Registered Charity Number: 1181333
Tinsley Community Allotment
ANNUAL REPORT AND UNAUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
For the year ended 31 December 2024

rinsley Community Allotment
Contents
Page
Legal and administrative information
Trustees, annual report
2-11
Accountants, Report
12
Receipts and payments account
13
Statement of assets and liabilities
14
Notes to the accounts
15-16

rinsley Community Allotment
Legal and administrative information
for the year ended 310ecember 2024
Trustees
Name
Timothy Shortland
Rodney Heslop
Sheila Sutherland
Michael Steadmarb
Mary Sewell
Posltlon
Chair
Treasurer
Secretary
Other key personnel
Jacqui Dace
Jess Banham
Community Allotment Worker
Community Allotment Worker
Charity number
1181333
Company number
CE016034
Principal address
C/0 Tinsley Forum
120-126 Bawtry Road
Sheffield
S9 IUE
Accountants
Seven Hills Accountants Limited
57 Burton Street
Sheffield
56 2HH

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees, annual report
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
The trustees submit their annual report and the financial statements for the year ended 31 December
2024.
Structurei governance and management
Tinsley Community Allotment is a Charitable Incorporated Organisation which registered with the Charity
Commission on 21 December 2018. Tinsley CommunityAllotment is governed by the rules and regulations
set down in its governing document as last updated on 21 December 2018.
The organisation started operating in February 2019, previously it was operated as part of the Tinsley Tree
project, but has now transitioned to being an independent charitable organisation.
Method oARecruitment and Appointment of Trustees
Trustees are recruited through putting out requests within the allotment, gardening and horticultural
network in Sheffield. Trustees are appointed by invitation to attend a meeting, with information regarding
the roles and responsibilities havinE been shared prior to the meeting. Appointment includes signing a
trustee declaration.
Relationship with uny relatedparties
Charitable objectives and activities
The objects of the charity are..
i. to further or benefit the residents of Tinsley, South Yorkshire without distinction of gender, sexual
orientation, race or of political, religious or other opinions by providing allotment facilities in the
interests of social welfare for recreational leisure time occupation with the objective of improving
life for the residents.
2. to advance the education of the public, in particular young people, by providing practical
horticultural activities with links to the national curriculum.
In shaping our objectives for the year and planning our activities, the trustees have considered the Charity
Commission's guidance on public benefit. This report illustrates the activities undertaken to support the
public benefit requirement.
The artivities we do to meet our objectives are:
Tinsley Community Allotment is open on Friday mornings offering
educational and experiential sessions to school children from the local
primary school Tinsley Meadows Primary Academy. One group
attends each week during term time and we occasionally offer one-
off sessions to whole year groups Isplit into smaller groups) linking
with particular national curriculum themes in school. Activities
offered to these children include: sowing and planting,. riddling
compost,. leaf collecting and composting,. weeding, watering and
harvesting,. themed scavenger hunts,. art and craft.
The allotment is also open on Friday afternoons to the general public. These sessions are aimed more
towards local adults during term time, but are generally open to all. Volunteers attend sessions and help
with all tasks on the allotment- sowing, planting, tidying, compostinB and planning what to grow.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees, annual report
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
The activities we do to meet our objectives {continued)
Visitors are offered harvested produce to take home with them at the end of the sessions. The allotment
is also offered as a space for relaxing, socialising and learning about horticulture.
In 2021 we set up an allotment-based, weekly toddler group on Thursday
mornings in term time. This is aimed at families from the local and nearby
areas with pre-school aged children. The children can attend with carers, and
we offer them allotment themed activities, art and crafts. toys, a music wall,
a chance to relax with a book in the reading den, snack time, harvested
produce and social opportunities for the parents and carers. This has proved
to be very successful, bringing in families from the area. We have funding
from British Land to continue this project for one more year.
Tinsley is part of the Darnall Ward and falls within the IOYO most deprived
nationally. Tinsley area is culturally diverse, with a large BAME population,
including transient communities such as Slovak Roma. There are high levels of need including prevalence
of poor mental health, social isolation in the elderly, chronic ill-health and co-morbidity as well as low
levels of physical activityi Uptake of services e.E. poor nutrition and obesityi low literacy levels Iparticularly
where English is not a first language).
Activities undertaken at Tinsley Community Allotment address a number of these differing priorities
within the local area, including=
Improvement to health, wellbeing and self-esteem - the undertaking of organic food cultivation provides
excellent opportunities to undertake gentle exercise and also can improve diet and reduce levels of
obesity. Improvements to wellbeing and self-esteem are widely documented.
8uilding communities
our activity is operb to all members of the community and, most recently, has
involved people between the ages of l and 70 years of different genders. Our volunteers are also
ethnically diverse. As such, our project supports local community cohesion by bringing people together
for a common goal.
Poverty and welfare
our activity assists local poverty and welfare by empowering local people to
cultivate their own food. All organic fruit and vegetable crops are shared with volunteers on a regular
basis. Eating and tasting is also undertaken.
Environment - the activity demonstrates excellent horticultural practice, introducing the principles of
organic food cultivation and also recycles all of its green waste in order to produce compost and leaf
mould.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
Achievements and performance
Numbers:
We have had 383 different visitors this year, 171 of these being adults and 212 children. This is a 33%
increase on last year's figures.
This year we have continued to bring in a large number of volunteers and visitors to the allotment on the
two days that we are open in the week. We attribute this in a large part to having continued to develop
the relationships and collaborations that we have built with local people and other organisations in the
area over recent years.
After Easter we re-opened our toddler sessions in conjunction with Manor and Castle Development
Trust. These sessions continued to be popular with families from the local area. We had a new core
group of families who attended regularly. Overall, the number of toddlers was slightly decreased this
year due to new funding for younger children's nursery places.
The sessions for pupils from Tinsley Meadows Primary were taken up in the early part of the year by
a class of 9 children with special educational needs that attended last year. In the autumn term a
new group of 10 Year 4 children attended. We also hosted two half day sessions for the whole of F52
as we have done in previous years, bringing 59 children and 24 adults to the site. This year we
worked with 3 children who needed some time out of the classroom environment with one to one
support. They each attended by themselves with a Teaching Assistant and a friend of their choice.
This year we held five holiday family events and achieved record numbers. The Easter open day saw 31
visitors, the autumn Apple Day had 40 and the 3 summer days saw a combined total of 212 attendeesl
In total, there were an impressive 173 who had never been to the allotment before. We attribute this
success partly to the school agreeing to include our events in an email sent out to all parents. We are
also grateful to the staff at Tinsley Forum who displayed leaflets and spread the word.
Our 2 long term committed volunteers, who have been involved with the allotment for many years,
continued to come throughout the year to water and tend plants when no one else was on site.
Their help was invaluable in the summer months. Our other regular volunteers include a local family
who attend most weeks to water their planters and bring friends to tour the allotment and collect
harvests. They have also joined in with our holiday sessions and the carers, group that we run,
brinEing friends and neighbours with them. We have had other regular volunteers who, as well as
wanting to develop their horticultural skills, attend for a variety of reasons, including practicinE
English, getting out of the house to meet people and finding volunteering opportunities as a new
resident in the area. As well as our regular volunteers we have had many occasional or one-off
visitors looking for social contact or to join in with our open sessions.
We held our trustee AGM meeting on site in july, allowing our trustees to see what we had been
working on during the year.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
es Gender Ethnlclt
All details are approximate as we do not formally record this information.
Under 11
206
54%
11-18
1%
19-50
129
34%
Over 50s
42
11%
Total
383
Gender
Overall, the gender of visitors has been 56% female and 44% male.
Ethnici
The local population is made up of roughly 40¥0 from Pakistan, 40% from Slovakia and 20% White
British. 96% of school children in Tinsley are from BME groups. Our regular volunteers are White British
and Asian.
Summa of ethnicit
White..
21%
AsianlAsian British:
63Yo
Roma/Slovakian'.
8%
Black/African/Caribbean/Black British= 32Yo

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
Actlvltles:
Online
resence
This year we continued to update our social media followers with regular posts on Twitter/X and
Facebook, but at the end of the year we decided to leave X as we have less engagement with visitors on
this platform. We continued to use 'Messenger' and 'WhatsApp' to keep in touch with some of our regular
visitors.
Construction & maintenance
We carried out various winter pruning, tidying and preparing jobs before the spring season began.
We took down the willow reading den which had started to lean at an alarming angle and rebuilt it
with the help of Meadowhall volunteers.
We moved another planter near the entrance for growing strawberries which was decorated by
Meadowhall volunteers.
We cleared an area and constructed a new raised bed for raspberries in the orchard.
We rehung some more donated bird boxes.
Pruning of fruit trees and bushes.
Cleaning out the water butts.
Growin
Thi5 year we grew a variety of vegetables, herbs, fruit and flowers..
Squashes- courgettes and pumpkin
Legumes- Climbing French beans, borlotti beans, broad beans, mange tout
Onions and Roots- Onions. spring onions, garlic, leeks, beetroot, carrots
Salad crops- tomatoes, chillies, cucumbers, lettuces, rocket, melon, cress, spinach, chard
Brassicas-Kale, broccoli
Herbs
thyme, rosemary, parsley, basil, coriander, lemon balm, mint, lavender, fennel, sage, cress,
tarragon, feverfew
Other vegetables- Sweetcorn, potatoes,
Flowers- sunflowers, primroses, poached egg plant, nasturtiums, daffodils, cornflowers, ajuga, calendula,
marigolds, salvia, nigella, sedum
The fruit growing in the orchard area includes apples, pears and plums. In the main allotment we have
blueberries, lingonberries, jostaberries, cranberries, Ereengages, rhubarb, raspberries, plums,
redcurrants, blackcurrants, gooseberries and cherries.
All harvested produce was given to volunteers and visitors.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
School activities
The sessions up until the summer this year were taken up by the same class of children with special
educational needs and disabilities that attended last year and who benefitted from attending weekly with
a high adult to child ratio. In the autumn term a new group of Year 4 children attended the sessions and
we look forward to welcoming them back in the spring.
Activities with the children this year included: sowing and planting, weeding, watering, harvesting, and
woodchipping paths. They also played allotment-themed games, did seed saving, weighed vegetables and
took harvests back to school. We produced an allotment diary with drawings and photographs that the
children had taken. They enjoyed revisiting this on a regular basis and discussing some of the activities
that they ahd previously done. This book was given to school near the end of the year. At the end of term,
we held an awards ceremony to celebrate each pupil's involvement on the allotment, with medals for
best bug hunter, best digger, best sunflower grower etc.
In addition to the regular sessions with school, we also hosted two sessions for the whole of FS2 as we
have done in previous years. They visited with staff and parentlcarer volunteers and carried out bug hunts
and photo trails.
Toddler activities
In conjunction with Manor and Castle Development trust, we ran weekly sessions in term time offered to
families of pre-school children in the local area. Sessions included outdoor activities aimed at toddlers
such as a digging pit, music wall, art/craft activities, story time in our refurbished reading den, fine and
gross motor skill development, age specific gardening activities and social opportunities for both toddlers
and their carers. Each week they Bathered at the end for a snack. This project enabled us to continue to
develop our relationships with parents and carers as well as strengthening the connections already made
with another community initiative.
As our previous children started at school, we had a mostly new core group of families who attended
regularly. The carers enhoyed a chance to meet with other adults and the toddlers benefitted from
opportunities for social interaction. This year our toddler group had a high number of children with
neurodiversity, and they enjoyed the freedom of playing in our toddler-friendly outdoor environment.
Parents and carers were regularly offered seasonal harvested produce to take home.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
rinsle
Carin
Hands and Heart
Once again, we ran four weekly sessions for this local carers, group. We had
new members attending and the sessions were successful. The women took
part in craft activities such as painting stones and making cards from pressed
flowers. We were encouraged to see their confidence in their own creativity
growing weekly. They enjoyed helping us prepare and juice apples using the
apple press. They also carried out gardening activities including seed saving,
sowing pea shoots to take home, and planting bulbs in pots they had
decorated. Each week the women harvested crops to take home. The social
interaction was particularly important for this group as their caring roles can
lead to social isolation. They had a chance to share some of their worries
and concerns in a safe and supportive environment as well as enjoying a
relaxed time to chat and laugh together.
rin
and summer famil events
In the Easter holidays we had an open day with activities such as den building, making tissue paper flowers
and sowing sunflower seeds to take home. We ran three themed events for families in the summer
holidays. All three days were very well attended and enjoyed by all. On the busiest day we had over a
hundred people in the allotmentl There were different treasure hunts and trails, home-made
refreshments of cakes and soup and opportunities to sow seeds and take part in craft activities. Each week
people could take home any harvested produce available.
Autumn and Winter sessions
The last of our Autumn Winter sessions that began in 2023 took
place in February this year. It fell during half term so we were
delighted to also welcome some new children to the allotment
who had great fun playing in the digging pit and exploring the
site.
In October half term we ran an Apple day. Our visitors enjoyed
preparing and pressinE apples to make juice shared by all. They
also did craft activities and played games.
Nature Hub Activities
This year we have benefited from a grant from The Nature Hub fund. As well as funding our Summer open
days, we received a grant to improve the orchard. We have begun clearing overgrown areas and space
where green waste has been piled up. We have already created a new raised bed and planted it with
autumn fruiting raspberries. We have also planted hundreds of daffodil and crocus bulbs and bought a
mulberry bush and fig tree. A sign welcoming people to the orchard will be installed early next year.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
Links with the communi
As part of the delivery of our activities, we aimed to make connections with local community initiatives
and groups in order to develop opportunities for partnership working and to further promote our
activities.
Our staff and a trustee attended the construction pase of the new art piece 'The Looping Boat,
designed by Alex Chinneck.
This year we again offered sessions to finsley Caring Hands and Heart- a local group of carers.
They attended the allotment for a series of gardening and artlcraft sessions provided to give
the carers respite from their roles.
We have been back in touch with Abundance Sheffield, although we didn't need to request
any apples for our apple day, as the orchard provided plenty of apples to harvest this year.
We also had visits from two Council workers, the Sheffield Enablement Team, a visitor
interested in a junior gardeners, group, Sarah from 'Healthwatch', two Sustainable
Communities Officers, the Community Police Officer, Rachael from the Sheffield Food
Partnership and Lucie Ward from Darnall Well Being.
We have continued to collaborate with Manor and Castle Development Trust in the running of
our toddler group. All toddlers were accompanied by parents or carers which enabled us to
develop relationships with the adults. Publicising our summer family days within toddler group
meant that some of the parents came along with their toddlers and brought older siblings too.
We have continued to build on our relationship with Tinsley Library, attending some of their
events to raise our profile in the local area and advertise our events. This has brought new
families to the allotment.
We continued to develop our collaboration with our funders from British
Land. In March and June we held team building days for members of staff
from Meadowhall. The teams carried out site maintenance and DIY
activities as well as decorating another planter. They returned in October
to plant bulbs and construct a new raspberry bed in the orchard.
Offering the full year activities to FS2 brouEht many parents and carers to
the allotment as volunteers. They had a chance to join in activities Wlth
their children and also to visit the site and see what we do.
Our Summer Family Days were specifically aimed at bringing families to the allotment. These
well attended events allowed us to develop our relationships with children, parents and carers
from the local area.

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
Evaluation
We have continued to offer locally produced crops to all visitors, build on
our collaborations with other organisations and improve the allotment
for everyone who visits.
We once again welcomed children from Tinsley Meadows Primary
Academy to the site, offering the pupils with special educational needs a
regular term time visit to learn about horticulture, take harvests back to
school and take part in fun and engagin8 activities.
The Friday afternoon public sessions have continued to bring in new volunteers, as well as our regulars.
Our regular volunteers have benefitted from gaining new skills, and having opportunities to ￿tialISe.
We held five successful open day events in the school holidays, bringing many new families to the site.
We hope that they will continue to visit when we run more sessions next year.
We have built on the collaborations we have with other local organisations. For the fourth year running
we worked with Tinsley Caring Hands and Heart offering gardening and art and crafts. The women that
attended these sessions benefitted from social interaction and improving their confidence through trying
new activities. We have continued to develop our relationship with Manor and Castle Development Trust,
working together on the toddler group. This has brought more new families to the site.
We aim to offer a friendly and welcoming environment for all to relax, learn new skills and build
confidence and we believe Tinsley Community Allotment has had another successful year.
io

rinsley Community Allotment
Trustees ' annual report- continued
Forthe year ended 31 December 2024
Plans for the future
We plan to continue running school and open sessions from March to October and toddler sessions from
after Easter until the summer, in 2025. The plan is also to continue to develop our collaborations Wlth
other community groups and organisations in the area. We will continue to offer holiday sessions, with
themed days in the summer, Easter and October school holidays.
Financially we will continue to pay our staff for two days a week from the start of March until early Ortober
lincluding paying for half a day admin time, weekly) and then pay them for one day a week until the end
of 2025. In 2025 we propose to employ the staff for 20 weeks at one day a week and 30 weeks at two
days a week. We will review the pay rate at our next AGM.
British Land will continue to provide the funding for school sessions and toddler sessions for one year. As
part of this agreement, we will continue to work with staff from Meadowhall, by offering volunteer work
days to them. We are currently waiting to hear if we will be given the Eon Community Fund grant for 2025
to pay for our open sessions. We have been successful in receiving a further grant from Hubbub Nature
Funds to pay for three open days in the summer and for maintenance of the orchard area. Eon have
provided a grant to pay for an Easter Holiday event which brought in 60 visitors. We hope to work again
with Tinsley Caring Hands and Heart (depending on funding) to run more sessions for carers. We will also
continue to investigate any other funding streams that are relevant to the project. The plan is to continue
with our online presence with regular social media posts.
Reserves policy
We have reviewed our Reserves Policy and, after assessing the risk profile of our income streams and fixed
and variable costs, have introduced a new reserves policy target at a range between £3,512 and £5,712 a
year, if all funding streams are successful for 2025. This will enable the allotment to continue with current
grant levels for approximately a range of between 3.7 and 5.9 years working on the current reserves in
the bank.
At the end of the accounting year, we still had £1,277 restricted fund to spend from the Hubbub Nature
Hubs funding, this project was completed in March 2025. There was also £9 remaininE on other restricted
fund balances. The free reserves at 31 Oecember 2024 were £21,025. Based on the current forecast for
the number of days employed into 2025 and income levels remaining the same, our spend of £5,312 will
use the reserves within 3.9 years.
Approved by the trustees on 25 June 2025 and signed on their behalf by..
T_ s&AI..
T Shortland
Trustee
li

Accountant's report to the Trustees of Tinsley Community Allotment on the Preparation of the
Unaudited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 December 2024
In order to assist you to fulfil your duties under the Charities Act 2011, we have prepared for your approval
the accounts of the Tinsley Community Allotment for the year ended 31 December 2024 from the charity's
accounting records and from information and explanations you have given us.
As a practising member firm of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales IICAEWI, we
are subject to its ethical and other professional requirements which are detailed at
http=//www.icaew.com/en/membership/regulations-standards-and-guidance.
This report is made solely to the Board of Trustees of the Tinsley Community Allotment, as a body, in
accordance with the terms of our engagement letter dated 02102/2023. Our work has been undertaken
solely to prepare for your approval the accounts of the Tinsley Community Allotment and state those
matters that we have agreed to state to the Board of Trustees of the Tinsley Community Allotment, as a
body. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other
than the finsley Community Allotment and its Board of Trustees as a body for our work or for this report.
It is your duty to ensure that the Tinsley Community Allotment has kept adequate accounting records and
to prepare statutory accounts that give a true and fair view of the assets, liabilities, financial position and
surplus of the Tinsley Community Allotment. You consider that the Tinsley Community Allotment is
exempt from the statutory audit requirement for the year.
We have not been instrurted to carry out an audit or a review of the accounts of the Tinsley Community
Allotment. For this reason, we have not verified the accuracy or completeness of the accounting records
or information and explanations you have given to us and we do not, therefore, express any opinion on
the statutory accounts.
Signed..
Seven Hills Accountants Limited
57 Burton Street
Sheffield
S6 2HH
27 Jun 2025
Date=
12

Tlnsley Communlty Allotment
Receipts & payments account
For the period ended 31 December 2024
Unrestricted Restricted
fund
fund
Totsl
2024
Totsl
2023
Notes
Receipts
Grants & donations
Charitable activities
137
690
11,641
11,778
690
9,590
690
Total receipts
827
11,641
12,468
10,280
Payments
Equipment
Resources
Seeds & plants
Insurance
Accountancy
Sessional Support wages
Admin
Other
Publicity
227
328
236
227
430
255
176
390
11,070
3,330
214
52
775
534
79
166
360
9,880
3,940
80
25
102
19
176
390
1,500
3,330
9,570
214
52
Total payments
5.517
10.627
16.144
15.839
Net receiptsl {paymentsl for the year
14,6901
1,014
{3,6761
(5,559)
Transfers between funds
Net movement in funds after transfers
14,6901
1,014
{3,6761
(5,559)
Total funds brought forward
25,715
272
25,987
31,546
Total funds carried forward
21,025
1,286
22,311
25,987
13

Tlnsley Communlty Allotment
Statement of assets and liabillties
As at 31 December 2024
2024
2023
Cash assets
Balances at bank-
Current account
22,311
25,987
Total
22.311
25,987
2024
2023
Debtors
Other debtor5
2024
2023
Liabilities
Creditors
Accountancy
14
495
360
509
360
These Financial Statements are accepted by the trustees on 25 June 2025
Signed on behalf of the Board of Trustees by..
T_ s¥AI_
T Shortland
Trustee
14

rinsley Comrnunty Allotment
Notes to the accounts
Forthe perfod ended 31 December 2024
l Recelpts & payments account
Receipts and payments accounts are staremenrs that summ3rise the movement of cash into and out of the organisation during the financial
year. In this context 'cash includes cash equivalent5, for ex3mple, b3nk accounts where cash can be readily withdr3Wn to pay for debts a5 they
become due.
Unrestricted funds comprlse of general funds and deslgnated funds. General funds are empendable at the discretlon of the trustees in the
furtherance of the objectives of ihe charitv.
Restricted funds are subject to specific conditions by donors 3S to how they may be used. The purpose5 and u5e5 of the restricted funds are set
out in the note5 tothe accounts
2 Grants & donatlons
Unrestrirted Restricted
funds
fund5
2024
Total
2023
Total
Donations
sheffield City Council Ward Pot
South Yorkshire Comrnunity Fund
British Land Grant
Eon Community Fund
Hubbub Foundation
Tin51ey Forum Under 5's
37
37
121
719
973
3,653
3.￿0
loo
3,821
3.OLKI
4,0(I)
820
3,921
3.000
4,000
820
1.124
137
11.641
11,778
9,590
3 Income from Charitableactivitie5
Unrestrfcted
funds
Restrlrted
funds
2024
Total
2023
Total
Contract5 and projects
Attivity session income
690
690
690
690
690
690
4 Restricted funds
Opening
balante
l-Jan-24
Closlng
balance
31-Dec-24
Receipts
Payments
Transfers
Hubbub Foundaiion
South Yorkshire Community Fund
Eon Community Fund Grant
British Land Grant
Tinsley Forum Under 5's
4,CQO
1.277
272
3,(QD
3,821
820
13,0001
13,8141
272
11.641
110,6271
1.286
Hubbub Foundation
A Nature Hubs project with themes of Increasing acce55 2nd bringing people together. Funding io run three summer family open days and to
improve the orch3rd by planting new fruits in the orchard, add signage and carry out tidyin8 and m31lltenance on the site. Also fundingfor
training for the two 5e5sional 5UPPOrt workers.
South Yorkshire Community Fund
Fvndingto run sessions over autumn and winter In order to provide continviry for regular visitors.
Eon Communlty Fund Grant
Fundin8for a programme of organic fruit and ve8et3ble CU￿1vation sessions for the benefit of the local community.
ritlsh Land Grant
Fundingfortwo projects. The first project is running a programme of organic fruit and vegetable cultivation sessions for local school children.
The second is runningweekty sessions in term time offered to families of toddler5 in the local 3rea.
Tin51ey Forurn Under 5.5
Fundin8to run three surnmer holiday'Fafflily Days.
15

rinsley Comrnunty Allotment
Notes to the accounts
Forthe perfod ended 31 December 2024
4 Restrlded fijnds luntlnuedl
Prior yeor
pening
bolonce
l-Jun-23
Closing
bolonce
31-Dec-23
Receipts
Payment5
Tran5[er5
Sheffieldcity Council Wurfl Pot
south Yorkshire CommunytyFund
EDll Community Fund Grant
8ritysh Lond Sront
Tin51ey Forum ijnder 5 5
719
973
17191
f7011
13.0001
13,6531
11,1241
272
3,653
1,124
9,469
9,197
272
S Trustee5' remuneration
Trustees received no empenses. remuDeratioD or benefits in thls perlod.
6 Transattions y￿th related parties
No other transactions have taken place with related parties duringthe ye3r, otherthan those included ill note S.
16