Trustees’ Annual Report For the period 01/04/2020 – 31/03/2021 

## **Section A – Reference and administration details** 

Charity name: Work Rights Centre 

Other names the charity is known by: WoRC 

Registered charity number: 1165419 

Charity’s principal address: Work Rights Centre, 379-381 High Road, London, NW10 2JR 

Names of charity trustees who manage the charity: 

|**Trustee name**|**Office(if any)**|**Dates acted if not the wholeyear**|
|---|---|---|
|HollyRose Robinson|Chair of Trustees|Wholeyear|
|Mona Bou Zeineddine||Wholeyear|
|Laura Chilintan|Treasurer|Wholeyear|
|LauraGabriela Tutu||From 14th May2020|
|Andrei-Cosmin Decu||From 14th May 2020|
|Julia Himmrich||From 14th May 2020|



Senior Staff Members: 

Dora-Olivia Vicol, CEO Kasia Figiel, COO 

## **Section B - Structure, governance and management** 

Type of governing document: Constitution 

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

## **Section C – Objectives and activities** 

## **Objectives** 

The charity's purpose is to prevent and relieve poverty for the public benefit, by breaking the vicious cycle of precarious work (being employment which is low wage and low protection and offers no job security), insecure housing, and social isolation which affects vulnerable people, particularly migrant and ethnic minority workers, in insecure jobs in the UK. This is by: 

(a) assisting people who are in, or at risk of, precarious work with information, advice and casework on how to access fair and lawful employment, immigration status security, financial assistance, and other necessary conditions of social mobility; 

(b) conducting research and evidence-based campaigns for fairer employment, better social integration, and social mobility; 



(c) raising awareness of the dangers of precarious work and social immobility, by engaging relevant stakeholders in the business, public, and third sectors. 

## **Activities** 

The charity’s main activities are Employment Rights and Employability Clinics taking place in Brent, London and at the Manchester Central Library. 

The Clinics are designed to be accessible to the communities we seek to assist, based on feedback we have received from beneficiaries. They are free, confidential, and multilingual - staffed by a team covering seven languages including Romanian, Bulgarian, Polish, Russian and Spanish, many of whom have lived experience of working precariously and applying for welfare. 

The charity’s experienced advisers help vulnerable migrants with four key areas of advice: 

- _Employment rights_ - helping people challenge unfair dismissals, making sure they access redundancy rights, and recover any unpaid wages. 

- _Welfare_ - assisting beneficiaries who face barriers of digital illiteracy, poor English, or informal housing arrangements to access Universal Credit. 

- _Employability_ -  using our CV building and Cover Letter writing expertise to help people identify and apply for new positions, and working on beneficiaries’ sense of confidence by helping them identify transferable skills. 

- _EUSS -_ advising beneficiaries who have not yet secured their status or are still awaiting for the outcome of their EUSS applications. 

Beyond providing urgent help, Work Rights Centre’s activities contribute to long-term change by giving people the information and self-confidence they need to reach their full potential. This is  through: 

- _Workshops and information sessions._ Every month we hold sessions in schools, foodbanks, places of worship or local English classes. 

- _Infographics and video tools._ Every Saturday we answer the week’s top questions in an accessible visual format. Translated in seven languages and disseminated via social media, they help us build awareness and trust in migrant communities. 

## **Section D – Achievements and performance** 

From April 2020 to March 2021 , the Work Rights Centre has continued to grow: 

- Since the opening of our first employment rights clinic in London we advised 2,219 beneficiaries (June 2016 – March 2021) 

- By the end of March 2021 we recovered over £106,000 of unpaid wages for clients, who reported feeling more confident when looking for work (91%) and assessing their employment rights (92%) 

- 93% of monitored clients are either very satisfied or satisfied with the assistance they received. 

- We developed a new Letter Before Action digital tool 

- We developed a new Client Management System to support the safe storage of data for related to our growing numbers of beneficiaries and cases 

## **Section E – Financial review** 

In the last year the charity expenses have more than doubled from circa £60,000 in 2019/20 to circa £130,000 in 2020/21. The funds were used largely to support our expanding service provision in London and Manchester: including staff salaries, volunteer expenses and rent.  Our web and IT costs 



included a significant investment in the development of a new secure client database, as well as creation of new digital tools - CV builder and Letter Before Action builder. 

Over the last financial year, the charity income has more than doubled from circa £85,000 in 2019/20 to £215,642 in 2020/21. 

The principal source of income of the charity are grants, which amounted to  95%  of income in 202021.  We have raised a mix of large, medium and small grants from a variety of funders including  Trust for London, Tudor Trust, European Social Fund (to support the Manchester Clinic) and Brent NCIL (to support the new Digital Literacy project). 

Our earned income from charitable activities has more than doubled at around £5,900, while our income from donations has dropped significantly by 41% from £7,285 in 2019/20 to £4,299 in 2020/21. 

## Reserves policy 

The charity policy is to hold a minimum 3 months’ worth of our base running costs in unrestricted funds reserves to be available at all times  Over the last financial year the charity was able to grow its unrestricted reserves from £16,110 at the end of March 2020 to £22,875 in March 2021. This represents circa 3.78 months of the monthly core minimal cost, as defined in the charity reserves policy. 

## **Section G – Declaration** 

The trustees declare that they have approved the trustees report above. 

Signed on behalf of the charity’s trustees 

Signature: 

Full name: Holly Robinson 

Position: Chair of Trustees 

Date: 25th November 2021 



## **Work Rights Centre Accounts for period 1st April 2020 to 31st March 2021** 


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
Unrestricted Restricted funds Endowment funds Total funds Last year<br>SECTION A<br>A1 Receipts<br>Donations 4,299 0 0 4,299 7,285<br>Other income 5,900 0 0 5,900 2,400<br>Grant - LCF Thrive 0 0 0 0 7,500<br>Grant - Tudor Trust 2 35,000 0 0 35,000 0<br>Grant - Ratiu Foundation 0 0 0 0 2,000<br>Grant - Mayor of London European Londoners 1 0 0 0 0 5,000<br>Grant - LCF Salway Fund 0 0 0 0 5,000<br>Grant - Wembley Park Community Fund 3 0 0 0 0 9,509<br>Grant - Mayor of London European Londoners 2 0 0 0 0 4,970<br>Grant - Trust for London 0 7,500 0 7,500 15,000<br>Grant - Tudor Trust 0 0 0 25,000<br>Grant - Brent Advice Fund  0 1,500 0 1,500 1,500<br>Grant - European Social Fund 0 11,854 0 11,854 0<br>Grant - Catalyst 0 5,000 0 5,000 0<br>Grant - London Community Response Fund Wave 2 0 22,529 0 22,529 0<br>Grant - London Community Response Fund Wave 3 0 28,360 0 28,360 0<br>Grant - The Barrow Cadbury Trust COVID-19 Support Fund 0 21,700 0 21,700 0<br>Grant - Trust for London 2 0 22,000 0 22,000 0<br>Grant - Harrow Giving 0 10,000 0 10,000 0<br>Grant - GLA Microgrant 0 8,000 0 8,000 0<br>Grant - NCIL Digital Literacy 0 25,000 0 25,000 0<br>Grant - Tudor Trust Mental Health 0 2,000 0 2,000 0<br>Grant - London Catalyst 0 5,000 0 5,000 0<br>Sub-total 45,199 170,443 0 215,642 85,164<br>A2 Asset and investment sales etc 0 0 0 0 0<br>Total receipts 45,199 170,443 0 215,642 85,164<br>A3 Payments<br>Service Provision 224 71,414 0 71,638 34,088<br>Charity Director 0 25,143 0 25,143 4,520<br>Finance and Fundraising Manager 0 8,729 0 8,729 1,200<br>AQS Project Manager 0 607 0 607 429<br>Senior Communications Officer 0 1,672 0 1,672 0<br>Volunteer Expenses 60 153 0 213 1,670<br>Development Officer 0 0 0 0 7,967<br>Publicity materials 0 424 0 424 732<br>Banking Fees 24 45 0 69 60<br>Governance 113 183 0 296 616<br>HR costs 215 772 0 987 717<br>Training costs 113 820 0 933 80<br>Web and IT costs 540 11,889 0 12,429 1,823<br>Rent 900 4,050 0 4,950 5,400<br>Other costs 1,208 592 0 1,799 1,390<br>Sub-total 3,397 126,493 0 129,890 60,693<br>A4 Asset and investment purchases etc<br>Total payments 3,397 126,493 0 129,890 60,693<br>Net receipts 41,802 43,950 0 85,752 24,471<br>A5 Transfer between funds<br>A6 Cash funds last year end 16,110 30,341 0 46,451<br>Cash funds end February 2021 57,913 74,290 0 132,203<br>Unrestricted Restricted funds Endowment funds<br>SECTION B<br>B1 Cash funds<br>Total cash funds 57,913 74,290 0<br>B2 Other monetary assets 0 0 0<br>B3 Investment assets 0 0 0<br>B4 Assets retained for the charity's own use 0 0 0<br>B5 Liabilities 0 0 0<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>




## **Work Rights Centre Balance Sheet As at 31 March 2021** 

|**Work Rights Centre**<br>**Balance Sheet**<br>**As at 31 March 2021**||||
|---|---|---|---|
|||**Mar-21**|**Mar-20**|
|Unrestricted|Restricted funds|Total|Total|
|**ASSETS**<br>**Current assets**<br>Cash at bank<br>57,913<br>**Total assets**<br>**57,913**<br>**NET ASSETS**<br>**FUNDS**|74,290<br>**74,290**|132,203<br>**132,203**<br>**132,203**|46,451<br>**46,451**<br>**46,451**|
|Grant - LCF Thrive||0|7,417|
|Grant - Tudor Trust 2||35,000|0|
|Unrestricted reserves||22,913|8,693|
|**Total unrestricted funds**||**57,913**|**16,110**|
|Grant - Trust for London||0|960|
|Grant - Tudor Trust||0|20,061|
|Grant - Wembley Park Community Fund 3||0|4,389|
|Grant - Mayor of London European Londoners 2||0|3,860|
|Grant - Brent Advice Fund||1,964|1,071|
|Grant - European Social Fund||-2,628|0|
|Grant - London Community Response Fund Wave 3||4,149|0|
|Grant - The Barrow Cadbury Trust COVID-19 Support Fund||4,614|0|
|Grant - Trust for London 2||20,548|0|
|Grant - Harrow Giving||6,377|0|
|Grant - GLA Microgrant||7,266|0|
|Grant - NCIL Digital Literacy||25,000|0|
|Grant - Tudor Trust Mental Health||2,000|0|
|Grant - London Catalyst||5,000|0|
|**Total restricted funds**||**74,290**|**30,341**|
|**FUNDS**||**132,203**|**46,451**|






## **Independent examiner's report on the accounts** 

**Section A                        Independent Examiner’s Report** 

|**Report to the trustees/**<br>**members of**<br>**On accounts for the year**<br>**ended**<br>**Set out on pages**|Charity Name<br>Work Rights Centre (WORC)|Charity Name<br>Work Rights Centre (WORC)|Charity Name<br>Work Rights Centre (WORC)|
|---|---|---|---|
|||||
||March 31 2021|**Charity no**<br>**(if any)**|1165419|
|||||
||(remember  to include the page numbers of additional sheets)|||



I report to the trustees on my examination of the accounts of the above charity (“the Trust”) for the year ended **31/03/2019** 

**Responsibilities and** As the charity's trustees, you are responsible for the preparation of the **basis of report** accounts in accordance with the requirements of the Charities Act 2011 (“the Act”). 

I report in respect of my examination of  the Trust’s accounts carried out under section 145 of the 2011 Act and in carrying out my examination, I have followed all the applicable Directions given by the Charity Commission under section 145(5)(b) of the Act. 

**Independent** I have completed my examination.  I confirm that no material matters have **examiner's statement** come to my attention in connection with the accounts which gives me cause to believe that in, any material respect: 

- the accounting records were not kept in accordance with section 130 of the Charities Act; or 

- the accounts did not accord with the accounting records; or 

- the accounts did not comply with the applicable requirements concerning the form and content of accounts set out in the Charities (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 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. 

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. 

**Date:** June 22 2021 

**Signed: Name:** Jane Smith **Relevant professional** CIMA **qualification(s) or body (if any): Address:** 16 Windlesham Gardens 

**Oct 2018** 

1 

**IER** 



BN1 3AJ 

## **Section B                           Disclosure** 

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** . 

N/A 

**Oct 2018** 

2 

**IER** 

