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2024-10-31-accounts

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Trustees’ Annual Report and

Audited Financial Statements

For the year ended 31 October 2024

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees’ Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

CONTENTS Page
Welcome 2
Who we are 3
What we do 6
Governance 8
Reference and Administrative Details of the Charity 11
Trustees’ Annual Report 13
Financial Statements for the Year-Ended 31 October 2024 22
Independent Auditors’ Report 27
Statement of Financial Activities 31
Balance Sheet 33
Cash Flow Statement 34
Notes to the Financial Statements 35

Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees’ Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

WELCOME

This is my last Annual Report as Chair of the Council of Management before I retire in December 2024 and hand over to my successor, Mark Greet.

The past few years have shown us just how important it is to recognise, respond and adapt to the ever-increasing number of challenges we face. While we have undoubtedly remained true to our Christian foundations and core ethos to act with compassion; we have responded to these challenges that so many across the country have faced, the lingering effects of Covid, the pervading impact of the ongoing cost of living crisis and even now, right at the end of this reporting year, the varying degrees of uncertainty that are affecting our fishing communities at every level as they contemplate multiple issues across the political and domestic spectrum.

I am delighted with the continuing efforts made by all members of our dedicated staff right across the charity to do what is best for our clients in the active and former fishing communities, particularly now as so many more appear to be affected by financial hardships.

But while financial concerns seem to be most prevalent; we have not lost sight of what we are all about, to offer support in whatever guise is necessary to those who seek it from us. Invariably there is much work done to comfort those who are nearing end of life and then console those who are bereaved. Front line staff spend a lot of time in churches, officiating and supporting funeral services and then going back out into the community; reaching out as far and wide as they can to ensure that all who may be eligible for support know about us, know how to engage with us and are without barriers when they choose to do so.

I can reflect back over the years I have served as both a trustee and then Chair with pride for this is a charity that does what it says on the tin – it supports people without judgement and without exclusion. It is the epitome of our mantra of ‘delivering Christianity with its sleeves rolled up’.

Michael Vlasto OBE Chair (at 31 October 2024) The Council of Management The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen (the Fishermen’s Mission)

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

WHO WE ARE

Our Origin . The National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen was founded in October 1881 when Ebenezer Mather, a devoted Christian from the Thames Church Mission, witnessed 189 fishermen perish close to the safety of shore off Eyemouth. He sought to provide a ministry to fishermen and help improve their health and adopted the motto ‘Preach the Word; Heal the Sick’.

143 years later and we are the only national charity that works solely to support fishermen and their families.

Our Values. All our work is based in the roots of our Christian faith, accepting all without judgement. We take the compassion of Christ to our fishing communities, purposefully reaching out to fishermen and their families, providing practical and emotional support with every step .

The Fishermen’s Mission’s values are founded on our ecumenical Christian faith and our commitment to provide practical help that makes a positive difference in people’s lives; making tangible improvements to the lived experience of those we support.

“Welcoming” “Listening” “Supporting”

Equity, Equality, Diversity and Inclusivity (EEDI). “Everyone is equal in the sight of God” and yet we live in a world where inequity, inequality, uniformity and exclusion still persist.

The Fishermen’s Mission is an equal opportunity organisation, wholly committed to promoting and exercising EEDI throughout our workforce and at every level of our organisation. We are committed to a providing a working environment that is free from any form of discrimination across the nine characteristics outlined in the Equality Act 2010, namely Age, Gender, Race, Disability, Religion or belief, Sexual orientation, Gender reassignment, Marriage or civil partnerships, Pregnancy and maternity.

We will make reasonable adjustments to meet the needs of staff who are or become disabled and since 2022, the Fishermen’s Mission has been a Disability Confident Committed employer.

Much of our outward facing work is also founded on addressing the inequity and inequality experienced by many fishermen and their families.

EEDI Objectives. Each year Council agrees a series of objectives for the following year. For 2023/24 these were:

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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These objectives have been fully implemented by the Executive and SMT and Council has reaffirmed its commitment to EEDI and become a truly representative organisation.

How we are structured . The Memorandum and Articles of Association outlines the overarching governance of the Fishermen’s Mission. The following paragraphs describe the structure in more detail.

Royal Patronage . Queen Victoria bestowed Royal Patronage on the National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen in 1886 making us the Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen (RNMDSF). As the Royal Household conducted a detailed review of charity patronages following the passing of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second in September 2022, we remained hopeful of retaining our Royal Patronage.

Note: At the time of completing this report (Dec 24), we were honoured and privileged to learn that Her Royal Highness The Princess Royal had very kindly consented to become our new Royal Patron.

Vice Patrons . The Fishermen’s Mission is supported by a small group of carefully selected supporters who do everything from bringing attention to the work we do through to very active fundraising and public advocacy across the local, regional and national landscapes. In 2024 we conducted a Quinquennial Review of Vice Patrons leading to some stepping down while others kindly agreed to continue in their roles.

We were very saddened by the passing of two of our long standing Vice Patrons towards the end of the year. The Right Honourable Lady Flora Majorie Fraser, 21st Lady Saltoun of Abernethy and Peter Lewis-Crown OBE had both been tremendous, and often very active, champions of the Fishermen’s Mission over many years.

A full list of Vice Patrons who have served during the year is:

Dame Judi Dench CH, DBE, FRSA In continuance
Mr Alex West In continuance
Mr Derek Cardno In continuance
Mr Mike Park OBE In continuance
Mr Nathan Outlaw In continuance
Mr Rick Stein OBE In continuance
Mr Nick Nairn In continuance
Mr Paul Trebilcock In continuance
Mr Ross Dougal In continuance
Dr Stephen Lockwood In continuance
Baroness Judith Wilcox Retired April 2024

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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Rt Hon The Viscount Thurso Retired April 2024 Lord Michael Grade CBE Retired April 2024 Mr Peter Lewis-Crown OBE Passed Away August 2024 Lady Saltoun of Abernethy Passed Away September 2024

The Association. In accordance with the Articles of Association, the formal name of the Association is “The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen”, (since 2006, we have used a working title “the Fishermen’s Mission”). At year end, the Association comprised 77 members, two fewer than at the start of the year.

The Trustees. The Trustees of the Fishermen’s Mission are elected from the Members of the Association. The Trustees serve as Directors of the charity for the purpose of the Companies Act. Collectively the Trustees/Directors form a governing body known as the ‘Council of Management,’ hereafter referred to as ‘Council’.

Under the Memorandum and Articles of Association, Council should have no more than fifteen Trustees appointed from the membership of the Fishermen’s Mission Association[1] .

Trustees who served on Council during the year were:

Mr Michael Vlasto OBE Chair Mr Ian Gatt CBE Deputy Chair Reverend Derath Durkin Mr Trevor James The Very Reverend Dr David Lacy DL Mr Nathan de Rozarieux Mrs Kate Pound Mr Mark Stubbings Mrs Wilma Goodlad Mrs Alicia Moyles Ms Deanne Thomas Mr Mark Greet Mrs Elspeth MacDonald Rear Admiral Sir Jeremy de Halpert KCVO Retired April 2024 Mr Thomas Maier Retired April 2024 Mr Jack Gatacre Resigned October 2024

In accordance with the provisions of the Company’s Articles of Association, The Very Reverend Dr David Lacy DL, Mr Trevor James, The Reverend Derath Durkin and Mr Nathan de Rozarieux retired by rotation at the Annual General Meeting in April 2024 and were then re-elected.

The Executive. The Executive comprises two officers:

Captain Marc Evans Royal Navy (Retired) Chief Executive and Company Secretary Mrs Alison Godfrey Deputy Chief Executive and Director of Business Development

The Senior Management Team . The Executive is supported by the charity’s Senior Management Team which provides leadership across the following areas: finance; port operations; business support; information technology and information systems, corporate partnerships; trusts & legacies, and management of specific initiatives and defined, time-bounded projects.

1 Council membership temporarily increased to sixteen during the first part of the year 2023-24 as new Trustees had been recruited and inducted into full membership prior to the planned retirement of Trustees at the AGM in April 2024.

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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WHAT WE DO

Our Charitable Objects. The Fishermen’s Mission was founded to:

In summary, the Fishermen’s Mission works all around the British Isles to provide spiritual, pastoral, practical (including financial and healthcare) welfare and support to active and former fishermen and their families.

Our Focus. The Fishermen’s Mission focusses on the people in need of the practical assistance and support we provide; our work reflects the things that matter to us and which we care about:

The values of the Fishermen’s Mission align closely with the Nolan Principles of Conduct in Public Life and the National Council for Voluntary Organisations (NCVO) Charity Ethical Principles.

Our Tasks. The Fishermen’s Mission engages in a broad scope of activity. The principle tasks being:

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The significant majority of the Fishermen’s Mission staff are based in and around the UK fishing ports, supported by many local volunteers. Their focus is direct engagement with active and former fishermen and their families across the full gamut of the above tasks.

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GOVERNANCE

The Company & Charity. The Fishermen’s Mission is a Company limited by guarantee and a registered charity governed by a Memorandum and Articles of Association which sets out how the Association, its Officers and Members of the Council shall manage the charity.

The Fishermen’s Mission is led and governed by an independent Board of Trustees, who also serve as the Directors of the company, and collectively form the Council that exercises full governance of the charity.

Effective governance is fundamental to our success as a charity. With good governance comes our ability to deliver our wider charitable objects and underpinning core day to day activity. Good governance enables our people to best use their skills which, combined with our resources, make them effective in what they do. Good governance helps us to oversee the standard of that activity and supports a positive culture throughout the workforce of paid employees and volunteers. Good governance also helps us to ensure that we are compliant with relevant legislation and to monitor and respond appropriately to the risks we are facing.

As part of our continuous professional development programme, Trustees are challenged to review how we conduct our business using the relevant charity governance codes as the handrail helping them to make such assessments.

Council Meetings. Council normally meets in full session four times each year with an agenda that covers varying standing items such as strategy, performance, risk, financial and compliance matters. The agenda is supplemented with other items that are reviewed at specific points in the annual cycle (e.g. policies) and by reports from the three standing sub-committees each of which is chaired by a member of Council:

Council has collective responsibility for setting and agreeing the overall direction, strategy and culture of the Fishermen’s Mission. Through NERC, Council sets Executive remuneration and approves annual executive pay rises while separately, through FRSC, Council approves the recommendations for annual non-executive pay rises. Council leads by example and aids the Chief Executive and the Deputy Chief Executive (the Director of Business Development) to execute the strategy and exercise day to day management of the Fishermen’s Mission, supported by their Senior Management Team.

Training & Development . On appointment, new Trustees, undertake an induction programme to familiarise themselves with the work of the Fishermen’s Mission, the requirements of their role and core governance responsibilities. Trustees are able to undertake training offered by various external providers and all will attend both the Annual Staff Training Conference and the Trustees’ Away Day which allows them to undertake additional training and refreshers on core elements of the work of Trustees.

Gender Balance . At the end of the operating year 2023-24, Council comprised 13 Trustees: 7 men and 6 women who bring a broad range of backgrounds, skills and experience to the business of Council. We continue to promote and encourage diversity and a significant improvement in the gender balance is the outcome of our overall aim to improve inclusion and diversity across the Council, although further work is required for the Council to be more representative, especially of the communities we support and we actively seek Trustees who have a lived experience of the work of the Fishermen’s Mission.

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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Recruitment, Appointments and Succession Planning . New Trustees were recruited in 2023 using a third party specialist recruitment firm. This process, while not repeated in 2023/24, helps to identify candidates that offer greater diversity, while of course ensuring the right attitude, empathy, alignment to our values and the professional skills we seek for Trustees of the Fishermen’s Mission. This ensures that Council and the sub-committees are enabled to deliver their governance responsibilities to best effect and assures us that we have the right people as Trustees to safeguard our succession planning process.

In planning for the future, Council temporarily exceeded the maximum number of Trustees (15) permitted by our governing document by one during the first part of the operating year. The Charity Commission was notified, highlighting that Trustees retiring at the AGM in April 2024 would return the total number to fewer than that specified in our governing document.

Strategic Risk Management. The Fishermen’s Mission’s approach to organisational risk management is to mitigate our risk exposure to an acceptable level across a broad spectrum of strategic and operational risks. Effective and efficient risk management is an important factor in the achievement of our strategic objectives and protecting the future sustainability of the charity. Our risk management framework is also a key component of our overall governance, and our approach aligns with Charity Commission guidance through a process that identifies major strategic and operational risks, assesses the level of risk and evaluates their mitigation.

The Risk Register is managed by the Chief Executive with members of the SMT being responsible for mitigations where appropriate. The Chief Executive also brings forward all strategic risks for review by Council in full session.

Financial Oversight . As part of its responsibilities, the FRSC reviews a rolling 5-year business plan supported by the associated key planning and budgetary assumptions. FRSC also scrutinises a detailed annual budget which forecasts our income and expenditure for the year, including all costs associated with specific projects, across the charity for the next financial year. FRSC then presents this to Council in October annually for consideration and approval.

Cash-flow forecasts and monthly accounts are regularly monitored by Trustees and our policies specify the circumstances in which changes to the budget must be reviewed and reapproved. Financial authority is granted to Senior Managers through the approval of specific budgets.

The Finance Department is involved in any major project or programme work, providing the necessary support to ensure the appropriate financial decisions are made.

Financial Policies and Procedures. Council is responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charity. This is enabled through the Fishermen’s Mission financial policies and procedures. Compliance with these policies and procedures is mandatory for all employees and volunteers. Non-compliance may lead to disciplinary action.

Financial Risk Management. In accordance with SORP 2015, key financial risks have been identified and measures undertaken to mitigate them. All risks are recorded in a Council endorsed Risk Register, which is subject to regular reviews by the Senior Management Team. Council reviews all significant risks at each Council meeting. The Council’s leading financial risks were:

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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In the first two instances Council would, as a short term emergency measure, meet the shortfall by use of reserves which provide the financial resilience that would enable the Fishermen’s Mission to operate at current levels for at least two years.

The other financial risks are considered to be fully mitigated against through the employment of suitably qualified and experienced people within the financial function; training and robust checks and controls / internal scrutiny.

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REFERENCE AND ADMINISTRATIVE DETAILS OF THE CHARITY

Company Registration details. The Fishermen’s Mission is registered as a company limited by guarantee :

Charity Registration details. The Fishermen’s Mission is registered as a charity:

Professional Advisors to the Fishermen’s Mission:

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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TRUSTEES’ ANNUAL REPORT

Council presents its Annual Report and the audited financial statements for the year-ended 31 October 2024.

PUBLIC BENEFIT

Council has referred to the guidance published by the Charity Commission in reviewing the aims and objectives of the Fishermen’s Mission and in planning future activities and is satisfied that, as is evidenced by the information given in this report, its activities are clearly for public benefit.

Council confirms that the Annual Report and audited financial statements comply with the governing document, the Statement of Recommended Practice, Accounting and Reporting by Charities (SORP 2015), the Companies Act 2006 and relevant law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards.

PERFORMANCE

Overall. Council is satisfied that the Fishermen’s Mission has fulfilled the requirements of the three charitable objects as described in the Articles of Association, to:

It is the people of the fishing community who are at the heart of our work and 2023-24 has been a challenging year for many who are experiencing hardship through the precarious nature of fishing; environmental changes, the increasing frequency and duration of adverse weather; increasing spatial squeeze in the catch sector; the ongoing cost of living crisis; the crisis in health and social care and the lingering effect of the Coronavirus pandemic.

The winter months saw an increased number of questions and concerns about money and benefits, and we remain grateful to our partners at the Seafarers’ Advice & Information Line (SAIL) who do so much to support our clients in such troubling times.

They and our other close partners, the Seafarers Hospital Society, the Shipwrecked Mariners’ Society and the Sailors Children's Society together with our charitable supporters including the Merchant Navy Welfare Board, Trinity House, The Fishmongers’ Company and The Seafarers’ Charity have enabled us to adopt a more federated approach to our collective work supporting our part of the wider seafaring community in need.

Council remains pleased with our performance over recent years and during the past year in particular and is optimistic about our future. While we would be delighted to see an end to the demand for our services, the reality is that for as long as there is a fishing industry in the United Kingdom, then there will be a demand for a charity able to provide end to end support, that is solely focused on the wellbeing of those who are, or have been, part of that industry. We remain on a good financial footing despite operating with a deficit budget and we are able to plan judiciously, yet ambitiously, to meet the anticipated need over future years.

Strategic Objectives. Council set six strategic objectives for progression over a rolling five-year operating cycle. These are reviewed, adjusted as necessary and reissued annually in a formal policy statement and are summarised as follows:

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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In 2022 Council set three additional supporting objectives to:

Strategy Reviews in 2023 and 2024 did not generate any significant changes to either the strategic or supporting objectives. Council was therefore satisfied to continue with each line of activity pending a comprehensive, ‘bottom up’ review of the charity’s strategy, to be led by an external facilitator, in 2025.

The Executive is charged with pursuing the objectives and provides an assessment of progress against each strategic and supporting objective at each full meeting of Council. The end-of-year assessment concluded that good progress had been made against five of the six strategic objectives. Extending our support to new areas had some minor, but manageable, issues in relation to the reintegration of the Isle of Man into the main charity, although it was felt that these were offset by significantly better than anticipated engagement with the fishing associations and communities in the Channel Islands.

Across the three supporting objectives, it was assessed that further diversification of voluntary income revenue streams is required; improved diversity and representation within the Fishermen’s Mission and a more determined effort is required to move towards what are acknowledged to be challenging environmental targets.

All operational key performance indicators are presented at every Council meeting where it was agreed that each had been at least fulfilled, and in some cases surpassed.

Financial Performance. The year-end position of -£273,089 is a much improved year-end position against the deficit budget (-£318,000) approved by Council in October 2023 for the Fishermen’s Mission Financial Year 1 November 2023 to 31 October 2024.

This represents continuing positive movement in the charity’s financial position having previously posted year-end deficits of -£935,454 (2021/22), reducing to -£754,169 (2022/23).

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Towards the end of our financial year, the Charity Commission commented that the sector’s financial resilience and sustainability is seen to be a key current risk[2] , and this is mirrored by Council’s leading financial risks.

The Charity Commission further commented that during the recent cost of living crisis, many charities had faced a triple threat from increased running costs, greater demand for their services and reducing income. Charity Commission research has highlighted a fall in the number of people saying they have donated or raised funds for charity, alongside a steep increase in the number of people who have received help from a charity.

Over the past three years, we have overtly highlighted how we have had to work harder to maintain the same level of income, while over the same period expenditure had increased as both our operating costs and demand for our services by our clients have risen.

Over this period we have necessarily drawn upon invested reserves to mitigate the variance between income and expenditure, but this does not provide an enduring solution and a continuing deficit position is acknowledged as not ideal and that a steady balance of income and expenditure is preferable.

We recognise where the money comes from and where it goes; that we are meeting our charitable objects and are deliberately maintaining our level of service delivery at a time when we are being called upon more by our clients. That does not however mitigate the efforts that have been undertaken to scrutinise our costs at every level and across all activity streams while continuing to work hard to maximise our multiple revenue streams.

While we are similar to many charities in that we are well supported by volunteers, the number of paid staff means that we will not be immune to the effects of the increases to the employer’s National Insurance Contributions announced in the Budget towards the end of our financial year.

Fundraising - Overview. The Fishermen’s Mission is registered with the Fundraising Regulator and works within the Code of Fundraising Practice and the Chartered Institute of Fundraising’s guidance. During the period it was not unexpected, but still pleasing, to again report that there were no complaints received regarding any of our fundraising activity.

The positive aspect of our fundraising has been that we have fundamentally maintained our income levels in a climate where fundraising recovery post the pandemic has been fragile. Almost all fundraising is ultimately driven by the economic climate and while we cannot underestimate the generosity of our many wonderful donors, we know that many have continued to give what they can while potentially making savings in their domestic budgets to do so.

We value immensely our donors and supporters and recognise the right of the majority to remain ‘unsung heroes’. We exercise ethical practices in all our fundraising activities, in particular the Fishermen’s Mission purchases neither names nor addresses for fundraising purposes nor sells any information that we hold. We only contact those people who have purchased goods through our website, donated or offered support and we do not employ any third-party companies to fundraise in our name. All fundraising and marketing activity has been conducted within the compliance framework of the Data Protection Act 2018.

We have seen a marginal increase in the overall number of regular donors and a significant increase in giving through online platforms and contactless payment devices in particular which has made

2 “How to protect your charity as the sector continues to face financial pressures”. Charity Commission, 24 Sep 24.

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giving much easier for many (c95% increase on last year). We shall continue to develop this further, utilising a range of devices and opportunities to donate.

The fundraising team continues to be imaginative and innovative in seeking to maintain income levels wherever possible and this has resulted in some new initiatives and a greater sense of team working across the whole organisation.

The Fishermen’s Mission recognises both the demanding work and commitment of all the staff team in raising this income alongside a deep gratitude for the generosity of supporters and donors throughout the UK.

Looking ahead, we shall continue to do more of the same while adding new and diverse income streams to the enterprise however, we are realistic and do not expect to see a greater rate of recovery until the UK economic climate improves.

External analysis of the October Budget suggests that our year end outlook is likely to remain unchanged with slow recovery in the next twelve months while the longer-term outlook, beyond 2025 would appear to be deteriorating as the OBR does not anticipate significant growth over the next five years.

Fundraising Team Development. The fundraising team and port staff have worked extremely hard together this year and successfully achieved the income targets. Despite this it was clear that some of our donors found it a struggle to continue with their donations. New initiatives have included a scheme to develop support from fishmongers in continued partnership with The National Federation of Fishmongers, the introduction of challenge events and a strong campaign to introduce greater income through the Gift Aid Scheme. Donors and supporters remain the very lifeblood of the Fishermen’s Mission.

Fundraising - Trusts, Grant Making Foundations & Partners. Partnerships with grant making trusts and foundations remained key to the Fishermen’s Mission overall income and this was particularly true of the continued, long-term funding relationships within the maritime sector, including The Seafarers’ Charity, Trinity House, Fishmongers’ Company and the Merchant Navy Welfare Board.

Outside the sector, key support was received from a sound base of grant making foundations and partners including the Thomas J Horne Memorial Trust, The Margot and Andrew Tennant Charitable Trust, Garfield Weston Foundation, and the Pemberton-Barnes Trust. Trusts and foundations are at the centre of our ability to deliver core services, broaden our work and develop new service provision.

Fundraising - Legacies. Revenue from legacies remains key to the Fishermen’s Mission’s overall income. It underpins service provision but also helps to resource essential development work. Income from legacies during 2023/2024 was £895,278, slightly lower than in the previous year (£1,009,096 in 2022/23), but remained above our budgeted target. This would appear to be, at least in part, due to ongoing delays within the HM Courts & Tribunals Service (HMCTS). Some income held back from previous years has filtered through and there was an increased flow approaching year end. Council has noted that legacy notifications have remained stable and becoming part of the National Free Wills Network has provided access to a national network of solicitors thereby significantly easing the process of writing a will by those wishing to support us.

Supporters of the Fishermen’s Mission. The Fishermen’s Mission is proud to be supported by so many loyal friends from around the UK and beyond. It is a privilege to receive help and friendship from supporters. We value each call, email, letter and gift that is received as well as being deeply grateful for those who pray each week for work and staff using the Prayer Calendar. It is recognised

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that giving is a very personal decision and the Fishermen’s Mission is proud that so many people choose to support its work and recognises the vital support that donors and volunteers bring to the work.

A Year of Delivery - Firsts. 2023/24 has been a year of firsts for the Fishermen’s Mission:

Recognising that people living in the most deprived areas of the UK experience worse access to diagnostic services and subsequent patient treatment and care, the fishing community of North Shields was identified by MCS as a prime location to establish a community project. Backed by MCS, but delivered by the Fishermen’s Mission, the Cancer Awareness project (C Aware) aims to raise awareness across a community and aid facilitation of improved access to cancer screening, diagnosis and treatment.

The project is led by a dedicated team of three staff specifically recruited by the Fishermen’s Mission for this purpose who mobilise members of the active and retired fishing community to become Champions, key messengers who will receive and then share vital information with their family, friends and colleagues about early signs and symptoms of a variety of typical cancers and then help signpost people to how diagnoses can be obtained and support received thereafter.

The programme works with active and former fishermen, and their families to identify those barriers that have prevented them from accessing cancer screenings and follow up support. The core team facilitates cancer awareness sessions and shares information about local support through a series of focus (“talking”) groups and dedicated quayside events for the local fishing community.

Since the launch in March 2024, C Aware has been fully integrated into the Fishermen’s Mission and is already succeeding in raising awareness of where the increased cancer risks within occupational and lifestyle ways of living and started to break down some of the many barriers that have been identified to just talking about cancer let alone engaging with diagnostic services.

Ultimately, breaking down the barriers and connecting existing services to the fishing community, with a key focus on providing preventative information, will be key to reducing prevalence, advancing diagnosis and aid more positive prognoses.

There is already a flow of information from the project team to other staff around the country and looking ahead, we shall determine how this 3-year project can be brought into our core activity.

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Throughout the duration of the project, a growing number of key insights are being collated. Within the first few active months of the project some of the stand-out insights were:

The Fishermen’s Mission, working in collaboration with other maritime charities, and in particular Stella Maris and The Seafarers’ Charity, developed, publicised and delivered this new annual and national event.

The inaugural National Fishing Remembrance Day saw remembrance services organised and held at fishing memorials all around the four home nations of the United Kingdom.

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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A single National ‘focus event’ was held at the Fishermen’s Memorial in Grimsby in the presence of the Minister of State, the Right Honourable Sir Mark Spencer MP:

Our work has helped thousands of families, and we are very proud of the difference we have made – and will continue to make – in our local community. Without our wonderful supporters, none of this would be possible and so we are proud to have established this annual National Support Day.

A Year of Delivery - Continuing Success (and some firsts). In last year’s Annual Report we commented that as that year was coming to an end we had just been notified that our SEAFIT activity (delivered in partnership with the Seafarers Hospital Society) had been shortlisted as a finalist by the Health Services Journal (HSJ) in their Health Sector Recognition Category for 2024.

Having been recognised as the first ever initiative to win the new ‘Innovation of the Year’ at the Fishing News Awards and the Healthcare Provider category at the Charity Awards in 2023 to be further recognised by the health sector just a few months later with the HSJ Silver Award announced earlier this year was further recognition of the impactful work that our SEAFIT activity delivers, and continues to deliver.

SEAFIT remains our dynamic solution to closing the gap in health & well-being access for the fishing community around the UK and our activity in this space is increasing year on year. We reported that 2022/23 had been busiest year to date for SEAFIT activity, but 2023/24 exceeded that as we extended the reach of SEAFIT into previously unvisited areas including The Channel Islands (Jersey and Guernsey) and Wales.

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A summary of activity in 2023/24 is provided below with figures for 2021/22 and 2022/23 provided for comparison:

2023/24 2021/22 / 2022/23
57 Days quayside events with over 50 health providers 33 / 44
245 NHS health checks conducted 150 / 187
165 Further health checks conducted at SEAFIT events 120 / 157
234 Mental health engagements (54 clients, 137 sessions) c300 / 158
474 Physiotherapy engagements (113 clients) 150 / 634
76 Individual dental checks conducted 61 / 276

SEAFIT is responding to what is happening across many areas of the charity sector / the ‘civil society’ and that is plugging the gap between what the public sector (ostensibly local authorities and local NHS providers) should be expected to provide and what is actually being experienced by often under-represented and disadvantaged communities such as the fishermen and their families.

It is clear that SEAFIT is striking a nerve as we continue to receive comments from local public sector providers that without SEAFIT supporting the fishing community, they would be unable to extend their support into this area. SEAFIT remains the fundamental difference between the fishing community being able to access some frontline health services or not. There is however a glimmer of light as a few local authorities and NHS Trusts have, in just a few instances, quite openly used our SEAFIT activity model as the basis for some new community engagement activity, some of which has been focussed directly on the fishing community.

To quote the author Charles Caleb Colton, who coined the term in 1820, “Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery.”

Further to this, we are receiving more requests from health and industry organisations to work in partnership with them: Discussions are progressing with the Royal National Institute for Deaf People; our first venture into Wales has led to the inclusion of the Health, Safety and Wellbeing Forum; The Orkney Fishing Association has enquired about a non-dental health event, and the Dunbar Harbour Trust is looking at a specific focus on supporting their fishing community. All of which amounts to SEAFIT having raised the profile of fishermen’s health needs and the Fishermen’s Mission being seen as the ‘go to’ organisation to support fishermen’s health and wellbeing.

As SEAFIT moved into its fifth year, we conducted a quinquennial review of how some of our planned activity is delivered by some of our partners. The purpose being to ensure value for money, make appropriate concessions while maintaining the intended levels of service delivery and quality.

A Year of Delivery – New Customer Relationship Management System - Salesforce. We have worked hard over the past few years to fulfil the intentions of the strategic objective to “improve the collection, quality, management and utilisation of data.” We have also recognised that technology moves on and sometimes what you’re using doesn’t match the ambition. After considerable research, a proposition was passed through Council to transition from our existing customer relationship management (CRM), the system that manages all of our interactions with current and potential clients and partners, to a new CRM – “Salesforce”.

The objective was simple: To improve relationships; become better connected with our clients and our supporters; to streamline processes and become more effective and more efficient. We would be better positioned to integrate data from multiple sources, expedite the way we work with real-time updates and add greater commonality into our ways of working using a robust and widely used package that is also employed by a number of our partners making data sharing significantly easier and more secure.

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As with any new IT implementation project, this did not come as easily as anyone would have hoped for and demanded considerable leadership and day to day management from a number of senior staff as we built the tools and prepared to ‘go live’ early in the new operating year.

A Year of Delivery - Our Impact. The Fishermen’s Mission remains the only national charity dedicated solely to the support of fishermen and their families. Everything we do is funded by our donors; we do not receive any government or lottery funding and so it is particularly pleasing to see that during the course of this operating year, the Fishermen’s Mission has expended some £2,401,576 (£2,749,563 in 2022/23) on activities that directly support the delivery of our charitable objects.

We started the year with 3,319 active clients. Client movement during the year included 776 sadly passing away, 558 new clients being brought onto our books with others ceasing to be active clients or moving to reactive status. At the year-end we had recorded 2,882 active clients.

The number of new clients decreased from 785 in 2022/23 to 558 this past year, with the majority of new clients being registered in Southeast England (104), an increase of 30%. Elsewhere, client numbers remained fairly static but with some noticeable reductions in new clients in some areas of Scotland: Shetland 10 (48 in 2022/23); Southeast Scotland 26 (45 in 2022/23); Southwest Scotland 25 (52 in 2022/23) and Northwest Scotland and the Western Isles 10 (55 in 2022/23).

Of our active clients, the higher numbers who are active fishermen reside in East Anglia followed by Cornwall, Devon, Northern Ireland Southeast England, Southwest Scotland and Yorkshire. Meanwhile the higher numbers of former fishermen reside in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire closely followed by East Scotland, East Anglia, the Moray Coast and Shetland.

The majority of the migrant fishermen who are clients come from the Northern Irish vessels and those in Southwest Scotland.

The balance of our active clients remains broadly 23% active fishermen and 40% former fishermen, with the remainder being a mix of widows (29%); migrant fishermen (5%) and other smaller groupings.

We have recorded 20,601 direct welfare specific client interactions, a slight increase on the 20,277 in 2022/23 and distributed some 1006 grants valued at £411,324 compared with 1051 grants valued at £421,001 (data adjusted from 971 / £413,000 in 2022/23).

Council, in their capacity as Trustees and company directors, approves the Annual Report.

SIGNED ON BEHALF OF AND BY ORDER OF THE COUNCIL OF MANAGEMENT

KM Vlasto (Feb 13, 2025 12:05 GMT) Mark Greet (Feb 15, 2025 11:23 GMT) Michael Vlasto OBE Mark Greet Chair (as at 31 October 2024, to 31 December 2024) Chair (from 1 January 2025)

Approved by Trustees at the Council of Management on 5 February 2025:

Mark Greet (Feb 15, 2025 11:23 GMT)

Mark Greet, Chair (from 1 January 2025)

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FINANCIAL STATEMENTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 OCTOBER 2024

Responsibilities of the Members of the Council Of Management. In keeping with company law, Council is responsible for preparing the Trustees’ Annual Report and Financial Statements for each financial year. Council members must not approve the financial statements unless each Trustee is satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the situation of the charitable company and of the incoming resources and application of resources, including the income and expenditure of the charitable company for that period. In preparing these financial statements, Council is required to:

Council is responsible for keeping adequate accounting records that are sufficient to show and explain the charitable company’s transactions and disclose with reasonable accuracy at any time the financial position of the charitable company and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Companies Act 2006. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the charitable company and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of fraud and other irregularities.

Overall Results. The year-end position of -£273,089 is an improved year-end position against the deficit budget of -£318,000 approved by Council in October 2023.

The Net Movement in Funds for the year was a net inflow of £1,136,557 (c/w a net outflow of £673,997 in 2022/23) driven by the increase in the investment assets.

The Fishermen’s Mission Income. The total income received by the Fishermen’s Mission in 2023/24 was £3,282,428 (£2,995,109 in 2022/23) representing an increase of £287,319 on the previous year.

The Fishermen’s Mission Expenditure. The total expenditure by the Fishermen’s Mission in 2023/24 was £3,555,517 (£3,749,278 in 2022/23), of which, £2,401,576 is directly attributable to charitable activity (£2,749,563 in 2022/23).

Performance against Budget. The Fishermen’s Mission has openly highlighted that since last posting an operating surplus in FY 2020/21, we operated in deficit in 2021/22 (-£935,454) and again in 2022/23 (-£754,169).

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Working with a ‘modest’ operating deficit does not generate undue concern at this time. It is recognised that after a drop in our income commensurate with the Coronavirus lockdown period, we have been working hard to raise our voluntary income in particular while expenditure has increased year on year at least in line with inflation, and in some instances considerably beyond the prevailing rates.

2020/21 2021/22 2022/23 2023/24
Income £3.014M £2.349M £2.996M £3.282M
Expenditure £2.848M £3.285M £3.749M £3.556M

----- Start of picture text -----
Income v Expenditure
4.000
3.500
3.000
2.500
2.000
1.500
1.000
0.500
-
2020/21 2021/22 2022/23 2023/24
Income (£M) Expenditure (£M)
----- End of picture text -----

Controlling expenditure is key and the year-end deficit of -£273,089 indicates a continued progression towards a balanced budget. That the 2023/24 deficit is less than the forecast of - £318,000 highlights the success of our efforts to reduce the cost of what the charity does, through regular expenditure reviews and proactive third-party contract management, without reducing our charitable output. This process will continue throughout 2024/25.

The Fishermen’s Mission Reserves. At year-end, the market value of the portfolio managed by the charity’s appointed investment asset managers Sarasin & Partners LLP was:

Reserves Policy. In October 2023 Council reviewed and reissued the Investment Policy Statement, with some minor changes to the overall strategy for the reserves. To reflect their general judgements, Council maintains financial reserves to achieve four key objectives:

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Investments Performance for the Year-Ending 31 Oct 2024 (Source: Sarasin & Partners LLP). For the 12 months to 31[st] October 2024, the Fishermen’s Mission investment portfolio generated an attractive nominal and relative total return of +17.5% which was ahead of the long-term objective (inflation (UK CPI) +4%) of +5.7% but behind the index benchmark of +20.0%. Again this was ahead of the peer group return (ARC Steady Growth Charity Index) of 15.9%.

The portfolio’s outperformance against its charity peer group has been supported by the strategic changes that Sarasin have made to the portfolio. Since 2018, the bond allocation has been reduced and the equity allocation has moved away from making a separate UK and a global allocation (ex UK) to an integrated global approach including the UK market. This has removed the UK equity bias from the portfolio construction. The most recent change was made in June 2023, a well-timed reduction in UK equities, with the UK market underperforming its global peers since then. While many of the top AI-related tech stocks were held in the portfolio and performed very well, they were not held in as large sizes as the equity index which meant the portfolio lagged slightly behind the benchmark.

Since inception (13[th] September 2016) the Fishermen’s Mission portfolio has generated an annualised net return of 6.8%, this is now comfortably ahead of the initial projected 5–7-year return that Sarasin presented to Council in 2016 of 5.2%.

Stewardship Approach (Source: Sarasin & Partners LLP). In addition to the exclusionary policy, Sarasin & Partners act as stewards of the Fishermen’s Mission’s assets, a mind-set that is guided by a commitment to think like owners of the companies in which the Fishermen’s Mission invests, rather than simply holders of the shares. On behalf of the Fishermen’s Mission, Sarasin takes an active and responsible approach to investment with the principles of stewardship being embedded at the heart of their investment process.

The analysis of environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors forms an integral part of the consideration for every investment decision. Council strongly believes that this analysis must be conducted by Sarasin’s equity and fixed income teams as any material risks and opportunities from ESG issues will influence the valuation of each company. Sarasin also has specialist stewardship analysts within the team, who advise on company engagements and lead the company’s policy outreach work.

Sarasin scores each potential investment separately on the environmental, social and governance factors and then builds an overall ESG score with a range from A to E (where A is exemplary, and E is un-investable), which then feeds into the valuation methodology of each company.

Sarasin makes an annual submission of their Stewardship Report to the Financial Reporting Council (FRC) and have succeeded every year in passing the UK Stewardship Code test. Details of this submission can be found on Sarasin’s website.

They also make a submission to the UN Principles for Responsible Investment; this is also available to view on the Sarasin website.

Investments Ethical Exclusions. Council has set clear exclusions for the Fishermen’s Mission’s investments:

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in indiscriminate weaponry (for example cluster munitions and landmines which are excluded from all portfolios, as are other activities that are subject to global sanctions)

The Fishermen’s Mission’s investments with Sarasin are in a pooled or commingled fund which is regularly reviewed to assure Council that the ethical exclusions are not compromised (a recognised risk with investments in commingled funds). Council is reassured that the Sarasin Charity Authorised Investment Funds (CAIFs) meet our ethical exclusions and also avoid investments in companies that generate significant revenues from:

Designated Funds . £6,927,922 of the charity’s total assets held are classified as Designated Funds, defined by the SORP as “a portion of the unrestricted funds that have been set aside for a particular purpose by the Trustees. For example, the value of functional fixed assets used to further the charity’s aims may be identified as a separate designated fund.”,

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The calculation excludes funds invested in property and other fixed assets that will continue to be used in the day to day running of the Fishermen’s Mission.

Retirement Benefits Scheme (RBS). The project to wind up the Retirement Benefits Scheme (RBS) commenced in 2020. While it has been anticipated that the process could have been completed by the end of the calendar year 2022, it was not until the ‘full & final payment’ was paid by the Fishermen’s Mission to Legal and General Assurance Society (LGAS) in September 2023 that the RBS Trustees were able to approve the action to formally trigger the winding-up of the RBS.

The final audited accounts, prepared by the Paul Crowdy Partnership, were reviewed and approved by the RBS Trustees on 6 March 2024. At the same meeting, the RBS Trustees reviewed and agreed to sign the Deed of Termination, prepared by Blake Morgan. While the deed was signed, it was not dated until after the auditor had signed off the final Scheme Report and Accounts.

To meet the requirement of Section 28 of the FRS 102, income and expenditure related to the Retirement Benefit Scheme (RBS) are shown within the Fishermen’s Mission’s accounts for the final time as the scheme was fully wound up in March 2024. The FRS 102 valuation of £0.00 provided for year-end (October 2023) remained unchanged with no movement of any resources into or out of the fund.

The RBS is now fully wound up to the complete satisfaction of all professional advisors to the RBS Trustees, the Fishermen’s Mission and The Pension Regulator.

There will be no reporting of the RBS in future annual reports.

Disclosure of Information to Auditors. Each of the persons who is a Trustee at the time when this Annual Report is approved confirms that:

Auditors. In accordance with section 487 of the Companies Act 2006, a resolution proposing that Forvis Mazars LLP be reappointed as auditors of the charitable company for Financial Year 2023/2024 was put to the Annual General Meeting in April 2024 and passed.

Council, in their capacity as Trustees and company directors, approves the Annual Report.

SIGNED ON BEHALF OF AND BY ORDER OF THE COUNCIL OF MANAGEMENT

KM Vlasto (Feb 13, 2025 12:05 GMT) Mark Greet (Feb 15, 2025 11:23 GMT) Michael Vlasto OBE Mark Greet Chair (as at 31 October 2024, to 31 December 2024) Chair (from 1 January 2025)

Approved by Trustees at the Council of Management on 5 February 2025:

Mark Greet (Feb 15, 2025 11:23 GMT) Mark Greet, Chair (from 1 January 2025)

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INDEPENDENT AUDITOR’S REPORT TO THE MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL NATIONAL MISSION TO DEEP SEA FISHERMEN

Opinion. We have audited the financial statements of The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen (the ‘charity’) for the year ended 31 October 2024 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, the Balance Sheet, the Cash Flow Statement and notes to the financial statements, including a summary of significant accounting policies.

The financial reporting framework that has been applied in their preparation is applicable law and United Kingdom Accounting Standards, including FRS 102 “The Financial Reporting Standard applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland” (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion, the financial statements:

Basis for opinion. We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the “Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements” section of our report. We are independent of the charity in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern. In auditing the financial statements, we have concluded that the trustees’ use of the going concern basis of accounting in the preparation of the financial statements is appropriate.

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charity's ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least twelve months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees with respect to going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.

Other information. The other information comprises the information included in the Annual Report, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. The trustees are responsible for the other information contained within the annual report. Our opinion on the financial statements does not cover the other information and, except to the extent otherwise explicitly stated in our report, we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon.

Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Trustees’ Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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Our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial statements or our knowledge obtained in the course of the audit, or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether this gives rise to a material misstatement in the financial statements themselves. If, based on the work we have performed, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact.

We have nothing to report in this regard.

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006. In our opinion, based on the work undertaken in the course of the audit:

Matters on which we are required to report by exception. In light of the knowledge and understanding of the charity and its environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the Annual Report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 and Charities Accounts (Scotland) Regulations 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Responsibilities of Trustees

As explained more fully in the trustees’ responsibilities statement set out on page 22, the trustees are responsible for the preparation of the financial statements and for being satisfied that they give a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the trustees determine is necessary to enable the preparation of financial statements that are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error.

In preparing the financial statements, the trustees are responsible for assessing the charity’s ability to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the trustees either intend to liquidate the charity or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements as a whole are free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with ISAs (UK) will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial statements.

The extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is detailed below.

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities, including fraud.

Based on our understanding of the charity and its industry, we considered that non-compliance with the following laws and regulations might have a material effect on the financial statements: employment regulation, health and safety regulation, anti-money laundering regulation and data protection regulations.

To help us identify instances of non-compliance with these laws and regulations, and in identifying and assessing the risks of material misstatement in respect to non-compliance, our procedures included, but were not limited to:

We also considered those laws and regulations that have a direct effect on the preparation of the financial statements, such as FRS 102, the Charities SORP 2019, UK tax legislation, pension legislation and the Companies Act 2006.

In addition, we evaluated the trustees’ and management’s incentives and opportunities for fraudulent manipulation of the financial statements, including the risk of management override of controls, and determined that the principal risks related to posting journal entries to manipulate financial performance, management bias through judgements and assumptions in significant accounting estimates, income recognition (which we pinpointed to the cut-off assertion) and significant one-off or unusual transactions.

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Our audit procedures in relation to fraud included but were not limited to:

There are inherent limitations in the audit procedures described above and the primary responsibility for the prevention and detection of irregularities including fraud rests with management. As with any audit, there remained a risk of non-detection of irregularities, as these may involve collusion, forgery, intentional omissions, misrepresentations or the override of internal controls.

A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at www.frc.org.uk/auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Use of the Audit Report. This report is made solely to the charity’s members as a body in accordance with Chapter 3 of Part 16 of the Companies Act 2006. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charity’s members those matters we are required to state to them in an auditor’s report and for no other purpose. To the fullest extent permitted by law, we do not accept or assume responsibility to anyone other than the charity and the charity’s members as a body for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.

Jonathan Marchant (Senior Statutory Auditor) for and on behalf of Forvis Mazars LLP Chartered Accountants and Statutory Auditor 5[th] Floor, Merck House Seldown Lane Poole Dorset BH15 1TW

Date: Feb 19, 2025

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STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES

Incorporating the income and expenditure account for the year ended 31 October 2024

Notes
INCOMING
RESOURCES -
Incoming resources
from generating funds:
Voluntary Income:
Donations & Gifts
Legacies
Investment Income
2
Incoming resources
from charitable
activities
Charity Shop
Other incoming
resources
Macmillan Project
Net realised gain on sale
of fixed assets
Rental Income
TOTAL INCOMING
RESOURCES
RESOURCES
EXPENDED
3
Fundraising
Admin Costs
Charitable activities
Charitable expenditure
TOTAL RESOURCES
EXPENDED
NET
(OUTGOING)/INCOMING
RESOURCES BEFORE
OTHER GAINS AND
LOSSES
OTHER RECOGNISED
GAINS AND LOSSES
Unrealised (loss)/gain on
investment assets &
transfer
Unrestricted
Funds
2024
£
Restricted
Funds
2024
£
Total Funds
2024
£
Total
Funds
2023
£
1,296,826
288,455
1,585,281
1,505,162
880,079
15,199
895,278
1,009,096
315,000
0
315,000
300,000
134,088
0
134,088
129,250
0
158,499
158,499
0
146,127
0
146,127
2,838
48,155
0
48,155
48,763
2,820,275
462,153
3,282,428
2,995,109
176,419
830,361
147,161
0
323,580
830,361
310,248
689,467
1,985,508
416,068
2,401,576
2,749,563
2,992,288
563,229
3,555,517
3,749,278
(172,013)
(101,076)
(273,089)
(754,169)
1,409,645
0
1,409,645
30,172

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Actuarial gain on defined
pension scheme
10/16
NET MOVEMENT IN
FUND
RECONCILIATION OF
FUNDS
Balance brought forward
on 1 November 2023
10
Balance carried forward
on 31 October 2024
10
0
0
0
50,000
1,237,632
(101,076)
1,136,556
(673,997)
12,103,268
273,786
12,377,054
13,051,051
13,340,900
172,710
13,513,610
**12,377,054 **

All activities relate to continuing operations. The SOFA includes all gains and losses recognised in the year.

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BALANCE SHEET

As at 31 October 2024

Notes
FIXED ASSETS
Investments Shares - General
6
Investments – George R Watt Fund
6
Tangible Assets
7
CURRENT ASSETS
Debtors
8
Cash at bank and in hand
CREDITORS: AMOUNTS FALLING DUE
WITHIN ONE YEAR
9
NET CURRENT ASSETS
NET ASSETS BEFORE PENSION LIABILITY
Defined benefit pension scheme liability
16
NET ASSETS AFTER PENSION LIABILITY
12
FUNDS OF THE CHARITY
Restricted funds
11
Designated funds
10/12
Free reserves

Pension deficit
16

General fund
10/12
TOTAL CHARITY FUNDS
2024
2023
£
£
11,234,285
9,699,655
783,723
684,463
1,471,183
1,523,060
13,489,191
11,907,178
138,730
191,236
66,168
420,563
204,898
611,799
(180,480)
(141,923)
24,418
469,876
13,513,610
12,377,054
0
0
13,513,610
12,377,054
172,710
273,786
6,927,922
6,785,371
7,100,632
7,059,157
0
0
6,412,978
5,317,897
6,412,978
5,317,897
13,513,610
12,377,054

The financial statements on pages 31 to 50 were approved by the Members of the Council of Management on 5 February 2025 and were signed on its behalf by:

…………………….. Mark Greet Chair of the Council of Management

……………………… Deanne Thomas Chair of the Finance and Resource Sub Committee Member of the Council of Management

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CASH FLOW STATEMENT For the year ended 31 October 2024

Notes
Cash flows from operating activities:
18a
Net cash (used in)/provided by operating activities
Cash flows from investing activities
Interest received
Interest paid
Dividends received from investments (gross)
Purchase of tangible fixed assets
Sale of tangible fixed assets
Net Investment /(Disinvestment)
Realised profit on investment/increase in cash
Net cash used in investing activities
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year
Cash and cash equivalents on 31 October 2023
Cash and cash equivalents on 31 October 2024
2024
2023
£
£
(541,804)
(928,989)
(541,804)
(928,989)
0
0
(7,641)
(1,062)
315,000
300,000
(78,446)
(61,360)
182,742
3,600
(49,628)
720,918
(174,618)
(91,579)
187,409
870,517
(354,395)
(58,472)
420,563
479,035
66,168
420,563

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NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

For the year ended 31 October 2024

1. ACCOUNTING POLICIES

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen (the Fishermen’s Mission), a company limited by guarantee is incorporated in the United Kingdom and is registered No. 00024477, is registered with the Charity Commissioners (No. 232822) and the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator (No SC039088). The registered office is Mather House, 4400 Parkway, Solent Business Park, Whiteley, Hampshire, PO15 7FJ.

Basis of preparation

The financial statements have been prepared on a going concern basis and under the historical cost convention, except as modified by the inclusion of investments at market value, and in accordance with applicable Accounting Standards in the United Kingdom, the Companies Act 2006, the Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005 and the Statement of Recommended Practice – Accounting and Reporting by provision of the Charities SORP 2015 (FRS 102). A summary of accounting policies, which have been applied consistently, is set out below.

(a) Income from donors and supporters

Income from donations and supporters are accounted for on an accrual’s basis. Any significant income related to the year end and received at the Fishermen’s Mission’s head office or main bankers after the year end is accrued in the financial statements.

Gifts in kind are included in incoming resources at the year end at an estimate of their value to the Fishermen’s Mission

(b) Legacies received

Legacy income is recognised when there is sufficient evidence to provide the necessary certainty that the legacy will be received, and the value of the incoming resource can be measured with sufficient reliability. Estimated legacy income of £914,405 (2023: £865,748) has not been included in the Statement of Financial Activities because the conditions of recognition have not been met.

(c) Tangible fixed assets and depreciation

Depreciation is calculated to write off the cost of tangible fixed assets over their expected useful economic lives on the following basis:

Freehold property 2% straight line
Long-term and short-term leasehold Amortised over period
property of the lease
Motor vehicles 33% reducing balance
Furniture, fixtures and fittings 20% reducing balance
Computer equipment 25% straight line

Individual fixed assets costing more than £1,000 are capitalised at cost and are

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subsequently stated at cost less depreciation. All laptops are capitalised on the above basis as the cost varies per laptop but is circa £1,000.

(d) Capital grants

Capital grants are recognised in restricted or unrestricted funds in accordance with the conditions of the grantor.

(e) Investments

Investments are stated at market value. Any unrealised gains and losses on investments are taken directly to the statement of financial activities.

(f) Investment income

Investment income is shown on an accrual’s basis.

(g) Classification of expenditure

Administration/Support costs have been reapportioned to direct charitable and fundraising costs dependent on the expense i.e., headcount/direct/evenly across cost centres in accordance with guidance in the SORP. Expenditure includes any VAT, which cannot be recovered and is reported to the part of the expenditure to which it relates. Resources expended are accounted for on an accrual’s basis.

(h) Charitable expenditure

Charitable expenditure includes all costs associated with the Fishermen’s Mission and Welfare centres situated throughout the United Kingdom. A proportion of time is spent doing work of a fundraising nature. The costs of this have been allocated to fundraising expenditure.

(i) Fundraising expenditure

Fundraising expenditure includes a proportion of administration charges. Fundraisers spend a proportion of their time doing work of a charitable nature. The costs of this have been allocated to charitable expenditure.

(j) Administration/Support expenses

Administration/Support expenses include building running costs and all related charges (including salaries) of head office. Administration/Support expenses are re-allocated to charitable and fundraising expenditure by headcount, direct and evenly across cost centres.

(k) Governance costs

Governance costs include those costs associated with meeting the constitutional and statutory requirements of the Fishermen’s Mission and include the audit fees and costs linked to the strategic management of the Fishermen’s Mission. These are included under resources expended within

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charitable expenditure.

(l) Operating lease

Rental payments under operating leases are charged to the Statement of Financial Activities on a straight-line basis over the period of the lease.

(m) Pension costs

The charitable company participated in a defined benefit scheme which has now been wound up with all liabilities transferred to Legal & General as of March 2024. The zero balance as per the FRS102 report for FY 22/23 therefore remains unchanged.

The Fishermen’s Mission also operates a defined contribution scheme. Contributions payable to this scheme are included in the Statement of Financial Activities in the period to which they relate.

(n) Funds

Restricted funds are those whose use is legally restricted to specific uses whether by a trust deed or by a letter received with the original gift.

Designated funds are those whose use is not legally restricted but whose purpose has been designated by Council. Council is entitled to change its mind and use these funds in whichever way it sees fit. The allocation of the Designated fund has been added as a note under the fund analysis.

The unrestricted fund covers all items that do not fall into the above categories.

(o) Cash and Equivalents

Cash is represented by cash in hand and deposits with financial institutions repayable without penalty on notice of not more than 24 hours. Cash equivalents are also liquid investments that mature in no more than three months from the date of acquisition and that are readily convertible to known amounts of cash with insignificant risk of change in value.

(p) Financial Instruments

The Fishermen’s Mission only has financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at their settlement value.

(q) Going Concern

A five-year rolling business plan underpins Trustees’ strategic assessments of going concern. This plan cascades through an annual budget assumptions process and thence to the production of the in-year budget that reflects:

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Where appropriate, funds from a designated ‘Development Fund’ in the reserves are allocated to balance the budget and reduce in-year income risk. To sustain going concern for the medium term, as a strategic priority, the Trustees aim to maintain the level of free reserves to support a minimum level of two years core service delivery (Business Continuity Reserves), as stated in the Fishermen’s Mission reserve policy.

Based on this assessment the Trustees are satisfied that reserves are set at a reasonable level. The Fishermen’s Mission has sufficient liquid resources to meet its planned obligations and maintain its stated reserve policy and has adopted a going concern basis for preparation of the financial statements.

The Fishermen’s Mission is assessed to be a going concern.

(r) Key Estimations

All accounting estimates are included that could be material to the financial statements. Those estimates used are reasonable in the circumstances and consistent with assumptions used in previous years.

Creditors are recognised where the Fishermen’s Mission has a present obligation resulting from a past event that will probably result in the transfer of funds to a third party and the amount due to settle the obligation can be measured or estimated reliably. Creditors are normally recognised at their settlement amount after allowing for any trade discounts due.

Trade debtors are recognised at the settlement amount due after any trade discount offered. Prepayments are valued at the amount prepaid net of any trade discounts due. Accruals and prepayments are calculated at year end. Invoices are accrued into the accounts if they are received after the end of the financial year but are either dated in the current financial year or are for goods/services received in the current financial year. Invoices are prepaid if they have been received during the year but they fully or proportionately relate to the following year.

Accrued income is included at the best estimate of the amount's receivable at the balance sheet date.

2. INVESTMENT INCOME

Income from Investments 2024
2023
£
£
315,000
300,000
315,000
300,000

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3. TOTAL RESOURCES EXPENDED

3a Costs of generating voluntary income

Restricted Fund Unrestricted Fund Unrestricted Fund Total Funds Total Funds
2024 2024 2024 2023
£ £ £ £
Fundraising 147,161 176,419 323,580 310,248
Admin/Support 0 830,361 830,361 689,467
147,161 1,006,780 1,153,941 999,715
b Governance cost
Restricted Unrestricted Total Funds Total Funds
Fund Fund
2024 2024 2024 2023
£ £ £ £
Salaries and related 0 41,727 41,727 33,931
Council expenses 0 10,526 10,526 35,217
Audit fee & FRS Note 0 34,092 34,092 33,450
0 86,345 86,345 102,598

3b Governance cost

3c Direct Costs Direct Costs
Welfare Total Total
2024 2024 2023
£ £ £
Manual staff costs 72,777 72,777 61,664
Uniformed staff costs 1,266,936 1,266,936 1,310,165
Depreciation 44,630 44,630 53,396
Centres operating costs 536,159 536,159 720,876
Welfare payments 58,454 58,454 44,743
Publicity 6,552 6,552 2,825
1,985,508 1,985,508 2,193,668
3d Support Costs
Costs of Governance Welfare Total Total
Generating
Funds
2024 2024 2024 2024 2023
£ £ £ £ £
Admin costs 169,458 0 416,068 585,526 666,226
(HQ)
169,458 0 416,068 585,526 666,226

3e Analysis of resources expended by expenditure type

Staff Costs Depn Other Costs Total Total
2024 2024 2024 2024 2023
Costs of £ £ £ £ £
generating
funds
Fundraising 323,580 0 0 323,580 310,248
Admin 515,318 0 315,043 830,361 689,467

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Welfare
Governance
1,296,063
93,709
925,459
2,315,231
2,646,965
41,727
0
44,618
86,345
102,598
2,176,688
93,709
1,285,120
3,555,517
3,749,278

3f Analysis of resources expended by activities

Activities Support Costs Total Total
undertaken
directly
2024 2024 2024 2023
£ £ £ £
Welfare 1,985,508 416,068 2,401,576 2,740,806

4. NET INCOMING RESOURCES

The net incoming resources for the year are stated after charging/(crediting): -

2024 2023
£ £
Depreciation of tangible fixed assets 93,709 100,259
Auditors’ remuneration – audit fees 27,192 26,400
(Profit) on disposal of fixed assets 146,127 2,838
Interest payable – bank interest 7,641 1,062
Operating lease rentals – plant and equipment 3,192 3,300
Operating lease rentals – other 66,980 69,906
RESTATE

5. EMPLOYEE INFORMATION

The average weekly number of persons employed during the year is analysed below: 

Fishermen’s Mission Staff – Port and Fundraising
Administration Staff – Head Office
Support Staff (Ports)
2024
2023
Number
Number
47
47
12
11
9
10
68
68

Employment costs for all full time and part time staff:

Wages and Salaries
Social Security Costs
Pension Costs
2024
2023
£
£
1,887,378
1,757,450
179,111
165,238
145,558
129,072
2,212,047
2,051,760

The number of employees whose emoluments for the year exceeded £60,000 is as follows:

£60,001 - £70,000
£70,001 - £80,000
£80,001 - £90,000
£90,001 - £100,000
£100,001 - £110,000
2024
2023
Number
Number
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
0
0

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The Fishermen’s Mission has identified Key Management Personnel as the current Executive Team, their total remuneration amounts to £197,436 (2023: £190,036).

The pension contribution made by the employer for two employees is £10,490 (2023: £7,193 for one employee).

Council members’ remuneration, expenditure and donations given

No Council member received any remuneration for Financial Year 2023/2024 (2022/2023: nil). Costs relating to Council members’ expenditure included in governance expenses were for accommodation, travel, and meal costs. Council Members claimed expenses during the year of £10,312 (2023: £25,689 which included costs of recruiting new Trustees of £13,199, so £11,690 without recruitment).

Donations of £1,074 (2023: £2,790) were received from Council members.

6. FIXED ASSET INVESTMENTS

Market Value
At 1 November 2023
Increase/(Decrease) in Cash
Net Investment/(Disinvestment)
Realised Profit/(Loss)
Unrealised Profit/(Loss)
At 31 October 2024
Fixed asset investment represents:
Cash
Currency Sterling
Mixed Investments
The following investments represents more than 5% of the portfolio by market value:
Sarasin Endowments Fund Class A INC
ISC Sterling Liquidity Fund
Listed
Investments
£
10,384,118
160,197
49,628
14,420
1,409,645
12,018,008
111,760
508,410
11,397,838
12,018,008
11,397,838
620,170
12,018,008

Investment Income of £315,000 is released at £82,500 each quarter and is shown as in Note 2. Investment income received in Q1 and Q2 was £75,000 each which was then increased to £82,500 in Q3 and Q4.

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7. TANGIBLE FIXED ASSETS

Cost
At 1 November 2023
Additions
Disposals
At 31 October 2024
Depreciation
At 1 November 2023
Charge for year
Disposals
At 31 October 2024
Net Book Values at 31
October 2024
Net Book Value at 31
October 2023
Freehold
and
Leasehold
Property
Motor Vehicles
Furniture, Fixtures,
Fittings and Computer
Equipment
Total
£
£
£
£
2,483,386
452,106
130,899
3,066,391
0
0
78,446
78,446
(59,945)
(29,027)
(14,172)
(103,144)
2,423,441
423,079
195,173
3,041,693
1,083,639
333,829
125,863
1,543,331
48,332
38,806
6,571
93,709
(24,955)
(28,237)
(13,337)
(66,529)
1,107,016
344,398
119,097
1,570,511
1,316,425
78,681
76,076
1,471,182
1,399,747
118,277
5,036
1,523,060

The Freehold properties include 11 Retirement properties and the Head Office in Whiteley. The Leasehold properties costs related to 1 leased unit.

8. DEBTORS: AMOUNTS FALLING DUE WITHIN ONE YEAR

2024 2023
£ £
Other Debtors 3,156 3,589
Prepayments and Accrued Income 135,574 187,646
138,730 191,235
. CREDITORS: AMOUNTS FALLING DUE WITHIN ONE YEAR
2024 2023
£ £
Trade Creditors 87,658 54,331
Other Creditors 884 315
Other Taxes and Social Security 48,132 46,753
Accruals and Deferred Income 43,806 40,525
180,480 141,924

9. CREDITORS: AMOUNTS FALLING DUE WITHIN ONE YEAR

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10. FUNDS

0.
FUNDS
Unrestricted Funds
General Fund Pension Fund Funds Restricted Total
Funds
£ £ £ £ £
At 1 November 5,317,897 0 6,785,371 273,786 12,377,054
2023
Net Incoming
Resources for (272,732) 0 100,719 (101,076) (273,089)
the Year
Net Unrealised
Gain on 1,409,645 0 0 0 1,409,645
Investment 0 0 0 0 0
Assets
Investment
buyout
0 0 0
George R Watt
Fund (NE 0 0 0
Scotland)
Actuarial
Adjustment Gain 0 0 0 0 0
Carry Value
Fixed Assets (41,832) 41,832 0 0
At 31 October 6,412,978 0 6,927,922 172,710 13,513,610
2024
0a.
DESIGNATED FUNDS ANALYSIS
At 1 Incoming Expenditure Trf to GF 31 October
November 24
2023
Fixed Assets 1,447,836 0 (68,819) 41,832 1,420,849
Pension Cov/Buyout
25,000
0 (25,000) 0 0
Provision
Major Emergency 500,000 0 0 0 500,000
Business Continuity 2,750,000 0 0 0 2,750,000
Business 1,378,072 95,278 0 0 1,473,350
Development
George Watts Fund 684,463 118,260 (19,000) 0 783,723
6,785,371 213,538 (112,819) 41,832 6,927,922

10a . DESIGNATED FUNDS ANALYSIS

Fixed Assets – These include our vehicles and the properties we own and lease to some former members of Port Staff (the Melita Property Scheme). There were 2 vehicles sold in FY 23/24 but no new ones purchased

Pension Cov/Buyout - £25k was left in Designated Funds for further admin charges for the Retirement Benefit Scheme at the end of FY 22/234. Actual admin charges were £79k so this fund has been used up. There is no remaining balance.

Major Emergency – no movement. This fund ensures we have immediate access to the

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resources required for a fishing emergency at sea

Business Continuity – no movement in this fund, which ensures that we hold 2 years of operating costs to allow current activity to continue uninterrupted.

Business Development – The incoming funds of £95,278 are the excess legacies received over the budget (£895,278 vs £800,000 budget). These funds are to be used on business development projects which is mainly new IT systems.

George Watt Fund – relates to a legacy from the estate of the late George R Watt, which has been invested by Sarasin’s. The movement is made up of the £99k Gain on investment and £19k Interest income received. The £19k interest income was spent fully in the Aberdeen and Fraserburgh areas

11 . RESTRICTED FUNDS ANALYSIS

CENTRES REVENUE At
01 November
2023
Incoming Expenditure At
31 October
2024
Shetland Fishermen’s’ Widows 50,256 0 -2,131 48,125
Retiredfishermen&Widows 726 0 0 726
Age UK 370 0 0 370
‘Joanna C’ 9 0 -9 0
WhitbySeafoods 10,000 0 -508 9,492
Seafarers Charity/North East Hardship 1,524 0 0 1,524
James Reckitt Trust 23,904 0 -10,242 13,662
Suffolk CountyCouncil * -1,203 0 1,203 0
MNWB – SHOUT 1,325 0 -1,325 0
MNWB – Bridlington Health Trainer 3,412 0 -3,412 0
Balmoral Comtec Ltd 984 0 -984 0
BN14793 Seafarers Charity Grant - North
EastHardshipFund
10,000 0 0 10,000
Forbes Ettles Hurry 51,019 0 -51,019 0
SEAFIT Q2 – Fairwinds 500 0 -418 82
SEAFIT Q3 – Fishwell 9,677 0 -9,677 0
SEAFIT – Aberdeen Health Lifestyle
Advisor**
-17,157 0 17,157 0
Seafarers Charity – Migrant Fishermen 23,850 0 -20,400 3,450
TrinityHouse 10,000 0 -2,555 7,445
Garfield Weston Foundation – Fairwinds 885 0 -885 0
Enquest 497 0 -497 0
S Buckley (Fleetwood) 17,984 0 -17,984 0
BN15510 Trinity house - Inspire Workplaces
23/24
11,800 -3,870 7,930
BN15510 Trinity house - Mental Health First
AidTraining
2,450 -1,800 650
BN15510 Trinity house - Reflective Practice
23/24
4,050 -3,250 800
BN15597 Seafarers Charity - rest to CRM
Development (Salesforce)
46,000 -44,910 1,090
BN16146 SPFA for Retired fishermen &
Widows Outing &BusTrip (Fraserburgh)
1,000 -685 315
BN16157 The Watch Ashore - defibrillators
in Newlyn
620 0 620

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BN16276 Michael O'Hare - Kilkeel Retired
Group
150 -56 94
BN16380 Sir James Reckitt Charity - rest
to Hull/East Riding
4,000 0 4,000
BN16362 Bolts Car Hire Ltd -
mailing/printing costs of Shetland Appeal
500 0 500
BN16362 Enquest - Shetland Appeal
leaflets
500 0 500
BN16414 Grimsby Sailors and Fishing
Charity-Grimsby Fishermen’s Lunch Club
1,000 0 1,000
BN16428 The AMB Charitable Trust - rest
to Yorkshire
5,000 0 5,000
BN16428 Jane Hodge Foundation - rest to
Wales
5,000 0 5,000
Acquired Fixed Asset Fund 75,225 -24,890 50,335
Macmillan / C-Aware Project 158,499 -158,499 0
Other income and expenditure in year 221,584 -221,584 0
GRAND TOTAL 273,787 462,153 --563,230 172,710

12 . ANALYSIS OF NET ASSETS BETWEEN FUNDS

Restricted Funds
Expenditure Fund
Acquired Fixed
Assets
Unrestricted
Funds
Designated Fund
General Fund
Pension Scheme
Fund
Tangible Fixed
Assets
Investments
Net Current
Assets
Pension
Liability
Total
£
£
£
£
£
0
0
122,375
0
122,375
50,335
0
0
0
50,335
50,335
0
122,375
0
172,710
1,420,849
783,723
4,723,350
0
6,927,922
0
11,234,285
(4,821,307)
0
6,412,978
0
0
0
0
1,471,184
12,018,008
24,418
0
13,513,610

The Expenditure Fund is a fund which consists of income given for the purchase of specific items. The Acquired Fixed Assets Fund is a restricted fund consisting of assets with restrictions on use.

The Designated Fund is a fund consisting of all fixed assets with no restrictions on use. It includes provisions to underpin various Fishermen’s Missions strategies including Major Emergencies. The George Watts Fund has been designated to provide an annual income and if required capital project funding for the Northeast of Scotland.

The General Fund is an unrestricted fund which can be used for any charitable purpose. The Pension Scheme Fund is an unrestricted fund equal to the year-end liability of the defined benefit pension scheme.

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13. TAXATION

The Fishermen’s Mission is a charity and as such is exempt from taxation on its income and gains to the extent that they are applied to its charitable purpose.

14. FUTURE CAPITAL EXPENDITURE

4.
FUTURE CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
2024 2023
£ £
Authorised by Council but not contracted for 91,000 83.852
Authorised by Council and provided for 51,500 0
142,500 83,852

The above costs are made up as follows:

2 x cars 50,000
6 x laptops 6,000
Salesforce CRM package 51,500
New accountancy package 35,000

15. FINANCIAL COMMITMENTS

At 31 October 2024, the Fishermen’s Mission had annual commitments under noncancellable operating leases expiring as follows: -

Due within 1 year
Due within 2-5 years
Land & Building
Other
2024
2023
2024
2023
£
£
£
£
66,980
69,906
3,192
3,300
65,977
114,346
4,056
6,600
132,957
184,252
7,248
9,900

RESTATED

16. PENSIONS

In accordance with Financial Reporting Standard 102 – (FRS 102) the Fishermen’s Mission is required to disclose certain information concerning assets, liabilities, income, and expenditure related to pension schemes for its employees.

The Fishermen’s Mission operates a pension scheme providing benefits based on final pensionable pay. The assets of the scheme are held separately from those of the Fishermen’s Mission, being invested with investment management companies. Contributions to the scheme are charged to the Statement of Financial Activities to spread the cost of pensions over employees’ working lives with the Fishermen’s Mission. A qualified independent actuary, on the basis of triennial valuations last carried out on the 31 October 2015, updated to 31 October 2019, using the projected unit method determines the contributions.

The scheme was suspended from 1 November 2007 and so no contributions relating to wages and salaries were made during the year ended 31 October 2024. The Fishermen’s Mission did make contributions towards administration costs of the pension scheme during the year as agreed in the Schedule of Contributions.

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Additional contributions have been made by the Fishermen’s Mission from 1 November 2004, such amounts of a regular and one-off nature as may be agreed between the Trustees and the employer from time to time and recorded in a Trustee minute or resolution. These contributions have been made to remove the deficiency in respect of past service at the valuation date.

In the year to October 2024 charges of £79,013 were incurred relating to RBS Pension administration costs; no money went into or came out of the pension fund itself and the valuation for the RBS remained £0.00 (as previously reported at 31 Oct 23).

Principal actuarial assumptions at the year-end were as follows:

Discount Rate
Inflation - RPI
Pension increases in deferment
RPI minimum 3% pa and maximum 5% pa pension
increases
RPI maximum 5% pa pension increases
Post retirement mortality:
Life expectancy at age 65 of male aged 65
Life expectancy at age 65 of female aged 65
Life expectancy at age 65 of male aged 45
Life expectancy at age 65 of female aged 45
The current asset split is as follows:
Equities
Property
Cash
Liability Driven Investments (LDI) Strategy
Annuity contract
Self Sufficiency Fund
Net current assets
Total Assets
Balance Sheet
Fair value of assets
Defined benefit obligation
Surplus/(Shortfall)
Effect of asset ceiling/IFRIC14
Net defined benefit (liability)/asset
2024
2023
N/A
5.5%
N/A
3.6%
N/A
3.6%
N/A
3.7%
N/A
3.4%
N/A
100% S3NA CMI 2022 (core)
(1.25%)
95% S2NA CMI 2021(core)
(1.25%)
N/A
86.7
N/A
89.2
N/A
87.9
N/A
90.6
Period to
31 Oct 2024
Period to
31 Oct 2023
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
31 Oct 2024
31 Oct 2023
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0

Amount recognised in Profit and Loss

Period to Period to
31 Oct 2024 31 Oct 2023
Current service cost £0 £0
Administration expenses £0 £50,000
Interest costs £0 £335,000

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Interest income
Interest on effect of asset ceiling/IFRIC14
Total charge to Profit and Loss
£0
(£335,000)
£0
£0
£0
£50,000

Amount charged to other comprehensive income

Return on assets less interest income
Actuarial gains/(losses) – change in assumptions
Change in impact of asset ceiling/IFRIC14
Total remeasurements
Period to
31 Oct 2024
Period to
31 Oct 2023
£0
(£982,000)
£0
£792,000
£0
£20,000
£0
(£170,000)

Change of changes in present value of DB obligation

Value of liabilities at start
Current service costs
Past service costs
Interest cost
Benefits received/(paid)
Change due to settlement or curtailments
Experience (gain)/loss on experience
Change in assumptions (gain)/loss
Settlement Payments
Closing defined benefit obligations
Period to
31 Oct 2024
Period to
31 Oct 2023
£0
£7,431,000
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£335,000
£0
(£592,000)
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
£0
(£792,000)
(£6,382,000)
£0
£0

Change in value of assets

Value of assets at start
Interest on assets
Employer contributions
Member contributions
Benefits paid
Administration costs
Settlements and curtailments
Actuarial gain/(loss) on Scheme assets
Value of assets at end
Period to
31 Oct 2024
Period to
31 Oct 2023
£0
£7,451,000
£0
£335,000
£0
£220,000
£0
0
£0
(£592,000)
£0
(£50,000)
£0
(£6,382,000)
£0
(£982,000)
£0
£0

Change in effect of the asset ceiling/IFRIC14

Opening effect of the asset ceiling/IFRIC14
Interest on effect of assets ceiling/IFRIC14
Change in the effect of asset ceiling/IFRIC14
Closing effect of the asset ceiling/IFRIC14
Period to
31 Oct 2024
Period to
31 Oct 2023
£0
£20,000
£0
£0
£0
(£20,000)
£0
£0

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The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

With the RBS fully would up in March 2024; there will be no future reporting of this scheme in the Annual Report and Accounts.

GROUP PERSONAL PENSION

The Fishermen’s Mission also operates a defined contribution pension scheme. The assets of the scheme are held separately from those of the Fishermen’s Mission in an independently administered fund. The pension cost charge represents contributions payable by the Fishermen’s Mission to the fund. At the year end, there were no unpaid contributions (2023: none).

Contributions payable by the Fishermen’s Mission for the
year
2024
2023
£
£
145,558
129,072

17. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS

Disclosures:

a. Rear Admiral Sir Jeremy de Halpert KCVO was a Trustee and serving member of The Council of Management for the Fishermen’s Mission during the reporting year (until his retirement in April 2024). Sir Jeremy is also a member of the Elder Brethren from which he was elected to the Court of the Corporation of Trinity House that oversees the business of the Corporate Board and Lighthouse Board. Trinity House is a charity dedicated to safeguarding shipping and seafarers, providing education, support and welfare to the seafaring community with a statutory duty as a General Lighthouse Authority.

During the reporting year Trinity House provided financial assistance via four grants to the Fishermen’s Mission for mental health support activity including the provision of Inspire workplace counselling; mental health first-aid training and Reflective Practice, totalling £44,355.

The total value is below the material threshold and Sir Jeremy does not have the significance influence over the outcomes of the Trinity House grants committees so as to be in conflict under the definition of related party transactions.

b. Mrs Alison Godfrey was the Director of Business Development) and a key management person at the Fishermen’s Mission during the reporting year. Mrs Godfrey is also a serving trustee of the Merchant Navy Welfare Board (MNWB)’s Council which receives and approves grant applications from the Fishermen’s Mission along with other charities and organisations. As one of approximately 15 current trustees, there is a recognised degree of influence as she advises the Council as a “ person able to make a particular contribution due to their specialist expertise ” but this is not considered to be ‘significant influence’ so as to be in conflict under the definition of related party transactions.

During Financial Year 2023/2024 the Fishermen’s Mission received grants from MNWB totalling £2,602. In FY 22/23, the total value of grants received from MNWB was £150,824 (this is higher as it includes £125K of funding from the Department of

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

49

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Transport, plus 2 x cars at £12,000 each.) There was no funding for cars received in FY 23/24.

18 . CASH FLOW STATEMENT

(a) Reconciliation of net income/(expenditure) to net cash flow from operating activities

cash flow from operating activities
Net expending resources
Investment income
Interest payable
Depreciation on tangible fixed assets
(Increase)/Decrease in debtors
(Decrease)/Increase in creditors
Pension scheme contributions in excess of charge
(Gain)/Loss on Disposal of Fixed Assets
Net Cash Provided by (Used In) Operating Activities
2024
2023
£
£
(273,089)
(754,169)
(315,000)
(300,000)
7,641
1,062
93,709
100,259
52,505
(73,020)
38,557
49,717
0
50,000
(146,127)
(2,838)
(541,804)
(928,989)

(b) Reconciliation of net cash flow to movement in net cash balance

(Decrease)/Increase in cash in the year
Changes in net cash balance from cash flows
Net cash balance brought forward
Net cash balance carried forward
2024
2023
£
£
(354,395)
(58,472)
(354,395)
(58,472)
420,563
479,035
66,168
420,563

(c) Analysis of net cash resources for the year

Cash in hand and at bank At 31
October
2023
Cash Flows
At 31
October
2024
£
£
£
420,563
(354,395)
66,168

19. POST BALANCE SHEET EVENTS

There are no post balance sheet events for Financial Year 2023/2024.

The Royal National Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen

Trustees Annual Report and Audited Financial Statements for the year ended 31 October 2024

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