## **Growing Together Levenshulme** 

## **Trustees Report and Financial Statements for year ending 31[st] March 2021** 

## **Content** 

Legal and administrative details               pg. 1 Trustees report                                          pg. 2-8 Financial review                                                  pg. 8 Statement of Financial Activities pg. 9-10 Notes to the financial statements                       pg. 10 

## **Legal and Administrative Details** 

## **Charity Number:  1166420** 

## **Trustees:** 

Jacqueline Cotton, Chair Tom Spencer, Treasurer Graham Kayes, Secretary Gill Bradley Roo Wilkins Augusta Ward Nicola Scott 

**Registered Address** : 161 Hamilton Road, Longsight, Manchester, M13 OPQ 

**Bankers** :  CAF Bank, 25 Kings Hill Avenue, Kings Hill, West Mailing, Kent, ME19 4JQ. 

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## **Trustees report for the year ended 31st March 2021** 

The Board of Trustees submit their annual report and the financial statements of Growing Together Levenshulme (GTL) for the year ended 31[st] March 2021. 

Growing Together Levenshulme, informally known as ‘the Garden’, is a large, resilient community of asylum seekers and refugees from across Greater Manchester who come together through therapeutic gardening sessions to support each other and create beautiful spaces.  We run therapeutic horticulture sessions from our community allotment in Levenshulme, Manchester, promoting vegan-organic horticulture principles and providing a community allotment project for marginalised communities. 

## Mission Statement 

Creating a therapeutic horticulture project with disadvantaged groups, particularly refugees and asylum seekers, to build community and networks of solidarity, whilst learning and sharing skills around vegan-organic growing, and creating a beautiful and relaxing garden together. 

## History, Structure and Governance 

Growing Together was set up in 2011 as a partnership between Revive (an organisation supporting refugees and asylum seekers) and Highfield EcoAllotment Project.  It was initially a project within Revive before maturing into an organisation in its own right.  The project has run consistently since 2011 and became a charity in 2016.  Growing Together Levenshulme was registered by the Charity Commission as a Charitable Incorporated Organisation on 7th April 2016. 

Growing Together Levenshulme has historically had no paid staff, and is collaboratively run by a team of volunteers.  Operational decisions are made by the Steering Group which comprises volunteers and participants.  Volunteers also meet regularly as the Caretakers and People Support Groups to ensure the project runs smoothly, our participants and team are well supported, and the vision of the Steering Group is progressed.  In November 2020, we recruited a freelancer to support the work of the volunteer team.  Trustees are appointed or reappointed annually at the AGM.  The Trustees are ultimately responsible for the governance of the organisation, ensuring it fulfils its legal obligations, carries out activities to fulfil its aims for the public benefit, and oversees strategy and resources. 

Risk management:  Trustees annually review major risks which Growing Together Levenshulme is exposed to, and identify actions to monitor and minimise the potential impact of these risks. 

Public Beneft: When planning activities for the year, the Trustees consider the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit and are satisfied that our activities meet the principles outlined in that guidance.  Growing Together Levenshulme’s purposes meet the public benefit requirement in that it provides 

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identifiable benefits to a sufficient section of the public, defined in relation to membership of a marginalised community. 

## **The objects of GTL are:** 

i) To provide facilities for recreation or other leisure time occupation by providing an area for use as a community garden for: therapeutic horticulture; training and support for those persons who have need of such facilities by reason of their youth, age, infirmity, disablement, financial hardship or social and economic circumstances; or for the public at large in the interests of social welfare and with the object of improving the condition of life of said inhabitants. ii) To promote for the benefit of the public, the conservation, protection and improvement of the physical and natural environment by promoting biodiversity, vegan-organic growing, healthy lifestyles, permaculture and conservation practices. 

Growing Together Levenshulme is committed to working with marginalised communities, offering access to a community allotment to groups usually unable to take advantage of such opportunities.  This year, we have met our objectives primarily through the provision of free therapeutic gardening sessions for asylum seekers and refugees living in Greater Manchester. 

This short video gives a flavour of the project     https://youtu.be/Z0tRgJevT7Y 

## **2020-21.   Reorienting GTL to meet our members needs and sustain our community during the pandemic** 

For the last ten years, GTL has run two gardening sessions per week and provided limited phone and in-person support outside these sessions, through a team of committed volunteers.  Just prior to the start of this financial year, in March 2020, we closed the physical space of the Garden to safeguard the health and wellbeing of our members, and to comply with NHS guidance on Covid-19. Over the following weeks, we phoned everyone who had attended the project over the past year.  We asked them what they most needed and how we could best offer support whilst the project was physically closed. 

Many people were fearful and isolated.  Others were concerned about how they would manage without the food and travel expenses they had relied upon from various community groups that had now closed.   Many of our members were already dealing with anxiety, depression and other mental or physical health conditions at significant levels. They now found themselves facing increased vulnerability to the psychological and physical impacts of the Corona virus. Others were more vulnerable due to being homeless or sofa surfing, unable to self-isolate or keep themselves safe. Others were deeply worried about friends or family who they left behind in their country.  Some with no recourse to public funds as a condition of their stay had lost their jobs and become destitute. Others had been destitute for years.  Many were becoming increasingly isolated and vulnerable as services and drop-ins across the sector were closed or curtailed, and progress on immigration cases stalled. 

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We responded by offering a range of flexible support options.  82 of our members wanted some form of support: 

- 63 wanted regular phonecalls and support, usually calls on a weekly basis. 

- An additional 13 were adult children of members, who were also regular attendees of the Garden in their own right.  Most didn’t want regular calls but received occasional support and reached out to us as needed. 

- 6 people didn’t need regular calls/support, but wanted to keep in touch 

- 5 people didn’t want support, usually because they had settled in a new area 

- 4 people couldn’t be reached. 

Our volunteer team is divided between Gardening volunteers and People Support volunteers.  For some time, our capacity had been overstretched.  A combination of increased demand and volunteers also juggling work, family commitments, and Covid challenges led us in November 2020, to recruit a parttime freelancer to supplement the work of our team.  We recruited an outstanding individual, a refugee herself, who is hugely enhancing the quality and extent of the support we can offer.  She has worked closely with our twelve volunteers to sustain and develop the project. 

Throughout the year we underwent extensive consultation with members about how/when to reopen safely, and put in place risk assessments and action plans to enable us to re-open once safe to do so, including no access to indoor space and giving out snacks rather than cooked food.  Whilst we are an outdoor project and could mitigate many of the risks onsite, our main concern was that our members travel from nine of the ten boroughs of Greater Manchester, with many taking long journeys comprising two buses to get to the project.  Due to the risks associated with public transport, we decided in October ’20 to open the Garden just to local participants – those who were able to walk or cycle to the Garden.  By the end of the period of this report, we were making plans to imminently open to small groups of up-to 8 people, and also provide an extra day at the Garden to enable up to 24 people a week to attend in small groups. We were also providing regular online activities including a Zoom-in to the Garden, and much more extensive remote support. 

Read on for more details and some of our highlights. 

## **Supporting our Members** 

Over the year, we significantly increased the extent and reach of our support and now provide holistic support outside the Garden to all our members.  We sustained contact throughout the year and stepped up during periods of crisis. Our regular calls offered a friendly voice and an opportunity to assess unmet needs, and offer support or referral on as needed.    As well as being a listening ear and providing a range of support directly, we have referred people to counselling, legal advice, foodbanks, emergency housing and healthcare.  We 

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have supported our members through crisis and trauma, stood in partnership with them and advocated on their behalf.  We maintained contact with our members who were moved to hotels and accommodation out of the area who intensely struggled with isolation and lack of access to support. 

We set up a WhatsApp broadcast list to keep participants informed of key advice/info and to send photos of the Garden to keep people's spirits up, social connections alive, and to sustain that sense of being part of a community where you matter and will be looked out for. 

Most of our members struggled to meet their basic needs during the pandemic. Many had been impacted by austerity and the hostile environment and had previously relied on free meals at community organisations which all suddenly closed.  As well as seeing our asylum-seeking members struggling to survive, it was shocking to see our refugee members needing support with food and bills as prices rocketed and they were unable to travel to cheaper shops.  We referred members to foodbanks, community grocers, and organised deliveries of food parcels where no other support was available.  We referred our destitute members to the Greater Manchester Migrant Destitution Fund and to Red Cross Destitution Support.  We previously had a small Urgent Need Fund, and we expanded the use of this Fund significantly to meet the many and varied crisis needs of our members. We were also able to give all our members phone credit/data on three occasions during lockdown, which helped reduce the isolation many were so impacted by. 

Throughout the year we have supported our members to keep informed and safe during the pandemic.  We shared information and resources in different languages and updated them as the situation evolved.  Our volunteers and their friends made hundreds of quality masks and we sent packs of masks and hand sanitizer to all our members.  We also provided information, reassurance and encouragement around getting vaccinated. 

Members regularly talk about how grateful they are for the support we offered over lockdown, particularly around easing their depression, stress and isolation, enabling them to keep in touch with friends, and having someone to turn to when there was a problem. Covid-19 has highlighted how many asylum seekers and refugees have insufficient support to meet their needs, especially in times of crisis.  Having run weekly sessions for 10 years we have built deep trusting relationships with individuals.  We are often people’s first place to turn in a crisis, which was evident this year more than ever. Some have said they wouldn’t have been alive today without the support of the Garden. 

_“You are my backbone. There is no other group that is helping me. You call to find out how we are doing, you are looking out for us in this pandemic. It keeps me going. Your help and support, it keeps a smile on my face.”_ 

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## **Our Community** 

_‘Chatting, laughing and sharing.  Having a good time together like family in the garden’._ 

A major focus for the year was sustaining our community while the Garden was physically closed.  People often say they come to the Garden so they can meet people who are in the same situation, and know they are understood, supported and feel safe.  We seek to promote a culture of mutual support and community. Participants have observed how friendships established at the garden help sustain them longer-term.  Whilst there were fewer opportunities to bring people together at the Garden this year, we did our best to bring the Garden to them. 

This was the year that many of us discovered Zoom.  A highlight has to be the chilli club.  We dropped off supplies so members could grow chilli plants at home, and facilitated Zoom sessions and a WhatsApp group to learn growing techniques and share photos and chilli plant news.  So many well nurtured chilli plants and proud gardeners! 

We also ran open Zoom sessions so our members could meet, talk and connect with each other.  As always, we were inspired by the generosity of spirit, compassion, and capacity to offer each other support that we witnessed from our members, who were themselves under such stress.  Our members missed out on the usual trips and parties, but we still managed a Zoom end of year party.  With dancing!  And following a drive for donations, we were able to send a parcel of gifts to all our members. 

By the end of the year we were in the routine of fortnightly Zooms to coincide with in-person sessions as the Garden.  This meant that those who weren’t yet able to return to in-person sessions could still see the Garden, advise on techniques to look after specific plants, chat to friends and feel more part of the Garden. 

_‘This pandemic, it was good to come together on Zoom. The Garden is doing so good!   We are not walking to the Garden but we can see it and our mind is refreshed.  Even seeing the road, the gate to the Garden it makes me happy. With depression over lockdown I can’t wait to log on to the Garden Zoom.  I have other appointments on Zoom where I have to talk about my health but the Garden is different.  Here I can just see.  It makes me feel happy to see friends.’_ 

## **Our Garden** 

## _‘I see the Garden, I can breathe’_ 

Over the past year, the garden flourished despite the challenges, and those participants who were able to attend did an amazing job growing vegetables and building trellises, raised beds, and covered areas.  Volunteers also worked hard to sustain the Garden while we were closed.  We produced a wide variety of produce with favourites including yellow tomatoes, strawberries, rugari, sweetcorn, and giant sunflowers.  Harvested produce would usually go into the 

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communal meal, but this year we distributed bags of harvested produce to our members. 

We had recently expanded our site to take on two neighbouring allotment plots, enabling us to significantly expand our physical space.  These needed much clearing and demolition of unsafe structures, including a satisfying day where we hired a digger to clear the plot.  Members, through the Steering Group, continued planning for the new plot, including which trees to plant, and deciding on getting a large polytunnel/workspace with space inside for tables and raised beds. 

Whilst many of our members have been unable to get the usual therapeutic benefits of being outside in nature, the Zoom tours of the Garden and photos on the WhatsApp list have helped trigger positive memories and emotions and helped sustain members through difficult times. 

## **Building Community Links.  Sharing Skills** 

The pandemic meant we weren’t able to run our usual events opening up our site to the local community, and we had to scale back our Giving Back projects helping other community organisations do up their green spaces.  However, we were able to facilitate a day of gardening for asylum seekers housed at the Britannia Hotel and shortly after the end of the financial year we visited Revive with a few participants to build new raised beds in their garden. We are also planning a collaboration with Europia around a group of Roma women meeting at the Garden to grow herbs.  Looking back over the year, one of the positive outcomes is the stronger relationships we have built with a range of partner organisations, and we look forward to building on these as things open up. 

## **Leadership and Voice** 

An overriding principle of GTL is to be member-led.  We have continued to ensure inclusive, participant-led decision-making structures underpin the project.  Our paid worker is a refugee herself and is well-placed to advocate for the needs and interests of participants.  Participants have had a strong voice in project direction through engaging in our well attended Steering Group meetings.  These were run slightly differently over the year, combining small inperson meetings, Zoom sessions and individual feedback to enable as many members as possible to participate.   Members have increasingly taken the lead in gardening activities, and the collective sense of project ownership has continued and been enhanced. 

We have provided opportunities for our Garden and its participants to feature in a range of projects and campaigns to raise the voices of our members, including one of our members speaking at a Social Workers Without Borders event to help train social workers working with people impacted by immigration control. 

## **Getting Our Act Together** 

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- We have strengthened how we operate as an organisation, including: 

   - Restructuring how the people support team works and building better systems for case notes, communication and peer support. 

   - Recruiting volunteer interpreters for routine translation and sensitive phone calls 

   - Team training on accessing healthcare, supporting victims of trafficking, and working with interpreters. 

   - Team training from MIND around working with depression and suicidal thoughts. 

   - Reviewing Trustee membership and recruiting new trustees to include better representation from the refugee community and other refugee organisations. 

   - Reviewing the impact of having paid freelance support and options to continue this role in the longer-term rather than just as a pandemic response. 

## **Looking Ahead** 

Looking into next year, we hope to embed some of the positive organisational changes we have made during the pandemic: to offer a paid employment contract to our freelancer and to scale up from a volunteer organisation to one with a paid employee; to continue to offer and develop a blended approach of remote and onsite activities and support to our members; and to support our members’ active involvement in GTL’s development. 

## **Financial Review** 

Income in the 2020-21 year came in the form of grants and donations, with continued success through crowdfunding.  During the financial year, income from grants and donations totalled £24,319 and spending totalled £31,300, resulting in a loss for the year of £6,980 (we had made a surplus in both previous years). On the 31[st] March 2021, we had £8,815 in the bank. 

Our spending was significantly affected by Covid-19: we spent no money at all on busfares due to closing the garden but distributed £15,540 to participants through Urgent Need Fund payments, food parcels, phone credit and travel costs to access foodbanks. We spent £768 on PPE for participants. We also added a new budget-line to pay GTL’s freelance worker, totalling £9,156, which was covered by Covid response grant funding brought in mid-year. 

We are very grateful to our funders, all of whom gave permission for us to change our planned project budgets to allow the spending described above. 

We anticipate running at costs similar to this year (or higher) in the coming year, meaning that significant additional funding is required. 

GTL holds cash reserves of £3000, which is adequately covered by the funds available at the year end. 

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Accounts have been prepared on a cash basis, using the Charity Commission standard Receipt and Payments CC16a form (see attached). GTL is not required to account on an accruals basis, or to be audited as it is a small organisation. Additionally, GTL is not required to file a tax return as it is recognised as a charity by HMRC. 

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## **Proft & Loss 01/04/2020 – 31/03/2021** 


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
INCOME AND SPENDING<br>INCOME<br>2020- 2019-<br>21 20<br>Donations (mydonate) 2836 Awards for All 9980<br>Donations<br>Spotlight 5000 (MyDonate/CAFdonate) 1410<br>Donations (Urgent Need<br>Forever Manchester 3100 Fund) 4507<br>Aviva Community Fund 988 Spotlight Fund 5000<br>Comic Relief Paid Role 4000 Inspire donation 404<br>Barrow Cadbury Paid Role 5000 Lawfirm donation 250<br>ARM 3395<br>2155<br>Total 24319 Total 1<br>SPENDING<br>2020- 2019-<br>21 20<br>busfares 0<br>busfares 6500<br>lunch 220<br>lunch 1959<br>gardening materials 776<br>gardening materials 1437<br>insurance 309<br>insurance 263<br>kitchen equipment 399<br>infrastructure (clearing new plot, building<br>maintenance) 2066<br>improvements to building 294<br>stationery 1044<br>stationery/admin 296<br>rent 171<br>rent 174<br>gifts for partcipants 423<br>presents for participants 387<br>external training 318<br>training/workshops 1697<br>art materials 164<br>trips 628<br>Parties 233<br>outreach events 330<br>volunteer travel expenses 344 volunteer expenses (travel,<br>DBS) 719<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>


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**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
Urgent Need Fund payments 7286 Urgent Need Fund<br>payments 983<br>phone credit 5844<br>food parcels 1801<br>travel to foodbanks 519<br>PPE 768<br>translation/interpretation 255<br>Paid covid role 9156<br>1646<br>Total 31301 Total 2<br>2020- 2019-<br>21 20<br>Surplus for the Year -6980 5089<br>2020- 2019-<br>21 20<br>1579<br>Cash funds at year end 8815 5<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>


## **Statement of Assets and Liabilities at the Year End (31st March 2021)** 


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
Cash Funds Amount<br>Current account 8815<br>Assets retained for GTL’s own  Current value<br>use (optional)<br>Classroom space 8000<br>Polytunnels 400<br>Liabilities Amount due<br>(optional)<br>None n/a<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>


## **Notes to the fnancial statements:** 

All figures are rounded to the nearest pound. 

A loss was made in the year 2020-21 as some funds received towards the end of the 2019-20 financial year were continued to be spent in the year 2020-21. 

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The total value of GTL’s classroom/workshop building (paid for during 2015-17), is retained within GTL’s assets as £8000. 

This is a true record of the income and expenditure of Growing Together Levenshulme for the period stated above. 

This report was approved by the trustees and signed on their behalf on 27[th] July ‘21 



Jaqui Cotton (Chair)                                    Tom Spencer (Treasurer) 

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**Charity Name N Growing Together Levenshulme 1** 


## **Receipts and payments acco** 

Period start date 

**For the period from** 

**To** 01/04/2020 

## **Section A Receipts and payments** 

**Unrestricted Restricted Endowment funds funds funds** 

**to the nearest £** 

**to the nearest £ to the nearest £** 

## **A1 Receipts** 


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
Grants                     3,395                    18,088                            -<br>Donations                     2,836                            -                              -<br>                            -                            -                              -<br>                            -                            -                              -<br>                            -                            -                              -<br>                            -                            -                              -<br>                            -                            -                              -<br>                            -                            -                              -<br>                    6,231                    18,088                            -<br>Sub total (Gross income for AR)<br>A2 Asset and investment sales,<br>(see table).<br>                            -                              -                              -<br>                            -                              -                              -<br>Sub total  [                            - ]                             -                              -<br>Total receipts                   6,231                 18,088                           -<br>A3 Payments<br>workshops sessions                     1,104                      3,405                            -<br>Volunteer expenses                        344                            -<br>Insurance                        309                            -<br>Stationery                        178                         866                            -<br>Rent                        171                            -<br>Marketing/fundraising/outreach                           -<br>Training                        318                            -<br>Urgent Need Fund                     7,449                      8,001                            -<br>Staff costs                     9,156                            -<br>Sub total                     9,075                    22,226                            -<br>A4 Asset and investment<br>purchases, (see table)<br>                            -                              -                              -<br>                            -                              -                              -<br>Sub total                             -                              -                              -<br>Total payments                   9,075                 22,226                           -<br>Net of receipts/(payments)  -                2,844  -                4,138                         -<br>A5 Transfers between funds                          -                         -                           -<br>A6 Cash funds last year end                   7,340                   8,455                         -<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>




_**Cash funds this year end**_ **4,496 4,317 -** 



## **Section B Statement of assets and liabilities at the end of** 

||||**Unrestricted**|
|---|---|---|---|
|**Categories**|**Details**||**funds**|
|**B1 Cash funds**|Current account<br>Reserves|**_Total cash funds_**|**to nearest £**<br>**1,496**<br>**3,000**<br>**-**<br>**4,496**|
||(agree balances|with receipts and payments<br>account(s))|OK|
||||**Unrestricted**|
||||**funds**|
|**B2 Other monetary assets**|**Details**||**to nearest £**<br>**-**<br>**-**<br>**-**<br>**-**<br>**-**<br>**-**|
||||**Fund to which**|
|**B3 Investment assets**|**Details**||**asset belongs**<br>**Fund to which**|
|**B4 Assets retained for the**<br>**charity’s own use**|**Details**<br>Classroom Space<br>Polytunnels||Unrestricted funds<br>unrestricted funds<br>**asset belongs**<br>**Fund to which**|
|**B5 Liabilities**|**Details**||**liability relates**|





Signed by one or two trustees on behalf of all the trustees 


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
|||
|---|---|
|Signature|Print N|
|TSpencer|Tom Spe|

**----- End of picture text -----**<br>




**o (if any) 166420** 

**CC16a** 

## **ounts** 

Period end date 31/03/2021 

## **Total funds** 

## **Last year** 

**to the nearest £** 

## **to the nearest £** 


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
                  21,483                   14,980<br>                    2,836                     6,571<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>                  24,319                   21,551<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>



**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
                          -<br>                          -                               -<br>                          -                               -<br>                  24,319                21,551<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>



**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
                    4,509                   11,908<br>                       344                        720<br>                       309                        263<br>                    1,044                        296<br>                       171                        174<br>                          -                          563<br>                       318                     1,697<br>                  15,450                        983<br>                    9,156                           -<br>                  31,301                   16,604<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>



**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
                          -<br>                          -<br>                          -                               -<br>                  31,301                16,604<br>-                6,982                  4,947<br>                          -                         -<br>               15,795                       -<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>




8.813
4,947


**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
the period<br>Restricted  Endowment<br>funds  funds<br>to nearest £ to nearest £<br>                    4,317                           -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                 4,317                       -<br>OK OK<br>Restricted  Endowment<br>funds  funds<br>to nearest £ to nearest £<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>Current value<br>Cost (optional)<br>(optional)<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>Current value<br>Cost (optional)<br>(optional)<br>                          -                       8,000<br>                          -                          400<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>                          -                             -<br>Amount due  When due<br>(optional) (optional)<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>





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                          -<br>                          -<br>                          -<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>



**----- Start of picture text -----**<br>
Date of<br>Name<br>approval<br>encer 27/07/2021<br>**----- End of picture text -----**<br>


