’ by Mr George Palmer, advertising a Heritage Open Day art exhibition ‘Biscuits and Bricks’, Friends of the University of Reading event on the Huntley and Palmer families.

Other Events – we supported the Friends of Reading Old Cemetery and The Friends of the University of Reading with equipment and material loans at the East Reading Festival and had our own stand - a mini ‘cinema’ for young children to investigate the cemetery and some of its insects. We also attended a work-party day at Reading Old Cemetery but otherwise event activity did not completely pick up to pre-pandemic levels this year.

Online – a volunteer began work on supporting the website ReadingOldCemetery.uk which is being led by Professor Yota Dimetriades of the University of Reading Institute of Education.

We still host some other heritage related mini-websites: turbocharged, 100.rgspaces, relics.rgspaces, holybrook.gallery. These now need reviewing as activity changes.

Fundraising: No active fundraising was planned for or needed this year.

Volunteers: the bulk of our administration is undertaken by a trustee/volunteer. With few physical events we have not sought to recruit long-term this year but were grateful for the help of a couple of ad hoc volunteers for some events.

Other resources: Website hosting is provided on an ongoing basis free courtesy of a trustee. Trustees and volunteers use their own IT equipment for the Charity’s work.

Finance

Policy on reserves: the Trustees have a policy of holding enough funds to cover any known liability without relying on any future income.

Funds materially in deficit: none.

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with the accounting policies set out in notes to the accounts and comply with the charity’s governing document, the Charities Act 2011 and Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice 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.

This report was approved by the Trustees and signed on their behalf by

Signature:

date: 23/11/2022

Name: Jenny Halstead, trustee

Statement of Financial Activities for the year to 31 October 2021

Note Unrestricted
2022
Restricted
2022
Total
2022
Total
2021
£ £ £ £
A Income & endowments
A1 Donations and legacies 0 0 0 5,000
B Expenditure on
B2 Charitable activities 1 (9,250) 0 (9,250) (500)
Net income/(expenditure) (9,250) (0) (9,250) 4,500
Reconciliation of funds
Total funds brought forward 0 9,271 5,221
Total funds carried forward 0 471 9.721

Balance sheet at 31 October 2021 (charity number: 1160023)

Note 2022 2021
£ £
B Current assets
B4 Cash at bank (none in hand) 471 9,721
C Current liabilities
C1 Creditors: amounts falling due within 1 year 2 1,500 1,500
Total net assets or liabilities (1,029) 8,221
D The funds of the Charity
D2 Restricted funds 0 0
D3 Unrestricted funds (1,029) 8,221
Total charity funds (1,029) 8,221

Audit exemption statement

With an income of less than £25,000, the Charity is not required to have either an independent examination or audit. In addition, the constitution does not require an audit and the trustees have agreed that no external scrutiny is needed this year.

Signed

Name Jenny Halstead

Trustee, on behalf of the trustees

Approved by the trustees on 23/11/2022

Notes to the financial statement for the year ended 31 October 2021

The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Accounting and Reporting by Charities: Statement of Recommended Practice applicable to charities preparing their accounts in accordance with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS 102) (effective 1 January 2015)

Note 1
Grants
Progress Theatre £250
Biscuit Factory £5000
Community garden – St Luke’s £2000
CommunityGarden – Newtown ‘heritage’ bench £2000
Note 2
Designated for Christchurch Green heritage board £1,500

There have been no related party transactions in the reporting period that require disclosure.

No staff were employed in the period.