Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth Annual Report
CONTENTS
| CONTENTS | |
|---|---|
| AT A GLANCE | 3 |
| FROM THE BISHOP | 5 |
| OUR YEAR IN NUMBERS | 6 |
| CASE STUDIES | 7 |
| FROM THE CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER | 14 |
| OUR FINANCES AT A GLANCE | 17 |
| FINANCIAL REVIEW | 20 |
| OUR STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT | 24 |
| FROM THE AUDITORS | 28 |
| CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES | 31 |
| CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET | 32 |
| CHARITY BALANCE SHEET | 33 |
| CASH FLOW STATEMENT | 34 |
| STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTING POLICIES | 35 |
| NOTES ON THE ACCOUNTS | 37 |
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AT A GLANCE
CHARITY NAME
Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust
CHARITY NUMBER
England 246871 Jersey 381 Guernsey CH263
CHARITY TRUSTEE
Portsmouth Roman Catholic Trustees Registered (PRCDTR)
PRCDTR BOARD OF TRUSTEES
Bishop of Portsmouth Rt Rev Philip Egan Rev Mr Gerard Dailly Mr Bernard Davis
Rev Canon Michael Dennehy (resigned 11 August 2022) Mr Michael Elks
Rev Christopher Heaps (appointed 08 December 2022) Rev Mark Hogan Mr Paul Kilduff (appointed 30 June 2022) Dr Catherine Knowles
Rev James McAuley (appointed 15 September 2023) Mrs Sue Masser (resigned 08 December 2022) Rev Canon Paul James Smith
Rev Benjamin Theobald (appointed 28 April 2022) Rev Canon Simon Thomson
Rev Mgr Paul Townsend (resigned 11 August 2022) Mr Chris Trickey (appointed 30 June 2022)
SENIOR OFFICERS
Mr Hereward Drummond, Secretary to Trustees Mrs Heather Hauschild, Chief Operating Officer Mr Clive Field, Director of Finance
REGISTERED OFFICE
St Edmund House, Bishop Crispian Way, Portsmouth, PO1 3QA
AUDITORS
10 Queen Street Place, London, EC4R 1AG Haysmacintyre LLP
BANKERS
2-4 Palmerston Road, Southsea, PO5 3QH Lloyds Bank PLC
SOLICITORS
Upper Borough Court, Upper Borough Walls, Bath, BA1 1RG Stone King LLP
INVESTMENT ADVISORS
25 Luke Street, London, EC2A 4AR Charles Stanley & Co LTD 1 London Wall Place, London, EC2Y 5AU Cazenove Capital
PRINCIPAL INSURERS
Suite 5, Oxford House, Oxford Road, Thame, OX9 2AH Catholic Insurance Services
FINANCIAL YEAR
01 September 2021 – 31 August 2022
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Like the deer that yearns for the running streams, so my soul is yearning for you my God (Psalm 42:1) )
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FROM THE BISHOP
Like the deer that yearns for running streams, so my soul is yearning for you, my God (Ps. 42). The image of the deer yearning for running streams is portrayed in my episcopal crest. It symbolises you and me, indeed every human being, thirsting for happiness, looking for the water of life, seeking communion with the God who created us and put us here. As St Augustine once said, the human heart is restless until it rests in God, and this religious thirst is present in the heart of every child, woman, and man. We often hear about material poverty, yet spiritual poverty is living without a relationship with God, not knowing Jesus Christ our Lord and Saviour, and not having a spiritual community to call home. This is exactly our mission as the Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth: to bring people closer to Jesus Christ through His Church.
During 2022, the parishes and communities of our Diocese have been rebuilding after the COVID pandemic. It is gratifying that by the end of 2022, Sunday Mass attendance was on average about 80% of what it was pre-COVID. Some Catholics no longer practice although now there are also new families and others coming along. Numbers are not everything of course – Bl. Dominic Barberi, it is said, once remarked that England would be converted one person at a time - but numbers are important in terms of resources and the strength and impact of our witness and service.
This year, we launched the draft version of our Ten-Year Mission Plan and engaged in extensive consultation with clergy and laity, parishes, and individuals. Entitled You Will Be My Witnesses , the plan will be finalised in summer 2023. It outlines our priorities: to go out on a mission to all, to convert Catholics and deepen faith, to be people dependent on the Holy Spirit and to become outward-looking servants, focused on helping those in their time of need. We continue to pay special attention to youth, nurturing vocations, and prioritising resources.
You Will Be My Witnesses seeks to put Christ at the centre and to develop missionary communities. To release the resources, we propose to reconfigure the 87 parishes of the Diocese into 24 new pastoral areas that will over time become single integrated parishes. I devoted two of my four Pastoral Letters of 2022 to these themes. In one of them, I said: “Many will focus on the proposed changes to parish structures... But don’t be fooled! Structural change will fail without a deep spiritual change in ourselves and our communities. We will not be saved by structures: change the structures and all will be well. Sadly, it won’t. What we all need now is to draw closer to the Sacred Heart of Christ.”
Our diocesan finances continue to be challenging. We need to encourage stewardship, responsibility, and tithing. Over these last months, our Chief Operating Officer, Heather Hauschild, and her support staff have been working hard on these matters. They have also been working on the incorporation of the Diocese as a Charitable Incorporated Organisation (CIO). I want to acknowledge with great gratitude their hard work. Those familiar with charities will know all about CIOs, but for most, it will make little visible difference.
What incorporation does is put the diocesan charity on a sound footing, updating many of the internal operating policies and procedures, whilst tidying up countless loose ends. This incorporation project has absorbed a huge amount of energy, second only to the work on our ten-year strategy.
Over the last year, I celebrated the tenth anniversary of my ordination as the Bishop of Portsmouth, full of gratitude to God for His blessings and to the clergy and faithful for their loyalty, whilst continuing all the regular things a Bishop does: parish and school visitations, numerous confirmations in Eastertide, pilgrimages to Lourdes and Oberammergau, two meetings of the Diocesan Pastoral Council, nine meetings of the Board of Trustees, three meetings of the Council of Priests and three of the Deans and Coordinating Pastors, plus other gatherings for Safeguarding, Bishops Council and the Vicariates.
This past year, I blessed the new Abbot of Douai and the new Mother Abbess of St. Cecilia’s. I visited our seminarians in Oscott, Allen Hall and Rome. I welcomed Bishop John Arnold to lead the annual Schools Day and went on a short visit to Taizé with the Anglican Bishop of Portsmouth, Bishop Jonathan Frost. We had two ordinations in the summer: Fr James Lewis to the priesthood and Andrew Collins (along with a new Deacon of the Ordinariate, Timothy Graham) to the diaconate. I attended two plenary meetings of the Bishop’s Conference and the bi-annual joint meeting of the Anglican and Catholic Bishops.
I sit on two committees of the Bishops Conference, Education and Evangelisation, and so I attended the annual Conference in York of NBRIA, of which I am the president, and the Conference in Washington DC of SPES, of which I am a Board member. I said Mass at the New Dawn Festival in Walsingham, led in the summer the Pro-Life Pilgrimage to Walsingham, celebrated Mass for the AGM in Jersey of the Knights of St. Columba, and visited the SCITT teacher training facility in Southampton.
We had two gatherings of the Hampshire Church Leaders, of which I am the convener, and we had the joy of a short visit from Archbishop Andrew Nkea of Bamenda. I have also visited innumerable clergy for one-to-ones and met with countless lay and religious groups. Overall, this has been a very busy year as many things not possible during the pandemic have now been taking place.
I finish by expressing profound gratitude to everyone for their good work. Our Diocese of Portsmouth with its parishes and schools, stretching from south Oxford to the Channel Islands, has enormous potential. I am especially thankful to our Support Staff and to our Trustees for their diligence, competence, advice, and practical support. Let us pray to the Lord that the good work done in His Name will bear much fruit, fruit that will last (cf. John 15: 16), through the intercession of our dear patrons Mary Immaculate, St Edmund of Abingdon and the patron of our youth, Bl Pier Giorgio Frassati.
In Corde Iesu
Rt Rev Philip A. Egan BA, STL, PhD 5 Bishop of Portsmouth
OUR YEAR IN NUMBERS
25,321 People attended Mass on an average Sunday, about 80% of pre-pandemic levels
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1,477 1,640
Baptisms First Holy
Communions
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185 979 Pastoral Funerals Assistants
Together we received £6.8 million
in offertory income, averaging £4.20 per parishioner per week
422 Masses celebrated in an average week
96 87 Priests Parishes in active ministry
639 283 Confirmations Marriages
65 Receptions into the Catholic Church
142 Churches in active use
1,118 Catechists
Pastoral statistics are for the 2022 calendar year. Numbers of Pastoral Assistants and Catechists are for the 2021 calendar year.
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CASE STUDY: BRINGING CHRIST TO OUR COMMUNITY
The Parish of St Peter and the Winchester Martyrs is based in Hampshire and has worshipping communities in Winchester, Alresford, and Stockbridge. The last year has finally seen a return to normal activities, enabling the missionary community to grow and thrive. One of the main highlights from St Peter’s this year has been the creation of our Welcome Hub for refugees and asylum seekers.
Winchester is a place in which asylum seekers and refugees reside while waiting to hear if their applications to remain in the UK have proved successful. Following the outbreak of war in Ukraine in February 2022, our community of St Peter’s wanted to initiate a pragmatic response to the emerging refugee crisis and so, the St Peter’s Welcome Hub was born.
The Hub is open every Wednesday from 10:30 to13:30. It is used by over 60 asylum seekers from across the globe, including people from Afghanistan, Iraq and Sudan.
A variety of planned activities take place to assist the attendees, including conversation classes to encourage and improve speaking in English, art, meditation, poetry, and CV writing. The Hub also runs food classes funded by donations of fresh fruit and vegetables from local businesses and contributions from our parishioners. The meals prepared at the Hub enable attendees to take home fresh food.
Our Welcome Hub sessions are facilitated by several local partners, including the Job Centre, and the Citizens Advice Bureau.
The Welcome Hub has been made a reality thanks to contributions from the Society of St Vincent de Paul, funds from our parish of St Peter and the Winchester Martyrs and generous donations from volunteers and community appeals. The Hub has also been supported by the Basics Bank supplying clothing for attendees, and neighbouring churches donating toys and games.
St Peter’s is a very outward-facing church, that forges ties within the community. The attendees love coming because they feel so welcome and feel they too are part of a community again.
Welcome Hub Volunteer
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31,179
Pupils attending Catholic schools in our Diocese
750 Volunteer governors & directors
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Schools
5,460
Hours of Religious Education
4,855 Hours of Prayer
3,241 Pupils received free school meals
2,526 Teachers & education leaders
1,831 Support Staff
CASE STUDY: OUSTANDING CHRISTCENTERED EDUCATION
Our Lady and St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School in Lymington is a Christ-centred, energetic community with a reputation for academic excellence and an Outstanding Ofsted rating.
Among the highlights of the year, the school was officially recognised as a School of Sanctuary; illuminating its strong Catholic ethos through the love of its neighbour. ‘ Schools of Sanctuary ’ define schools which are particularly welcoming to refugees, asylum seekers and other individuals in need of sanctuary. Our Lady and St Joseph’s went through a rigorous process to be accredited with this status by the esteemed charity, City of Sanctuary UK.
In their efforts to support refugees and asylum seekers, pupils have used School Council time to discuss political conflicts abroad and how they might help those in need. They have also embraced the changing liturgical seasons as an opportunity to help others. During Easter, pupils filled shoeboxes full of gifts for Ukrainian children seeking refuge in Poland, and did the same again at Christmas time, for displaced children in Moldova, Romania, and Montenegro.
The school has also come up with inventive ways in which to promote prayer among its pupils and their families. At the start of the academic year, staff organised Prayer Bags to be sent home with each pupil containing, Bibles, prayer books and copies of school prayers. It also included a little prayer bear, some electric candles, and a rosary. The school also united their prayers with one million children across the globe and prayed the Rosary for peace in the world, during the month of October.
Like many other schools in our Diocese, Our Lady and St Joseph’s has excellent green credentials. The children are keen gardeners and have been growing a variety of produce which has been cooked by the school chef and served at dinner time. They also received the international accreditation of an Eco-Schools Green Flag Award in recognition of their ecological achievements which include their engagement with the COP-26 summit, their homegrown produce, impressive bug hotels and the establishment of an elected school Eco-Committee.
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CASE STUDY: CARE FOR OUR COMMON HOME
Herb gardens planted to be used in the food provided to the local community
665
Our Caritas Portsmouth Team is instrumental in delivering environmental and outreach projects across our Diocese.
Two community hubs have been established. The Southampton Hub is partnered with Immaculate Conception and Holy Family churches, as well as Holy Family School. While the Portsmouth Hub has teamed up with St Joseph’s Church in Havant.
Our Caritas Team supported volunteers at the parish of Southampton Immaculate Conception to run a gardening club dedicated to planting herbs and vegetables to support a community kitchen. In the summer, parish volunteers joined up with City Catering to prepare and deliver free cooked meals to local families.
Another gardening club was set up at Southampton Holy Family Church and School, planting hedges and growing vegetables and also creating bird boxes and bug hotels.
The environmental projects proposed by the Caritas Team also captured the imagination of schools across the Diocese, who have responded with considerable enthusiasm and dedication. Projects have included community tree planting, forest school activities, gardening clubs and bee-friendly planting
Hedgerow saplings planted to help landscape school grounds
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128
Bee bank Orchard trees designed and planted to built to create a encourage legacy biodiversity
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Food-growing projects
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wildflower sowing sites to encourage pollination
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1 2 Priest Deacon Ordination Ordinations
CASE STUDY: VOCATIONS
Our Department for Vocations focuses on building a culture of vocation across the Diocese. The Department proactively encourages parishes to share in the joy and responsibility of promoting this culture, through the distribution of monthly resources for parishes, including a weekly newsletter insert and intercessional prayers.
Each month, our ‘ Vocations Roadshow ’ visits local Evangelisation Strategy Teams (ESTs) in the Diocese. Part of the homily delivered during these visits includes a clear message to our faithful, who all have a significant part to play in the future of our Church.
During the visit, the Department for Vocations Team make themselves available to young adult groups around Confirmation age (15 years). The Team also gift people they meet with a Rosary for Vocations, encouraging them to pray for vocations, join the vocations’ prayer network, and sign up for the monthly Vocation E-news.
Our Department for Vocations also host a monthly Seeker Evening for those who are trying to discern the Lord’s call in their lives. Each session ends with prayer before the Blessed Sacrament. Three Seekers have progressed to conversations with the Bishop and Vocation Director, they are now seriously contemplating joining the priesthood. Another Seeker has been pursuing the call to Religious Life and is on the journey to joining a community.
The Team has also extended its work to schools and university chaplaincies addressing assemblies, delivering workshops and holding talks on vocations. It is our fervent hope that in time ‘ vocation ’ will be a part of the daily vocabulary of every school and parish in our Diocese.
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Diocesan seminarians (men training for the priesthood)
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CASE STUDY: CLOSER TO CHRIST CAMPAIGN
£5,328 Average pledge per donor
The Closer to Christ Campaign , launched in June 2021, is raising funds for two central aims; to support diocesan clergy through all stages of their ministry and to support parishes planning for mission as they emerge from the COVID pandemic. These aims include funding seminarians through their formation for the priesthood, supporting the wellbeing of priests in active ministry, providing support for retired priests in recognition of their life of service to the Church as well as rejuvenating parishes to ensure they have the necessary resources for prayer, worship, and community outreach.
It has been incredible to witness the enthusiasm with which priests and their parishes have embraced this initiative throughout the year, with some parishes surpassing their fundraising goals and hitting their targets, even earlier than anticipated.
The parish of Sacred Heart, Fareham, under the dedicated leadership of Canon John Cooke, has been among the highlights of the campaign this year, completing their fundraising timeline six weeks early and surpassing their goal by £40,000.
Securing this funding will allow the parish to “go green” as they hope to install solar panels and electric charging points at St Philip Howard Church, in addition to refurbishing the Sacred Heart Hall kitchen and recruiting a Catechetical Worker to launch faith formation.
16 Parishes had either taken part or were in active fundraising at the end of August 2022
I was so relieved and delighted when we reached our target of £210,000, I feel incredibly humbled by the generosity
of theparishioners’ sacrifice of their time and treasure and look forward to when our local project comes to fruition, enhancing our parish life.
Canon John
833 Families pledged to the campaign
£3.1M in pledges
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600 People received online training
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718
Online training sessions for PSMs
DBS checks processed
135
Parish Safeguarding Ministers (PSMs)
14 New PSMs welcomed
CASE STUDY: SAFEGUARDING
As a Diocese, we are committed to ensuring that the dignity and protection of every human being, especially children and young people, is a fundamental principle across all our work and activities. With Christ at the centre of our safeguarding efforts, we always strive to ensure that safeguarding standards across the Diocese are exemplary, so that every individual is respected and safe, without exception.
Following the initial restructure of the central Safeguarding Team this year we appointed two new additional Safeguarding and DBS Administrators and one Safeguarding Officer with responsibility for safeguarding training, to better meet the demands of our large Diocese.
Our Head of Safeguarding has been working with the Diocesan Safeguarding Committee to create a safeguarding strategic plan for the Diocese, which will assist in identifying areas of strength, along with areas for development. The plan reflects the Diocese’s commitment to working by the eight national safeguarding standards and ensuring best practice.
The Safeguarding Team continues to support the safe recruitment of employees and volunteers across our parishes and diocesan central teams.
Our central Safeguarding Team is responsible for the safe recruitment, induction, and ongoing training of our Parish Safeguarding Ministers (PSMs). Parishes are encouraged to build small teams of PSMs to manage the workload and to make local safeguarding arrangements more robust.
Following the appointment of our new Safeguarding Officer and the easing of Covid-19 restrictions, the Safeguarding Team has resumed face-to-face training for volunteers working within our parishes.
Approximately
2,500 Volunteers working with vulnerable adults or children
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FROM THE CHIEF OPERATING OFFICER
Looking back at the last year we can take encouragement that many of the plans we set have progressed thanks to the contributions of so many people across the Diocese.
The highlights for the year included:
The publication of the first draft of our Ten-Year Mission Plan You Will Be My Witnesses , the fruit of much discussion and consultation, sets out the vision for the Diocese and the priorities which will be our focus as we journey in faith together.
The progression of our plans to become a charitable incorporated organisation (CIO), which was intended to simplify our complex charitable structure to better reflect the current legislative and regulatory requirements. The transfer to the CIO took place in December 2022, just nine months after the project was formally commenced, which meant we could comply with the new legislation enacted in Guernsey at the beginning of the 2023 calendar year.
Our fundraising initiative, the Closer to Christ campaign which focuses on support for vocations to the priesthood, clergy in active ministry and support for priests in retirement, has been truly inspiring, with our parishioners pledging funds for the next three to five years. Some of the funds will also be used to support our parishes to recover from the impact of the COVID pandemic. We are so grateful for the generosity and commitment of our clergy who have led the local campaigns and for those who have donated to live their commitment to the future of our Church.
Our commitment to improving our IT functionality has borne fruit, with many parishes opting to participate in our central IT procurement and support. Our excellent IT manager has worked hard, building trust and confidence. This work enables us to ensure the capability, safety, and security of our IT systems.
The finance function for the Diocese, under the leadership of the Director of Finance appointed in May 2022, has taken steps to modernize reporting. A financial plan to ensure long-term sustainability has been developed and the financial challenges facing the Diocese have been shared with clergy and parishioners. An investment committee with members who have expertise in this area of finance was established to oversee our investment portfolio and advise Trustees on investment strategy in the future.
Caritas, our structure for supporting parish-led projects to reach out to people in their time of need, has supported several local initiatives. These include the provision of food and companionship, welcoming new arrivals from Hong Kong, and supporting out-of-school holiday clubs for young people. Our aspirations to realise the vision set for us by Pope Francis in Laudato Si have been brought to life with Caritas’ work with schools which have embraced initiatives such as tree planting and ecological preservation.
We have continued as the lead sponsor for the Home Office Community Sponsorship scheme. The two refugee families, supported with housing and practical support, have flourished through the committed teamwork and dedicated support of generous and creative volunteers.
Our website was updated and will continue to be upgraded in the next year. We also established an intranet as a resource for those closely involved in the Diocese’s operation. We know there is much to do to ensure our communications function reflects our aspirations over the coming years to realise our mission plan and to provide appropriate support for our parishes and teams and we look forward to progressing this.
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Looking ahead, in the coming year, we will continue the implementation phase of our Ten-Year Mission plan, You Will Be My Witnesses . The most important aspect of this is the development of Christ-centered communities focused on mission, which include our parishes, schools and chaplaincies. Much prayer, courage, love and generosity will be needed as we seek new ways of working together to revitalise the life and mission of the Church. The priorities set out in the mission plan will underpin all that we do in the coming years.
Following the establishment of the Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth as a charitable incorporated organisation (CIO) in 2022, we will continue to improve our governance. This will include the development of new policies and accompanying resources to assist our parishes and central teams and ensure legal compliance.
We are committed to the One Church approach to safeguarding and are working with the Catholic Safeguarding Standards Agency (CSSA), established as part of the Catholic Bishops Conference for England and Wales. The implementation of our Safeguarding Strategic Plan, adherence to core standards, and commitment to safeguarding our most vulnerable people, will underpin our work in the coming year.
The last phase of the Closer to Christ Campaign will be rolled out across our parishes that have yet to take part. We hope to achieve our goal of £13.5m from this campaign.
The financial recovery programme will continue, including the disposal of some surplus assets as well as seeking further opportunities for cost reduction. A diocesan-wide financial system will be procured during 2023. It is overdue as the previous system is no longer supported. A widely adopted user-friendly system will enable more effective support to be provided by the central team and will also help parishes with their oversight and planning.
We aspire to complete the central procurement and support project for IT next year, so that equipment is fit for purpose, cost-effective and as safe as possible.
Many of our parishioners contribute their time and talent to support our Diocese and local parishes. Our volunteers serve through a variety of ministries, works of charity, day-to-day tasks and on our committees which support diocesan and parish life. One of our priorities for next year is the development of resources and opportunities to bring people together so that all are supported in their work.
The revitalisation of our communications and fundraising functions is a priority. We have long-standing vacancies; recruitment in these areas is a particular challenge.
The work of our Estates Team will focus on developing our approach to Health & Safety and the good stewardship of our estate in 2023. The redevelopment of the St Mary’s parish site in Ryde is one of our priority projects; many of the buildings on this large site are derelict. A feasibility survey has been completed and a resolution must now be defined and implemented.
Turning to schools, the principal areas of work will be determining our approach to the structural reform signaled by the Government to best meet our aspiration for high-performing Christ-centered schools. Other priorities include rolling out the new inspection framework resourcing and implementing the new curriculum directory for religious education and deepening the partnership between our schools and parishes.
We are looking forward to participating in the National Schools’ Singing Programme, partly supported by grant funding.
Our Caritas Team, under new leadership, will continue to work with parishes enabling many more local projects to grow and flourish. The first phase will be parish engagement to assess the need and define the 15 principal priorities.
I:.lJ ,ll11 'IiJii ' 16
OUR FINANCES AT A GLANCE
£14.83M Expenditure
£14.55M Income
47% Of our income came from the offertory
£18.6K £14.8K Average cost Average cost per priest per employee
£88
20 Overdrawn parishes
Per parishioner was spent on repairs and maintenance of churches and other property
£10.2M Liabilities
£91M Assets
£84K Average cost of running a church
£282K Operating Deficit
15.3%
Decrease in income (adjusted for inflation)
£1M Gift Aid reclaimed
£80.8M Net Assets But most cannot easily be realised; they include our churches & restricted funds
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STEWARDSHIP HOW WE SPENT OUR MONEY
£2,244,393 (17%) on maintenance & repairs of our church property
£339,845 (3%) on insuring our churches
£457,970 (4%) on supporting seminarians & vocations
£455,858 (4%) on support for clergy
£570,326 (5%) on other curial departments
£339,405 (3%) on episcopal departments
£541,360 (4%) on finance & accounting
£158,928 (1%) on comms, news & media
£330,532 (3%) on property management
£123,891 (1%) on HR
£133,367 (1%) on IT
£173,040 (1%) on admin.
£2,717,693 (21%) on running costs for our parishes
£176,270 (1%) on safeguarding
£130,315 (1%) on legal & professional advice £153,105 (1%) on the levy for CBCEW*
£523,766 (4%) on supporting Catholic schools
£1,788,541 (14%) on our clergy
£1,513,317 (12%) on our parish employees
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*Catholic Bishops’ Conference for England & Wales
** This chart excludes depreciation, and expenditure relating to trading subsidiaries and restricted funds
***Icons are from freepik.com and flaticon.com
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FINANCIAL REVIEW
OVERVIEW
The Diocese of Portsmouth’s income for the year to 31 August 22 was £14.55M. This was an increase in absolute terms of £337K compared to the previous financial year. Expenditure meanwhile increased by £1.85M to £14.83M, leading to an operating deficit of £282K.
Comparisons
These figures must be viewed in the context of the Covid Pandemic and its aftermath, the energy-price-driven inflation of the post-covid period and the changes in Mass attendance during and after the pandemic. Because of the ecclesial and financial significance of the pandemic, 2022 will be considered in comparison to 2021 (a pandemic recovery year) and 2019 (the last pre-pandemic year).
Key Comparators: Mass attendance, inflation
Average weekly Mass attendance in the Diocese in 2019 was 32,294, falling to 17,306 in 2021 and then recovering, beyond expectations, to 25,321 in 2022. This is around 80% of pre-pandemic levels.
In terms of another key indicator, inflation, the Office of National Statistics retail price index shows that prices increased by 3.4% from September 2019 to August 2021 and by 9% from September 2021 to August 2022.
Analysis in real terms
Comparing overall diocesan income in 2022 with that of 2019, we see that, adjusted for inflation, it has decreased by 15.3%. The 2022 income of £14.55M translates to £12.95M in 2019 terms compared to the actual 2019 income of £15.3M Expenditure has likewise decreased in real terms by 15%. Meanwhile, over the same period, the number of Massgoers has decreased by 21.6%, meaning that the income and expenditure per remaining post-pandemic Mass-goer have increased slightly in real terms.
INCOME
Fundraising: Closer to Christ Campaign
The Closer to Christ fundraising campaign raised £957K in 2022. By August 2022, 20% of parishes (17/87) had launched their campaigns. The campaign is on course to meet its targets, although in terms of the numbers of parishes participating in 2022, the rollout has been slower than originally planned due to the aftermath of the COVID pandemic. A dedicated accounting system has been set up to record campaign income and the distribution of funds.
Parish offertory income
Offertory income includes income received via planned giving (standing orders, direct debits and envelopes), in addition to loose plate donations and contactless and online donations.
In 2022, offertory income amounted to £6.8M, which is 47% of total income. This included £3.97M in planned giving, £1.7M from loose plate donations, £58K from contactless donations and £37K from online giving. Offertory income declined from £7M in 2019 to £6.8M in 2022. Gift Aid reclaimed remains constant at around £1M.
Offertory per person per week
The lower average weekly Mass count of 25,321 in 2022 has generated a higher gift per person per week when compared to 2019. Offertory per person per week now works out at £4.20, which is further increased by gift aid reclaimed.
Other Sources of Income
£182,366 (1%) from our trading subsidiaries
£37,895 (<1%) from insurance claims
£188,951 (1%) from investments
£1,591,866 (11%) from rents
COVID Pandemic: before, during and after
The context suggests that, after the uncertainty of the pandemic, the 2022 financial results provide a more reliable indication of the Diocese’s post-pandemic financial and demographic future and thus will be more useful in terms of forecasting and planning, as our parishes and curia work together to implement the Ten-Year Mission Plan, You Will Be My Witnesses.
£3,173,498 (22%) from donations & fundraising
£1,913,574 (13%)
from grants and income for commissions & services
£650,854 (4%) from legacies
£6,811,904 (47%) from the offertory
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Central Costs
EXPENDITURE
Priests
The cost of supporting a priest includes their stipend, as well as Stole Fees, Christmas and Easter Offerings, travel expenses, housekeeping expenses, and the cost of supply priests.
These costs have increased by 16% from £1.55M in 2021 to £1.79M, although the real increase is less when inflation is factored in.
The 2022 figure works out at £18.6K per priest, an increase of £2,500 per priest. The stipend priests receive was increased in April 2021, having been frozen during the COVID pandemic. There was also a post-pandemic recovery in Christmas and Easter offerings and Stole Fees.
Staff
The period of 2019 to 2022 has seen a decline in staff numbers from 260 in 2019 to 216 in 2022. Expenditure on staff cost reduced from £3.6M in 2019 to £3.2M in 2022.
Repairs and Maintenance
The biggest contributor to the increase in parish expenditure at Year End of August 2022 was repairs and maintenance on churches, presbyteries and halls, which cost £2.24M in 2022. The increase was due to the backlog in works required following the COVID pandemic.
The cost of maintaining our buildings is a significant strain on our resources. Average offertory giving per parishioner per year (including Gift Aid) is £269; £88 of this goes towards the repair and maintenance of our estate.
The costs of most Curia departments remained relatively unchanged, or moderately reduced compared to 2021. This included largely unchanged costs of supporting clergy in ministry and New Evangelisation, and reduced costs for the Tribunal, Hospital Chaplaincies and Youth Chaplaincies.
The cost of training our seminarians increased to £355K in 2022 compared to £333K in 2021.
Support costs relating to Communications, Estates, HR, IT, Finance, Governance, Safeguarding and the Bishop’s Conference Levy increased from £1.91M in 2021 to £1.95M in 2022. This was a 2% increase in absolute terms but a decrease in real terms, because the rate of inflation was higher than 2%.
The fluctuations of year-on-year costs for our central teams depend on whether these teams are fully staffed and this, in turn, is an outcome of the difficult recruitment environment in the economy as a whole and specifically for charities and churches.
Cash
The cash position of the Diocese has improved from £9.4M to £10.8M due to the Closer to Christ Fundraising Campaign and capital expenditure controls. When the uncertainty of the COVID pandemic hit, the impact on our cash position could not be predicted, and there was an opportunity to safeguard the future by taking out a low-interest CBILS loan.
However, with the onset of global inflation and increases in interest rates, this loan became expensive to service and our financial strategy has focused on improving the sustainability of the cash position, removing dependence on borrowing, paying off the existing loan, and avoiding punitive interest charges. The loan was paid off in December 2022.
Cost per Church
A basic analysis of running costs per church can be conducted by dividing total running costs per parish by the number of churches in each parish. There are 139 churches in active use across the Diocese, spread over eighty-seven parishes. General parochial expenses per church average £84K per annum and range from around £20K per church to £284K per church. Costs per church increase with the size, age, and historic value of churches, with listed buildings tending to cost more.
Levy
In 2022, the parish levy - money paid by parishes to cover central diocesan costs - was set at £1.87M, representing 16% of parish income.
Analysis suggests that the levy in our Diocese is relatively low as a proportion of parish income compared to many dioceses. The low levy has led to a succession of curial budget deficits; the levy only funds 48% of overall curial costs.
The requirements for compliance in terms of managing a large, geographically diverse estate, the cost of ensuring we meet our statutory financial and governance obligations, and the responsibility of safeguarding our young people are significant drivers of central curial costs.
Parish Surplus/Deficit
For the year to 31 Aug 2022, 28 parishes recorded a deficit and therefore are using up their reserves. Of these, 16 would have still posted a deficit even after excluding one-off or exceptional items. Further, exceptional items tend to recur on a cyclical basis so cannot be completely discounted.
Of the 28 parishes that recorded a deficit, five recorded a deficit of greater than £50K. The combined deficit of the 28 parishes was £622K.
Parish Bank Overdrafts
Across the 87 parishes, there are 223 parish bank accounts. Of these, 28 bank accounts were overdrawn with a total overdrawn balance of £1.8M.
Assets
Despite an operating deficit, and a fall in the value of quoted investments held by the Diocese due to the conflict in Ukraine, overall net assets increased from £76.4M to £80.8M, thanks to the reclassification and revaluation of functional properties as income generating investment properties.
21
The Diocese owns £91M of assets: £41M of churches and other buildings used for our charitable activities, £26M of investment properties, £12M of investment in securities, £11M of cash and £1M of debtors (owed to the Diocese).
Net assets are lower than the total assets owned by the Diocese because of the £10.2M worth of liabilities (owed by the Diocese).
It should be recognized that churches and functional buildings (those used for our charitable activities) are held at a fraction of their insurance/rebuild value of circa £500M. The valuation method used in the accounts is explained under accounting policy h) on page 35.
The Closer to Christ fundraising campaign, over half of the revenues from which will cover major areas of curial expenditure such as supporting seminarians and clergy in active ministry; increases in the Levy, to avoid curial budget deficits; reductions in curial expenditure and strict budgetary discipline also aiming at balanced curial budgets.
A ten-year strategic plan You Will Be My Witnesses has been drafted and widely consulted on across the Diocese. The final plan is due to be published in 2023. The implementation of this plan is intended to help contribute to the revenue and cash generation required to achieve the target level of reserves.
Investments
Risks
The Diocese held £12.3 million in quoted investments on 31 August 2022. The target level of return set for these stocks and shares is set within the Investment Policy and is currently CPI plus 4%. Due to the impact on markets of the conflict in Ukraine and the global energy price inflation, these investments fell in value by £0.8 million over the financial year.
The Trustee Board have agreed on an ethical policy for the portfolio. The following is an extract from the investment policy:
“Where the issuer of a security (share, stock or bond) or deposit taker (bank) is directly and substantially (more than 5% of the activity of that entity) involved in activities which constitute grave moral evil such investments are to be entirely excluded because holding such securities would constitute formal co-operation in that evil. These would include but not be limited to, murder, procured abortion, contraception, sexual activity outside marriage and acts which undermine the dignity and sanctity of human beings (for example the exploitation of workers, migrants, the weak and the elderly) from conception to natural death, corrupting the young, heresy and sacrilege.”
The Bishop and Board of Trustees also require that our investment managers keep under review the environmental stewardship of entities in which the Diocese holds investments or deposits and instructs them to refer any activities which might constitute a breach of the duty of the stewardship of creation to them.
In July 2022, the Diocese established an investment committee to encourage our parishes to participate in investment decisions and to assist the Board of Trustees in their decision-making.
Reserves
Our Reserves Policy states that the Diocese should hold general funds (unrestricted, non-parish funds) equal to six months of mission support costs.
At the end of the 2021/22 financial year, total reserves stood at £80.8 million. The value of the churches, halls, and presbyteries of the Diocese, at £41 million, accounts for 51% of total diocesan reserves. As these assets cannot be spent, in August 2020 they were transferred out of the general fund into a designated fund. After this transfer, the general funds were reduced to a deficit of £3.9 million on 31 August 2020. By August 2022, the deficit had risen to £4.9M million, following losses on investments.
To return general funds to a balanced position we are focusing on three key inter-related areas:
A risk register is provided for Trustees to review at every meeting. Key risks are:
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The financial position of many parishes; reductions in weekly attendance and participation in the life of the church have been reflected in falling offertory income.
-
The growing backlog of estate maintenance, together with the deterioration of older, listed buildings (most notably the Cathedral) is a long-term liability. Our mission plan, You Will Be My Witnesses, sets out to increase participation in parish life and enable us to discern where to invest and what we can no longer maintain.
-
The Diocese comprises 87 individual parish units which operate autonomously to a significant extent. The organisation is highly dispersed and also largely reliant on volunteers for much of the day-to-day activity. This all presents a significant risk of non-compliance with key policies required by regulators and legislation.
-
Support and regular communication in a variety of forms is provided to parishes about policy and general guidance. However, further work is required to ensure that practical resources are provided to help parishes to navigate increasingly complex requirements.
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Cyber-security is a recognised global risk. Much effort has been made to mitigate the risk through training and monitoring. Key performance indicators have been developed based on the 12-point plan provided by the Diocese’s insurer; progress is regularly measured against the KPIs.
-
Although we have been blessed with vocations, the number of vocations to the priesthood is not keeping pace with expected clergy retirement in the medium term. Our mission plan, You Will Be My Witnesses , is intended to enable ways of working which mitigate these anticipated challenges to some extent.
-
The governance of the complex charity structure has become increasingly complicated. The incorporation of the charity in 2022 provided an opportunity to streamline the arrangements as part of our risk management strategy.
-
Recruitment to key roles in central administration and in parishes is proving a significant challenge. Vacancies can, on occasion, be open for several months. Attracting and retaining candidates with the appropriate experience and expertise will require a re-evaluation of our structure and pay and reward strategy in the coming year. 22
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OUR STRUCTURE, GOVERNANCE AND MANAGEMENT
The structure, governance and management of our Diocese as set out below reflects the position for the 2021-2022 financial year covered in this report. At the time of publication (Spring 2023) the governance structure of the Diocese is significantly different, following the incorporation of the Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth as a CIO.
Trustee vacancies are advertised through the appropriate diocesan communication channels. All candidates applying to become a trustee will be interviewed by the Bishop and Secretary to Trustees. Any successful applicants are co-opted as advisory members of the board at the next full meeting for a period of six months. At the end of the six months, they are appointed trustees by a resolution of the Board.
Constitution
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust is a charitable trust established by a Trust Deed dated 04 September 1934. Following a Deed of Revocation dated 5 December 2002, the Trust is governed under a Trust Deed dated 5 December 2002 and the subsequent amendments made on 07 April 2004.
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust is registered under the Charities Act 2011, its charity number is 246871.
Trustee
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust has a sole corporate trustee: The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trustees Registered (PRCDTR). The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trustees Registered is a body corporate under Part 12 of the Charities Act 2011 established on 11 September 1934 and granted corporation status by the Lord Chancellor on 27 November 1934.
The individuals who form the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trustees Registered will herein be referred to as the Trustees.
Trustee induction and training
The Secretary to Trustees is responsible for ensuring that an appropriate induction training programme is arranged for new trustees, within 3 months of appointment. The induction is expected to include clarification of legal responsibilities, Charity Commission requirements of charity trustees, strategic issues, governance issues, familiarity with the Trust Deed and structure of the charity, and other relevant induction material to allow trustees to understand the Charity’s purpose, activities, financial position, and current risks.
Trustees are encouraged to undertake regular training throughout their appointment which they feel is relevant to their role and to keep up to date with current legislation.
The individuals who form the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trustees Registered are the trustees of the Portsmouth Diocesan Trust, a charitable trust established on the 1st of August 1934. It is registered under the Charities Act 2011; its charity number is 246872.
The Trustees of the Portsmouth Diocesan Trust who formed the corporate trustee of the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust during the year ended 31 August 2022 and who were in office on the date of this report are detailed on p2.
Trustees expenses
Several trustees are clergy of the Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth. They are housed and remunerated by the Diocese and are reimbursed for expenses for carrying out their ministry in the same way as any other priest in the Diocese. However, no trustee received any remuneration from the Diocese, nor had any expenses reimbursed by the Diocese, in connection with their duties as Trustees during the year. No trustee had any beneficial interest in any contract with the Diocese.
The Board of Trustees met 10 times during the year.
Linked charities
Under a Charity Commission Scheme, dated 20 July 2001, all charities which have the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trustees Registered as trustees, except for the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Priests’ Retirement Fund, are linked for registration and reporting. The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust is the reporting charity, it has more than 90 linked charities, most are related to property.
The appointment of trustees
The sole corporate trustee of the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust does not change. The individuals who form the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trustees Registered are appointed trustees for the Portsmouth Diocesan Trust by a resolution of the Board.
Management team
The trustees are responsible for the overall management, oversight, and strategic direction of the Diocese. To achieve this, they have appointed a Chief Operating Officer who has delegated responsibility for the day-to-day running of the Diocese. The Chief Operating Officer is supported by a senior leadership team who have delegated areas of responsibility such as finance, estates, safeguarding, HR, IT, communications, governance, fundraising, charity outreach, and clergy support.
Setting pay
Remunerated roles in the Curia and central administration, have been benchmarked against several charity sector benchmarks, including other dioceses. The Diocese is a lower-quartile employer, although the Trustee Board may choose to apply a recruitment or retention premium to a particular post in certain circumstances.
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Organisation
The Diocesan Curia is organised into a Framework for Collaboration, with three vicariates reflecting the threefold ministry of the Bishop who acts in the name of Our Lord Jesus Christ as priest, prophet, and king.
Each Vicariate is responsible for one aspect of the Bishop’s threefold ministry: Vocation, Education and Evangelisation. Each is headed by an Episcopal Vicar, who, together with the Vicars General, are the sole members of the Bishop’s Council, most of whom have been appointed Trustees. Each Vicariate Committee is chaired by the Episcopal Vicar for that Vicariate.
The Chancery and Tribunal are also part of the Curia. The Judicial Vicar, who leads the Tribunal, has been appointed as a Trustee.
The Council of Priests meets regularly to consult on matters of Canon Law and advises the Board of Trustees.
The Trustee Board is also supported in decision-making by detailed scrutiny and recommendations provided by subcommittees: Finance, Audit and Risk; HR and Remuneration; Safeguarding; Investment; Caritas; Bamenda; Vocation Vicariate; Education Vicariate and Evangelisation Vicariate; which meet regularly throughout the year.
The purpose of the Finance, Audit and Risk Committee is to provide strategic oversight to the administration of the temporal goods of the Diocese and its parishes, land and buildings, money, investments, and the discharge of its legal and contractual obligations. The FAR Committee is chaired by the Vicar General, Moderator of the Curia.
The HR and Remuneration Committee considers remuneration across the Diocese and makes recommendations to the Board. It is chaired by the Vicar General, Moderator of the Curia.
The Safeguarding Committee is responsible for matters which relate to safeguarding and is chaired by a non-clergy trustee.
Each parish is expected to have a Parish Finance Committee and encouraged to have an Evangelisation Strategy Team to support the parish priest management of the parish day-today.
The structure of the Diocese presents a harmonious balance between the Diocese’s legal responsibilities as a charity and its responsibility to Canon Law.
Relationships with other organisations: other regulators
In addition to the Charity Commission for England and Wales, the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust is overseen by the Jersey Charity Commissioner and the Guernsey Registrar for Charities.
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust is registered with the Fundraising Regulator and adheres to the Code of Fundraising Practice.
Safeguarding in the Diocese is overseen by the Catholic Safeguarding Standards Agency; the CSSA national safeguarding policies are in operation across the Diocese
Other organisations within the Diocese
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust has a close relationship with other charities which operate as part of the Diocese, these include:
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Priest’s Retirement Fund, charity number 1061194, is a charitable trust which looks after our priests in retirement. It is currently undertaking a joint fundraising venture with the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust.
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Properties Limited, charity number 1168798 is a charitable company limited by guarantee which holds the Diocese’s property in Jersey.
Caritas Jersey Limited, charity number 150, is a charitable company limited by guarantee and is the hub of Catholic Social Action in Jersey.
The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust works closely with Catholic schools across the Diocese, mostly through the Vicariate for Education, and in some cases owns the school estate.
Other organisations outside the Diocese
In carrying out its work and mission, The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust works in collaboration with many and varied organisations such as the Catholic Trust for England and Wales (CATEW), the Bishop’s Conference for England and Wales (CBCEW), CAFOD, other Catholic dioceses, hospitals, prisons, universities, food banks, and a variety of other charities and organisations.
Charitable purposes
Our charitable purposes, as set out in our Trust Deed, are:
The provision maintenance and upkeep of churches and public chapels for the celebration of divine worship according to the rights and ceremonies of the Roman Catholic Church and of presbyteries and houses for the residence of Priests and Deacons attached to any such churches or chapels or otherwise and belonging to or connected with the Roman Catholic Church in the Diocese.
The provision maintenance and carrying on of the religious services of the said Church in such churches and public chapels or other places of a like character.
The provision maintenance and upkeep of houses of study halls and colleges for the education and training of priests and persons desirous of becoming priests of the said Church in the Diocese or elsewhere in Great Britain and abroad.
The education and training of priests, deacons, and persons desirous of becoming priests of the said Church by such means as the Trustees think fit.
The payment of stipends to the priests and deacons of the said Church and of salaries and wages in connection with any such institutions as aforesaid
The maintenance, support, and provision of medical and surgical aid for infirm and aged priests and deacons of the said Church and the burial of deceased priests and deacons of the said Church.
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The provision of holidays and rest for priests and deacons of the Roman Catholic Church in the Diocese include contributions agreed by the Trustees under this, and the preceding sub-clause shall be made only to or in respect of persons whose own means (if any) are in the opinion of the Trustees inadequate for such purposes.
The relief of poor persons professing the Roman Catholic religion in the Diocese or nearly related to priests or deacons of the said Church.
The provision maintenance and upkeep of schools and colleges are to be conducted by the principles of the said Church for the general education whether religious or secular (or both) of children and young persons or whether members of the said Church and catechetical other religious education.
The provision maintenance and upkeep of houses of residence for teachers and students in any such houses of study halls schools and colleges as aforesaid.
The provision maintenance and upkeep of homes for infirm and aged priests and deacons of the said Church in the Diocese being in the opinion of the Trustees without adequate means of support and of houses or accommodation for infirm and aged poor person, with preference being given to those professing the Roman Catholic Religion.
The provision maintenance and upkeep of cemeteries or burying places for the interment of deceased members of the said Church and other persons authorised by the Trustees.
The provision maintenance and upkeep of parish rooms and halls in connection with any such churches or chapels as aforesaid to be used for the advancement of the Roman Catholic religion in the Diocese or otherwise for the enlightenment education and religious and moral benefit of members of the said Church in the Diocese.
The provision and maintenance of hospitals and sanatoria for poor persons members of the said Church.
The acquisition of sites for and of ground to be held with buildings for any of the purposes aforesaid and the erection restoring altering enlarging maintaining and repairing of any buildings for any such purpose and the laying out maintenance and upkeep of grounds in connection with any such buildings.
The development of any part of any land held as Trust Property and the maintenance of any works for the time being carried on thereon under the powers hereof.
The making of donations or subscriptions to any charitable institution trust or organisation for Roman Catholic or other purposes in Great Britain or abroad or direct to any Bishop or official person engaged in any such work or to any other charitable institution or organisation necessary or proper in the carrying on of the charitable work of the Trustees.
The maintenance and upkeep of the charitable institutions’ work and undertakings now carried on or for the time being established under the trusts hereof.
Any such charitable purpose or purposes as in the opinion of the Bishop may be calculated to lead to the advancement or maintenance of the Roman Catholic religion.
Fundraising activity
The Diocese follows the Code of Fundraising Practice and the guidance for all aspects of fundraising and has produced policies and procedures for all fundraising activity which are regularly reviewed by the fundraising department and trustees.
The fundraising activities of the Diocese take various forms; including fundraising through campaigns, planned regular giving via digital means and cash, securing grants from institutional, corporate, and non-profit organisations and community fundraising.
During the reporting period, there were no complaints received about fundraising activity. The Diocese ensures that the vulnerable are protected by adhering to the code of Fundraising Practice, ensuring diocesan policies and procedures are in place for fundraising activities, and regularly working with the safeguarding and governance teams to ensure that good practice is followed in accordance with the law.
Public Benefit
The Trustee Board has due regard to the Charity Commission’s guidance on public benefit in exercising its powers and duties.
The Trustee Board ensures the Diocese benefits the public by bringing meaning to people’s lives, providing opportunities to strengthen relationships with God, providing a moral and ethical framework for life; through community and social cohesion in its pastoral work; and through its work supporting the poor and the marginalised.
Statement of Trustees’ responsibilities
The purpose of this statement is to distinguish the Trustees’ responsibilities for the accounts from those of the auditors as stated in their report. The Charities Act 2011 requires the Trustees to prepare for each financial period, financial statements which give a true and fair view of the Charity’s financial activities during the period and of its financial position at the period end. In preparing the financial statements the Trustees are required to:
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Select suitable accounting policies and apply them consistently.
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Observe the methods and principles in the Charities SORP.
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Make judgements and estimates that are reasonable and prudent.
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State whether applicable accounting standards have been followed, subject to any material departures disclosed and explained in the financial statements; and
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Prepare the financial statements on a going concern basis unless it is inappropriate to presume that this basis applies.
The Trustees are responsible for ensuring proper accounting records are kept which disclose, with reasonable accuracy at any time, the financial position of the Diocese and enable them to ensure that the financial statements comply with the Trust Deeds and the disclosure regulations. They are also responsible for safeguarding the assets of the Diocese and hence for taking reasonable steps for the prevention and detection of an error, fraud, and other irregularities.
This Annual Report was approved by the Trustee Board at a meeting held on the 20 April 2023.
Signed:
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IE Ir tolki 27
FROM THE AUDITORS
Independent auditor’s report to the trustees of The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust
Opinion
We have audited the financial statements of The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust for the year ending 31 August 2022 which comprise the Statement of Financial Activities, the Balance Sheet, the Statement of Cash Flows 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 Financial Reporting Standard 102 The Financial Reporting Standard is applicable in the UK and the Republic of Ireland (the United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).
In our opinion, the financial statements:
-
give a true and fair view of the state of the group’s and the parent charity’s affairs as of 31 August 2022 and the group’s net movement in funds for the year then ended.
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have been properly prepared under the United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice; and
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have been prepared following the requirements of the Charities Act 2011.
Basis for opinion
We have been appointed as auditors under section 144 of the Charities Act 2011 and report in accordance with the Act and relevant regulations made or having effect thereunder. We conducted our audit by 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 group following 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 group'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.
Other informatio n
The trustees are responsible for the other information. The other information comprises the information included in the Report of the Trustees. 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.
In connection with our audit of the financial statements, 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 audit or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If we identify such material inconsistencies or apparent material misstatements, we are required to determine whether there is a material misstatement in the financial statements or a material misstatement of the other information. 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
Matters on which we are required to report by exception
We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters about which the Charities (Accounts and Reports) Regulations 2008 require us to report to you if, in our opinion:
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adequate accounting records have not been kept by the parent charity, or returns adequate for our audit have not been received from branches not visited by us; or
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sufficient accounting records have not been kept; or
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the parent charity’s financial statements are not in agreement with the accounting records and returns; or
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• we have not received all the information and explanations we require for our audit.
Responsibilities of trustees for the financial statements
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 group’s and the parent 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 group or the parent charity or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.
Our responsibilities and the responsibilities of the trustees for going concern are described in the relevant sections of this report.
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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 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 under 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 based on these financial statements.
Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of noncompliance with laws and regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud is detailed below:
Based on our understanding of the group and the environment in which it operates, we identified the principal risks of non-compliance with laws and regulations related to Canon Law, employment law, safeguarding regulations and Charity Law, and we considered the extent to which noncompliance might have a material effect on the financial statements. We also considered those laws and regulations that have a direct impact on the preparation of financial statements such as the Charities Act 2011 and Charities SORP.
Use of our report
This report is made solely to the charity’s trustees, as a body, under section 144 of the Charities Act 2011 and regulations made under section 154 of that Act. Our audit work has been undertaken so that we might state to the charity's trustees 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’s trustees as a body for our audit work, for this report, or for the opinions we have formed.
Haysmacintyre LLP 10 Queen Street Place Statutory Auditors London EC4R 1AG
Date: 21 April 2023
Haysmacintyre LLP is eligible to act as an auditor in terms of section 1212 of the Companies Act 2006.
We evaluated management’s incentives and opportunities for fraudulent manipulation of the financial statements (including the risk of override of controls). Audit procedures performed by the engagement team included:
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Review of minutes of trustees’ meetings.
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Inspect correspondence with regulators and tax authorities.
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Discussions with management including consideration of known or suspected instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations and fraud.
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Evaluating management’s controls designed to prevent and detect irregularities.
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Identifying and testing journals; and
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Challenging assumptions and judgements made by management in their critical accounting estimates. These are related to depreciation and investment property valuations.
Because of the inherent limitations of an audit, there is a risk that we will not detect all irregularities, including those leading to a material misstatement in the financial statements or non-compliance with regulations. This risk increases the more that compliance with a law or regulation is removed from the events and transactions reflected in the financial statements, as we will be less likely to become aware of instances of non-compliance. The risk is also greater regarding irregularities occurring due to fraud rather than error, as fraud involves intentional concealment, forgery, collusion, omission, or misrepresentation.
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.
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,1. rdl J 30
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
| Notes Donations and legacies Donations and Offertories Legacies Other Other trading activities: Rent – miscellaneous lettings Income of trading subsidiaries 15 Investment income Investment income and interest receivable 1 Rent – investment properties Other incoming resources: Insurance claims Gain on disposal of tangible fixed assets Total income Expenditure on raising funds Expenses of trading subsidiaries Finance costs Charitable activities Activities in furtherance of the Roman Catholic Faith Total expenditure 2 Net (outgoing)/incoming resources before transfers Realised and unrealised gains on investments Net income/(expenditure) Transfers between funds Transfers - Diocesan Levy Net movement on funds Reconciliation of funds Fund balances brought forward Fund balances carried forward |
UNREST | RICTED PARISH - TOTAL 8,331,264 557,031 1,201,761 852,746 182,366 107,845 694,843 37,895 - 11,965,751 (125,521) (14,211) (9,681,360) (9,821,092) 2,144,659 4,022,954 6,167,613 826,578 (1,877,145) 5,117,045 69,091,738 74,208,784 |
RESTRICTED |
|---|---|---|---|
| CURIA - TOTAL |
|||
| 35,137 93,823 508,986 44,277 - 28,322 - - - |
|||
| 710,545 | |||
| - - (133,572) (3,784,442) |
|||
| (3,918,014) | |||
| (3,207,469) | |||
| 1,004,654 | |||
| (2,202,815) | |||
| (1,098,837) 1,877,145 |
|||
| (1,424,507) | |||
| 2,567,095 | |||
| 1,142,588 |
The statement of financial activities includes all gains and losses in the period. All operations are continuing and there are no discontinued operations in either year. The comparative year’s Statement of Financial Activities is included in note 18.
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PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET AS AT 31 AUGUST 2022
| Fixed Assets Notes Tangible assets 4 Investments 5 Debtors: due after more than one year 6 Current Assets Debtors and prepayments 6 Cash at bank and in hand Creditors: due within one year 7 Net Current Assets Creditors: due after more than one year 7 Parish Loan Accounts Due from parishes Net off intra-curial Due to parishes NET ASSETS Unrestricted Funds General Funds Designated Funds 10 Restricted Funds 9 Permanent Endowment Funds 8 RESERVES |
CURIAL FUNDS 3,035,870 9,760,962 12,796,832 28,809 1,177,236 1,336,740 2,513,976 (6,342,381) (3,828,405) (3,546,311) 6,214,046 (183,223) (7,051,318) (1,020,495) 4,430,430 (4,892,151) 6,034,740 1,142,588 3,121,741 166,101 4,430,430 |
PARISH FUNDS 38,022,978 28,151,172 66,174,150 - 78,981 9,450,338 9,529,319 (309,663) 9,219,656 - (6,214,046) 183,223 7,051,318 1,020,495 76,414,301 - 74,208,784 74,208,784 1,381,418 824,100 76,414,301 |
31-Aug-22 41,058,848 37,912,134 78,970,983 28,809 1,256,217 10,787,078 12,043,295 (6,652,044) 5,391,251 (3,546,311) - - - - 80,844,732 (4,892,151) 80,243,523 75,351,372 4,503,159 990,200 80,844,732 |
31-Aug-21 42,201,135 33,542,381 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 75,743,516 | ||||
| 698,463 447,656 9,411,965 |
||||
| 9,859,621 | ||||
| (4,721,634) | ||||
| 5,137,987 | ||||
| (5,168,135) | ||||
| - - - |
||||
| - | ||||
| 76,411,831 | ||||
| (3,788,993) 75,447,825 |
||||
| 71,658,832 | ||||
| 3,944,580 808,419 |
||||
| 76,411,831 |
Approved by the Trustee Board on the 20 April 2023 and signed on their behalf by:
32
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST CHARITY BALANCE SHEET AS AT 31 AUGUST 2022
| CURIAL FUNDS | PARISH FUNDS | 31-Aug-22 | 31-Aug-21 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fixed Assets | |||||||
| Tangible assets | 3,035,870 | 34,871,193 | 37,907,063 | 39,015,600 | |||
| Investments | 9,904,462 | 28,151,172 | 38,055,634 | 33,542,381 | |||
| 12,940,332 | 63,022,365 | 75,962,697 | 72,557,981 | ||||
| Debtors: due after more than one year | 28,809 | - | 28,809 | 698,463 | |||
| Current Assets | |||||||
| Debtors and prepayments | 1,247,223 | 26,625 | 1,273,849 | 438,783 | |||
| Cash at bank and in hand | 1,336,740 | 9,358,399 | 10,695,139 | 9,183,111 | |||
| 2,583,964 | 9,385,024 | 11,968,987 | 9,621,894 | ||||
| Creditors: due within one year | (6,342,381) | (267,367) | (6,609,748) | (4,527,324) | |||
| Net Current Assets | (3,758,417) | 9,117,657 | 5,359,240 | 5,094,570 | |||
| Creditors: due after more than one year | (3,546,311) | - | (3,546,311) | (5,168,135) | |||
| Parish Loan Accounts | |||||||
| Due from parishes | 6,144,058 | (6,144,058) | - | - | |||
| Net off intra-curial | (183,223) | 183,223 | - | - | |||
| Due to parishes | (7,051,318) | 7,051,318 | - | - | |||
| (1,090,483) | 1,090,483 | - | - | ||||
| NET ASSETS | 4,573,930 | 73,230,505 | 77,804,435 | 73,182,879 | |||
| Unrestricted Funds | |||||||
| General Funds | (4,748,651) | - | (4,748,651) | (3,788,993) | |||
| Designated Funds | 6,034,740 | 71,024,988 | 77,059,727 | 72,218,873 | |||
| 1,286,088 | 71,024,988 | 72,311,076 | 68,429,880 | ||||
| Restricted Funds | 3,121,741 | 1,381,418 | 4,503,159 | 3,944,580 | |||
| Permanent Endowment Funds | 166,101 | 824,100 | 990,200 | 808,419 | |||
| RESERVES | 4,573,930 | 73,230,505 | 77,804,435 | 73,182,879 |
Approved by the Trustee Board on the 20 April 2023 and signed on their behalf by:
33
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST CASH FLOW STATEMENT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
| YE AUG 22 | YE AUG 21 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reconciliation of Net Incoming Resources to Cash Inflow from Operating Activities |
£ | £ | |||
| Changes in resources before revaluations | (282,467) | 1,230,543 | |||
| Returns on investment | (188,951) | (370,632) | |||
| Depreciation | 924,016 | 907,399 | |||
| Loss/(gain) on disposal of Tangible Fixed Assets | 59,721 | 87,942 | |||
| (Increase)/decrease in debtors | (138,907) | (182,719) | |||
| (Decrease)/increase in creditors | 154,498 | (714,886) | |||
| 527,910 | 957,647 | ||||
| Net cash inflow from operating activities | 527,910 | 957,647 | |||
| Cash flows from investing activities | |||||
| Returns on investment | 188,951 | 370,632 | |||
| Payments to acquire tangible fixed assets | (90,099) | (1,144,951) | |||
| Receipts from sales of tangible fixed assets | - | - | |||
| Payments to acquire investments | (3,631,761) | (3,284,953) | |||
| Receipts from sales of investments | 4,226,024 | 3,238,700 | |||
| 693,115 | (820,572) | ||||
| Cash flows from financing activities | |||||
| New bank loans received | - | 4,000,000 | |||
| Movement on School Loans | 630,350 | ||||
| Bank loan repayments | (476,262) | (71,000) | |||
| 154,088 | 3,929,000 | ||||
| Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year | 1,375,112 | 4,066,075 | |||
| Cash and cash equivalents at the beginning of the year | 9,411,965 | 5,345,890 | |||
| Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year | 10,787,077 | 9,411,965 | |||
| Reconciliation of cash flow to movement in net | |||||
| funds/(debt) | |||||
| Increase in cash in the year | 1,375,112 | 4,066,075 | |||
| Net cash inflow from movements in bank loans | (154,088) | (3,929,000) | |||
| Change in cash and cash equivalents in the year | 1,221,024 | 137,075 | |||
| Net funds at the beginning of the year | 4,536,965 | 4,399,890 | |||
| Net funds at the year end | 5,757,989 | 4,536,965 | |||
| Analysis of net funds/(debt) | 01 Sep 2021 | Cash flows | Other | 31 Aug | 2022 |
| £ | £ | £ | £ | ||
| Cash and bank balances | 9,411,965 | 1,375,112 | - | 10,787,077 | |
| Loans due within one year | (4,165,760) | (154,088) | (1,621,824) | (5,941,672) | |
| Loans due after one year | (5,168,135) | - | 1,621,824 | (3,546,311) | |
| 78,070 | 1,221,024 | - | 1,299,094 |
34
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTING POLICIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
The financial statements have been prepared in accordance with statutory requirements and with the Statement of Recommended Practice for Charities (SORP 2015) (Second Edition, effective 1 January 2019 and with the Financial Reporting Standard applicable to the UK and Republic of Ireland (FRS102) (Effective 1 January 2015). The particular accounting policies adopted are described below. The financial statements are prepared under the historical cost convention, as modified to include certain tangible fixed assets at a valuation and fixed asset investments at market value. The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust meets the definition of a public benefit entity under FRS102.
a) Basis of preparation
The financial statements represent the Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust together with its wholly owned trading subsidiary companies (consolidated on a line-by-line basis) listed in note 15 No separate Statement of Financial Activities has been presented for the Charity alone.
b) Preparation of accounts on a going concern basis Having considered future budgets and cash flows, the trustees confirm that they have no material uncertainties about the entity’s ability to continue as a going concern. In coming to this conclusion trustees have considered the repayment of the CBILS and other loans at 31 Dec 22, in connection with incorporation of the Diocese, the resources available to the Diocese, the move towards. balanced curial budgets and the impact of the 10 year plan, You will be My Witnesses.
c) Legacies, Donations and Grants
Legacies and donations are recognised the Diocese becomes legally entitled to them, receipt is probable and they can reasonably be measured in financial terms. Receipts of property, investments or other gifts in kind are included at market value. Grants are recognised when receivable.
d) Investment Income
Investment income is accounted for as it accrues.
e) Taxation
As a registered charity, the Diocese is exempt from income tax, corporation tax and capital gains tax derived from its charitable activities. Gift aid is credited to the category of income to which it relates.
f) Expenditure
Costs of raising funds comprise those costs associated with attracting voluntary income and grants and the management of the Charity’s investments. Costs of charitable activities consist of all expenditure directly relating to the objects of the Charity. Support costs which cannot be directly allocated are apportioned between activities.
Employment benefits, including holiday pay, are recognised in the period in which they are earned. Termination benefits are recognised in the period in which the decision is made and communicated to the relevant employee(s). Governance costs include expenditure on management and compliance with constitutional and statutory requirements together with an allocation of support costs. Irrecoverable VAT is included with the category of expenses to which it relates.
g) Schools Building Programme
Any grants obtained on behalf of school governors are netted off against total costs and only the residual cost to the Diocese is included in the financial statements.
h) Tangible Fixed Assets
Prior to 1 January 1997 the cost of fixed assets was written off in the year of acquisition and no comprehensive cost records were maintained. In order to arrive at a reasonable valuation of parish property, taking into account age, type, condition and life expectancy, the Trustees considered that the then insured values should be discounted by 90% and in subsequent years be depreciated at 2% per annum, on the building value only. Properties acquired after 31 August 1996 are capitalised at their actual cost of acquisition.
The Diocese owns a number of properties that are occupied and run by independent charities in the form of Voluntary Aided Schools and Catholic Academies. The school properties (land and buildings) are vested in the name of the Trustees. The Trustees cannot take a unilateral decision to dispose of these properties. Disposal can only occur if the school governors and the Secretary of State for Education decide that all or part of a school site is no longer required for education. In most circumstances, where a disposal occurs, the Secretary of State or the local authority may be entitled to recoup any grant. Although no rights of ownership vest in the school governing body, most other rights and obligations, such as for the maintenance and repair of the school and its facilities, are passed to the governors. The Trustees therefore consider that there is no capital value to the Diocese in the stock of school buildings.
Thus school properties have not been capitalised. There is a potential value, or contingent asset, in the event of a closure of a school (either connected to a re-organisation or not). Such an asset is recognised only upon the occurrence of a closure/re-organisation and the site’s development value becoming certain, such as upon the granting of planning permission. The recognition of this value is accounted for as an incoming resource in the year in which this value becomes measurable and certain. The inclusion of any value of school properties normally arises from a scheme under s554 Education Act and until then there is legally a duty to repay or recycle the proceeds from the sale of former school sites
Prior to 4 September 1934, the date of the original Trust Deed of the Charity, most parish properties were acquired on trusts related to individual parish missions and were formally brought under the legal control of the Trustees by virtue of Charity Commission schemes dated 4th and 7th February 1936. These assets are included in Parochial Funds.
There are a few properties held on trusts created after 1934 which are different from those in the 1934 and 2002 trust deeds. These assets are also included in Parochial Funds.
The estimated cost of furniture, equipment and motor vehicles held at 31 August 1996 has been capitalised in the financial statements. Subsequent additions exceeding £5,000 are capitalised at cost. Individual works of art, historical treasures and plate are not capitalised.
Depreciation is calculated by the straight-line method to write off the cost/value less anticipated residual value, over the expected useful lives of assets as follows: Freehold property (excluding land): 50 years Leasehold property: 50 years or, if less, the term of the lease Furniture and equipment: 5 to 20 years.
35
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST STATEMENT OF ACCOUNTING POLICIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
i) Significant judgements and key sources of estimation uncertainty
In preparing these financial statements the Trustees have had to make estimates and assumptions that affect the amounts recognised in these financial statements. Estimates and judgements are continually evaluated and are based on historical experience and other factors, including expectations of future events that are believed to be reasonable under the circumstances. Key areas subject to judgement and estimation are as follows: Fixed assets and investment properties.
j) Pensions
All eligible staff may join a personal pension scheme of their choice to which the Diocese makes a matching contribution of up to five per cent of salary. As a defined contribution scheme, no liability falls upon the Diocese, as employer, to make good a shortfall of funding other than contributions due.
k) Financial instruments
The Diocese only enters into basic financial instruments transactions that result in the recognition of financial assets and liabilities like trade and other accounts receivable and payable and investments in stocks and shares. The measurement basis used for these financial instruments is detailed below.
l) Parochial Funds
Each Parish is considered by Canon Law to be a juridical person with corresponding rights and obligations, including the holding and use of funds. The use of these parochial funds is the responsibility of the Parish Priest, Diocesan Finance Council and the Trustees in varying ways depending on the amount and significance of the funds. However, for the purposes of civil law parishes are not distinct legal entities and, unless there are distinct and express special trusts clearly evidenced in law, parochial funds are therefore shown as unrestricted but designated funds.
m) Permanent Endowment Funds
The capital of Permanent Endowment Funds must be maintained intact with any income arising being available for restricted or general charitable purposes of the Diocese, according to the terms of the original gift.
n) Fund accounting
Unrestricted funds comprise accumulated surpluses and deficits on general funds. They are available for use at the discretion of the Trustees in furtherance of the general charitable objectives. Designated funds are funds set aside by the Trustees for specific purposes (see note 11). Restricted funds are used for specific purposes as stated by the grantor. Expenditure which meets these criteria is charged to the fund (see note 10).
Investments
Investments are valued at fair value on the balance sheet date. Investment properties are stated at market value or a Trustees’ valuation, as advised by a qualified Chartered Surveyor. Gains/losses on investments are calculated as the difference between opening market value and closing market value after adjusting for additions and disposals during the period. No distinction is made between realised and unrealised gains in the financial statements.
Debtors
Short term debtors are measured at transaction price, less any impairment. Loans receivable are measured initially at fair value, net of transaction costs, and are measured subsequently at amortised cost using the effective interest method, less any impairment.
Cash and cash equivalents
Cash is represented by cash in hand and deposits with financial institutions repayable without notice of not more than 24 hours. Cash equivalents are highly 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.
Creditors
Short term creditors are measured at the transaction price. Other financial liabilities, including bank loans, are measured initially at fair value, net of transaction costs, and are measured subsequently at amortised cost using the effective interest method. The charity only enters into basic financial instruments transactions that result in the recognition of financial assets and liabilities like trade and other accounts receivable and payable and investments in stocks and shares. The measurement basis used for these financial instruments is detailed below.
36
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
1. INVESTMENT INCOME AND INTEREST RECEIVABLE
| Year ended | Year ended | |
|---|---|---|
| 31 August | 31 August | |
| 2022 | 2021 | |
| £ | £ | |
| Arising on quoted investments | 187,553 | 369,239 |
| Rent on investment property | 694,843 | 583,121 |
| Bank interest | 1,398 | 1,393 |
| ------------------ | ------------------ | |
| £883,794 | £953,753 |
37
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
2. CHARITABLE EXPENDITURE AND SUPPORT COSTS
| Direct Costs The Office of the Bishop Chancery & Cathedral Tribunal Hospital Chaplaincies Seminary Fees Maintenance of Catholic Schools Caritas/ERF Parish Costs Clergy Staff Church Running Costs Office and Presbetry Running Costs Parish Centre Running Costs General: books, events, donations, fees etc Insurance Repairs and Maintenance Depreciation Designated Funds Endowment Funds Restricted Funds Support Costs Communications Estates People IT Finance Governance Curia Property and overheads Safeguarding Bishops Confrence Levy Total |
Support of Parish Life | Vocation | Education | Evangalisation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Locally Incurred Costs Centrally Incurred Costs - - - 254,982 - 23,444 - 26,821 - 38,694 - - - 141,647 1,788,541 - 1,513,317 - 774,116 - 1,036,000 - 174,187 - 733,390 - 339,845 - 2,244,393 - 976,189 - 49,272 2,829 567,673 |
||||
| 9,579,978 1,105,362 Locally Incurred Costs Centrally Incurred Costs 39,732 39,732 87,626 - 114,315 - 99,894 - 335,374 38,696 193,904 22,373 212,731 52,731 153,476 - - 153,105 |
||||
| 10,817,029 1,411,999 |
38
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
2. CHARITABLE EXPENDITURE AND SUPPORT COSTS (Continued)
| 2. | CHARITABLE EXPENDITURE AND SUPPORT COSTS (Continued) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 2021 | ||
| £ | £ | ||
| Governance costs include | |||
| Auditors remuneration – Audit (including VAT) | £54,600 | £51,600 | |
| ======= | ======== | ||
| 3. | STAFF | Year ended | Year ended |
| 31 August | 31 August | ||
| 2022 | 2021 | ||
| £ | £ | ||
| The average number of total employees (not full time equivalents) of the | |||
| Diocese during the period and their aggregate emoluments are shown below | |||
| Staff Costs: | |||
| Wages and salaries | 2,922,265 | 3,088,349 | |
| Social security | 209,004 | 335,382 | |
| Pension costs | 99,594 | 63,572 | |
| Redundancy costs | - | 23,731 | |
| --------------------- | --------------------- | ||
| £3,230,863 | £3,511,034 | ||
| ========== | ========== | ||
| Monthly Average Number of Employees: | No. | No. | |
| Departments | 49 | 39 | |
| Parishes | 167 | 203 | |
| --------- | --------- | ||
| 216 | 242 | ||
| ==== | ==== | ||
| Employees with emoluments greater than £60,000: | 2022 | 2021 | |
| £60,001 - £70,000 | 1 | 3 | |
| £70,001 - £80,000 | 1 | 1 | |
| £80,001 - £90,000 | 1 | 0 | |
| £90,001 - £100,000 | 1 | 1 |
Key management personnel received salary, benefits, pension contributions and employers NIC of £528,436 (2021: £456,374) during the year. This reflects changes to staffing arrangements.
39
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
4. TANGIBLE FIXED ASSETS
| TANGIBLE FIXED ASSETS COST OR VALUATION At 1 September 2021 Additions Disposals Transfers to Investments At 31 August 2022 DEPRECIATION At 1 September 2021 Charge for the period On disposals Transfers to Investments At 31 August 2022 NET BOOK VALUE At 31 August 2022 At 31 August 2021 |
Freehold BuildingsLeasehold Buildings Furniture & Equipment Total £ £ £ £ 54,130,740 385,221 2,859,162 57,375,123 75,426 - 14,673 90,099 (82,582) - (4,763) (87,345) (278,008) - (11,788) (289,796) |
|---|---|
| 53,845,577 385,221 2,857,284 57,088,081 |
|
| 12,732,110 54,420 2,387,457 15,173,987 869,061 7,714 47,240 924,016 (22,861) - (4,763) (27,624) (39,378) - (1,768) (41,146) |
|
| 13,538,932 62,134 2,428,166 16,029,233 |
|
| 40,306,644 323,086 429,118 41,058,849 |
|
| 41,398,629 330,801 471,705 42,201,135 |
Fixed assets with a Net Book Value of £3,151,785 were held by the trading company. This is predominantly property owned in Jersey that has been transferred to a trading company to better comply with Jersey laws.
The Diocese also owns a number of properties, which are occupied and run by independent charities in the form of Voluntary Aided Schools and Catholic Academies. The Trustees consider that these properties have no capital value to the Charity – see Accounting Policy (f). The total re-instatement cost of these schools is approximately £300m. A list of the schools in the Diocese is set out on the Diocesan website (www.portsmouthdiocese.org.uk). All fixed assets are used in direct furtherance of the Charity’s objects.
40
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
5. INVESTMENTS
| INVESTMENTS Market value at 1 September 2021 Additions Disposals Transfer from Tangible Fixed Assets Revaluation gains Market value at 31 August 2022 |
Investment Quoted Properties Investments Total £ £ £ 20,490,000 13,052,382 33,542,382 - 3,631,761 3,631,761 (645,000) (3,418,027) (4,063,027) 248,650 - 248,650 5,508,867 (956,499) 4,552,368 |
|---|---|
| 25,602,517 12,309,617 37,912,134 |
All quoted investments (other than cash) are quoted on a recognised UK Stock Exchange or are valued by reference to investments listed on a recognised Stock Exchange. No figure for the cost of the investment properties owned at 1 January 1997 is available; the value at which they were first recognised in the accounts was £1,014,500. £10.6M of investment properties were valued in May 22 by Savills, Lancasters, Leaders, College & County, Ross Nicholas and Homebase Property Management. A further £7.1M has been valued between June 22 and Jan 23 by Kelway Law, Hose Rhodes Dickson, Robin Austen, Zoopla and Charters. The Trustees do not believe that there is a material movement in the value of investment properties since the date they were last revalued. The Charity Balance Sheet contains an additional £143,500 of investments in the Trading Subsidiaries listed in note 15.
41
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
6. DEBTORS
| DEBTORS | ||
|---|---|---|
| 31 August | 31 August | |
| 2022 | 2021 | |
| £ | £ | |
| Due after more than one year | ||
| School and other loans | £28,809 | £698,463 |
| ========== | ========== | |
| Due within one year | ||
| School and other loans Legacies Receivable |
928,983 - |
252,536 - |
| Other debtors and prepayments | 327,234 | 195,120 |
| --------------------- | --------------------- | |
| £1,256,217 | £447,656 | |
| ========== | ========== |
The above represents debtors for the Diocese, including trading subsidiaries, as such the difference between this and the charity balance sheet is £17,632 made up of £7,555 and £50,526 relating to trading subsidiaries ( see note 12) and £75,713 being money owed by the trading subsidiaries to the General Fund which moves to debtors in the charity balance sheet.
| 31 August | 31 August | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 7. | CREDITORS | 2022 | 2021 |
| Due after more than two years | £ | £ | |
| School and other loans | 2,673,738 | 3,697,711 | |
| ======== | ======== | ||
| Due between one and two years | |||
| School and other loans | 872,573 | 1,470,424 | |
| ======== | ======== | ||
| Due within one year | |||
| School and other loans | 5,941,672 | 4,165,760 | |
| PAYE Other creditors and accruals |
55,968 654,404 |
47,360 508,514 |
|
| -------------------- | -------------------- | ||
| £6,652,044 | £4,721,634 | ||
| ========== | ========== |
Creditors on the Charity Balance sheet differ from those on the consolidated Balance Sheet by £42,296 due to eliminating trading subsidiary creditors of £118,008 whilst offsetting the £75,712 of inter diocesan, trading subsidiary liabilities.
A loan of £1,000,000 from Lloyds Bank was taken out in October 2019 for a five year commitment period at an interest rate of 1.7% above LIBOR. After an initial 12 month holiday period quarterly repayments are being made with the loan to be repaid in full on the fifth anniversary. A Lloyds CBILS five year loan of £4,000,000 was taken out in February 2021, with interest and capital repayments beginning in March 2022 and is underwritten against a portion of the investment portfolio. Due to rising interest rates and the requirement, to refinance, triggered by the move to a Charitable Incorporated Organisation on 1 Jan 23, both loans were repaid on 31 Dec 22.
42
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
8. PERMANENT ENDOWMENT FUNDS
| Parochial Funds Properties Other Tanguy Masses St Mary’s Mission Christchurch Parish Priest Curial Funds Curtin Masses Dunne Masses St Joseph Education Fund |
Balance at 01 Sep 2021 Net Incoming / (Outgoing) Resources Transfers Movement On Investments Balance at 31 Aug 2022 £ £ £ £ 363,997 (2,379) - - 361,618 170,823 1,558 - 20,067 192,447 1,966 - - (125) 1,841 224,306 146 - 2,876 227,327 - - 43,647 (2,780) 40,867 |
|---|---|
| 761,092 (675) 43,647 20,037 824,100 |
|
| 47,328 470 - (3,048) 44,750 - - 2,939 (187) 2,752 - 741 122,662 (4,804) 118,599 |
|
| 47,328 1,211 125,601 (8,039) 166,101 |
|
| 808,420 536 169,248 11,998 990,201 |
For full comparative figures see Note 20.
43
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
9. RESTRICTED FUNDS
| RESTRICTED FUNDS CURIAL Social Welfare Clergy Training Bamenda Fund Clergy Assistance Lourdes Fund Youth Funds Vicariate Triple Trust Edmund Rice Fund School Building Fund Bamenda Millennial Gift Aid Collins Fund Dunne Masses Friends of Bamenda Holy Rosary Crosses Mass Stipends Bernard Medd Fund Parish Sisters Refugee Support Religious Vicariate World Youth Day Other Education Fund Diocesan Caritas Closer to Christ PAROCHIAL Parish Fund Raising Barron Trust Pangbourne Assistance Fund St Joseph Education Fund Christchurch Parish Priest Other Foundation Masses Caritas Jersey Ltd |
Balance at 01 Sep 2021 Incoming Resources Resources Expended Transfers Movement On Investment s Balance at 31 Aug 2022 £ £ £ £ £ £ 204,118 2,264 - - (14,677) 191,705 1,042,786 49,946 - 11,479 (149,945) 954,266 86,928 77,324 (81,503) 11,925 (348) 94,326 172,575 18,160 (2) - (27,229) 163,504 205,532 3,385 (3,977) - (11,305) 193,634 783 - - - - 783 71,140 944 - - (6,119) 65,964 328,461 3,359 (2,621) - (21,779) 307,420 77,146 243,529 (523,766) 203,089 - (2) 1,300 - - (1,300) - - 11,479 - - (11,479) - - 2,939 - - (2,939) - - 10,625 - - (10,625) - - 30 - - (30) - - 294 - - (294) - - 11,810 141 - - (914) 11,038 7,160 - - (7,160) - - 1,066 - - - - 1,066 174 - - (174) - - - - - - - - 21,907 - - (21,907) - - - 7,625 - 213,016 (49,439) 171,202 5,195 6,620 (2,318) - - 9,497 - 957,338 - - - 957,338 |
|---|---|
| 2,263,446 1,370,634 (614,186) 383,601 (281,755) 3,121,741 |
|
| 476,491 499,932 (476,270) - - 500,153 467,585 3,704 - - (29,554) 441,735 214,160 1,994 (4,880) - (12,930) 198,344 122,662 - - (122,662) - - 43,647 - - (43,647) - - 115,403 - - (115,403) - - 159,862 - - - - 159,862 81,324 - - - - 81,324 |
|
| 1,681,133 505,630 (481,150) (281,712) (42,484) 1,381,418 |
|
| 3,944,579 1,876,264 (1,095,336) 101,889 (324,239) 4,503,159 |
For full comparative figures see Note 21.
44
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
9. RESTRICTED FUNDS
CURIAL
Social Welfare Fund
This is a fund dating from 1952 for the promotion of social welfare generally.
Clergy Training Fund
A fund for the training of students to the priesthood, which is the recipient of a specific annual Diocesan collection for this purpose. A transfer is made to the General Fund from which the training costs are paid. A specialist review of funds has indicated that the Collins Fund, previously included under “other” should be included under this fund hence the transfer of £11,479.
Bamenda Fund
A fund to provide assistance to the Archdiocese of Bamenda in Cameroon, Africa that is the recipient of a specific annual Diocesan collection. There is a Trustees’ committee charged with monitoring and making the appropriate grants. Following a specialist review of funds the Bamenda Millennial Gift Aid Fund and the Friends of Bamenda Fund, previously included under “other” will be shown under the main Bamenda Fund, hence the transfers of £1,300 and £10,625.
Clergy Assistance
This fund provides financial support for clergy in need and is the recipient of a specific annual Diocesan collection.
Lourdes Fund
A fund to support the annual Diocesan pilgrimage to Lourdes.
Youth Funds
Funds collected specifically for youth purposes including Lourdes pilgrimages and summer schools.
Vicariate Triple Trust
The purpose of the trust is primarily to assist parishes in providing church furnishings.
Edmund Rice Fund
This donation was received in 2005, primarily for education purposes in Reading and surrounding areas, and the local pastoral area is developing support for appropriate chaplaincies in the area.
School Building Fund
This fund was established in 2001, to provide a central fund to meet the governors’ liabilities on expenditures in voluntary aided schools. The equalisation fund is targeted as half from all parishes on the mainland, whether feeder parishes or not, and the balance being raised by the schools from parental contributions. A transfer from Unrestricted Funds of £203,091 has been made to make up for a shortfall in funds raised.
Dunne Masses
Following a review, the £2,939 held in this fund, which provided a capital sum to derive an income to fund the saying of Masses in perpetuity has been transferred to Endowments.
Holy Rosary Crosses
Following a specialist review of funds, the balance of £30 has been transferred to unrestricted.
Mass Stipends
Following a specialist review of funds, the balance of £294 has been transferred to unrestricted.
Parish Sisters
Following a specialist review of funds, the balance of £7,160 has been transferred to unrestricted.
Religious Vicariate
Following a specialist review of funds, the balance of £174 has been transferred to unrestricted.
Bernard Medd Fund
This Fund aims to provide catechesis and summer schools for youth.
Refugee Support
This Fund is to support and assist refugees. Diocesan collections are made annually.
Education Fund
This fund is utilised for the support of schools and other educational purposes within the Diocese and has been reclassified from Designated to Restricted Fund, with a transfer of £213,016 following a specialist review.
Diocesan Caritas
Caritas Diocese of Portsmouth supports and promotes the love of neighbour in the parishes and schools of the Diocese.
Closer to Christ
This is a fundraising campaign being run in each of our 87 parishes aiming to raising £13.5M over five years with a third of the proceeds returning to the parishes and the remainder being split between funding seminarians, current clergy and our retired priests.
PAROCHIAL
Parish Fund Raising
These are funds that parishes raise for separate funds and charities, and account for as a restricted fund.
Investment Funds: Barron Trust, Pangbourne Assistance Fund
These are mainly legacies left specifically for expenditure within individual parishes or churches. The St Joseph Education Fund and Christchurch Parish Priest Fund have been reclassified as Permanent Endowments.
Foundation Masses
Legacies left for Mass intentions of the deceased, are held as separate funds within the parishes.
Caritas Jersey Ltd
Caritas Jersey Ltd supports and promotes the love of neighbour in the parish of Jersey.
45
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
10. DESIGNATED FUNDS
| CURIAL Education Fund Diocesan Caritas Insurance Risk Fund Pastoral Development Fund Living Our Faith Fund Diocesan Buildings Fund PAROCHIAL Living Our Faith Fund Living Our Faith Jersey Diocesan Buildings Fund Other Parochial Funds |
Balance at 01 Sep 2021 Incoming Resources Resources Expended Transfers Movement on Investments Balance at 31 Aug 2022 £ £ £ £ £ 213,016 - - (213,016) - - 130,158 49,935 (139,329) - - 40,764 (8,797) - - 8,797 - - 1,125,868 - - - - 1,125,868 1,820,339 5,481 (29,206) - (4,010) 1,792,603 3,075,504 - - - - 3,075,504 |
|---|---|
| 6,356,088 55,416 (168,535) (204,219) (4,010) 6,034,739 |
|
| 867,491 205,311 (22,383) - - 1,050,419 9,577 - - - - 9,577 39,158,371 - (1,135,931) - - 38,022,440 28,056,298 11,965,751 (8,918,654) - 4,022,954 35,126,349 |
|
| 68,091,737 12,171,062 (10,076,969) - 4,022,954 74,208,784 |
|
| 74,447,825 12,226,479 (10,245,504) (204,219) 4,018,943 80,243,524 |
For full comparative figures see Note 22.
Education Fund
This fund is utilised for the support of schools and other educational purposes within the Diocese and has been reclassified from Designated to Restricted Fund with a transfer of 213,016.
Diocesan Caritas
Caritas Diocese of Portsmouth supports and promotes the love of neighbour in the parishes and schools of the Diocese. Some of its funding is restricted.
Insurance Risk Fund
This fund has been designated to assist parishes and others to comply with safety requirements.
Living Our Faith Fund
A programme was initiated in 2008 to raise funds (i) to provide the Diocese with sufficient funds to support independently the training of students for the priesthood and the continuing care of its ordained clergy in their ministry, to fund adult formation programmes and resources and various capital projects, and (ii) to provide parish funds to meet local needs.
Value of Diocesan Buildings
Fund Funds invested in buildings used by the diocese in furtherance of their charitable objects are not available to spend. The value of these operational fixed assets have been transferred into a designated fund to indicate that they are not expendable financial assets.
Pastoral Development Fund
This fund has been set up from the proceeds of the sale of a surplus property and will be supplemented from further disposals where there are surplus funds generated, in order to aid parishes with their own developments.
46
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
11. ALLOCATION OF NET ASSETS
| ALLOCATION OF NET ASSETS |
Fixed Assets Investments Cash & Debtors Current & Long Term Liabilities Parish Loan Accounts Total - 31 Aug 22 |
|---|---|
| £ £ £ £ £ £ |
|
| Permanent Endowment Funds Curial Parochial Restricted Funds Curial Parochial Unrestricted funds Curial Parochial Total Net Assets |
- 115,256 49,988 - 857 166,101 508,271 242,436 58,474 - 14,919 824,100 - 4,043,825 1,178,926 - (2,101,010) 3,121,741 - 769,030 587,546 (714) 25,556 1,381,418 - 3,035,870 5,601,881 1,313,873 (9,888,692) 1,079,656 1,142,588 37,514,707 27,139,706 8,883,297 (308,948) 980,022 74,208,784 |
| 41,058,848 37,912,134 12,072,104 (10,198,354) - 80,844,732 |
12. TRANSACTIONS WITH TRUSTEES
Certain of the Trustees are also priests within the Diocese. As priests they receive income from their office together with living accommodation, living expenses and reimbursement of costs incurred on behalf of their parish on the same basis as other priests within the Diocese. No Trustees receive any remuneration or benefits from their trusteeships in the current or preceding year. No Trustees were paid for providing professional services to the Diocese. Total donations received from Trustees were £17,440.
47
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
13. CAPITAL COMMITMENTS
Authorised and contracted for
31 August 2022 31 August 2021 £ £ - £223,601 ========= ==========
14. CONNECTED CHARITY
The following charity is a connected charity of The Portsmouth Diocesan Trust:
Charity Charity Number Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocese 1061194 Priests’ Retirement Fund
Address
St Edmund House Bishop Crispian Way Portsmouth PO1 3QA
15. TRADING SUBSIDIARIES
During the period the Diocese had wholly owned active subsidiary companies incorporated in England and Wales. They were as follows: -
The Portsmouth Diocesan Trading Co Limited General commercial trading on behalf of the Diocese. (Company Number: 2746549)
Catholic Resource Centre Limited Sale of religious material. (Company Number: 3141601)
Our Lady of Peace Catholic Club Limited Management of licensed premises on behalf of Our (Company Number: 3340552) Lady of Peace, Earley.
The results and assets and liabilities of the above companies are reported within the financial statements.
Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust Company Limited (Company Number: 9003096) acts as Member of Caritas Jersey Limited, a Jersey registered charitable company, whose results and assets and liabilities are reported within the financial statements.
Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Properties Limited (Company Number: 9611450) was incorporated on 28th May 2015 and ownership of the Diocese’s freehold properties in Jersey was transferred to it from The Portsmouth Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust in 2019 in order better to comply with Jersey property law.
48
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
15. TRADING SUBSIDIARIES (Continued)
A summary of the companies’ trading results and balance sheets is set out below: -
| Consolidated Profit and Loss Account | 31 August | 31 August |
|---|---|---|
| For the Year Ended 31 August 2022 | 2022 | 2021 |
| £ | £ | |
| TURNOVER | 182,366 | 248,761 |
| Cost of sales | (46,905) | (129,046) |
| ------------------- | ------------------- | |
| GROSS PROFIT | 135,461 | 119,715 |
| Administrative expenses | (78,616) | (115,860) |
| -------------------- | -------------------- | |
| 56,845 | 3,855 | |
| Amount gifted to the Charity | (78,999) | (82,000) |
| Transfer of Fixed Assets | - | - |
| Tax on profit on ordinary activities | - | - |
| ------------------- | ------------------- | |
| (LOSS)/PROFIT AFTER TAXATION | (22,154) | (78,145) |
| Reserves brought forward | 3,062,451 | 3,140,596 |
| ------------------- | ------------------- | |
| RESERVES CARRIED FORWARD | £3,040,297 | £3,062,451 |
| ========= | ========= |
Included within turnover are sales to the Diocese amounting to £72,491 (2021 £96,253).
| Consolidated Balance Sheet | 31 August | 31 August |
|---|---|---|
| As at 31 August 2022 | 2022 | 2021 |
| £ | £ | |
| FIXED ASSETS | ||
| Tangible assets | 3,151,785 | 3,185,535 |
| ---------------- | ---------------- | |
| CURRENT ASSETS | ||
| Stocks | 7,555 | 11,085 |
| Debtors | 50,526 | 45,111 |
| Cash at bank and in hand | 91,939 | 181,531 |
| ------------------ | ------------------ | |
| 150,020 | 237,727 | |
| CREDITORS: Amounts falling due within one year | (118,008) | (194,310) |
| ------------------ | ------------------ | |
| NET CURRENT ASSETS | 32,012 | 43,417 |
| CREDITORS: Amounts falling due after one year | - | - |
| ----------------- | ----------------- | |
| NET ASSETS | £3,183,797 | £3,228,952 |
| ======== | ======== | |
| Share capital | 143,500 | 166,501 |
| Reserves | 3,040,297 | 3,062,451 |
| ------------------ | ------------------ | |
| SHAREHOLDERS’ FUNDS | £3,183,797 | £3,228,952 |
| ======== | ======== |
49
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
16. RELATED PARTY TRANSACTIONS
There were no related party transactions during the year. (2021: Nil).
17. POST BALANCE SHEET EVENTS
On 1 Jan 2023, with the change of the Diocese from a charitable trust to a charitable incorporated organisation, the assets of PRCDTR were transferred to the successor entity, the Catholic Diocese of Portsmouth. At the same time the £4M CBILS loan and £1M Lloyds Bank loan were repaid in full using the proceeds from the sale of £6M of quoted investments.
50
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
18. CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL ACTIVITIES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2021
| CURIA - TOTAL |
PARISH - TOTAL |
RESTRICTED - TOTAL |
TOTAL - 2021 | TOTAL - 2020 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Donations and legacies | ||||||||||
| Donations and Offertories | 16,822 | 7,662,014 | 730,589 | 8,409,425 | 10,088,427 | |||||
| Legacies | 281,246 | 548,028 | - | 829,273 | 755,131 | |||||
| Other | 897,531 | 1,849,876 | 159,763 | 2,907,171 | 761,573 | |||||
| Other trading activities: | - | |||||||||
| Rent – miscellaneous lettings | - | 740,776 | - | 740,776 | 1,231,352 | |||||
| Income of trading subsidiaries | - | 248,761 | - | 248,761 | 257,405 | |||||
| Investment income | - | |||||||||
| Investment incomeandinterest receivable | 268,155 | 54,321 | 48,156 | 370,631 | 208,415 | |||||
| Rent – investment properties | 15,575 | 567,546 | - | 583,121 | 650,754 | |||||
| Other incoming resources: | - | |||||||||
| Insurance Claims | - | 124,284 | - | 124,284 | 151,127 | |||||
| Gain on disposal of tangible fixed assets | - | - | - | - | 105,061 | |||||
| Total income | 1,479,329 | 11,795,605 | 938,508 | 14,213,442 | 14,209,245 | |||||
| Expenditure on raising funds | ||||||||||
| Expenses of trading subsidiaries | - | (238,820) | - | (238,820) | (376,108) | |||||
| Finance costs | (121,075) | - | - | (121,075) | (55,798) | |||||
| - | ||||||||||
| Charitable activities | - | - | - | 0 | ||||||
| Activities in furtherance of the Roman Catholic Faith | (3,457,616) | (8,362,614) | (802,774) | (12,623,004) | (13,864,222) | |||||
| Total expenditure | (3,578,691) | (8,601,434) | (802,774) | (12,982,899) | (14,296,128) | |||||
| Net (outgoing)/incoming resources before transfers | (2,099,362) | 3,194,171 | 135,734 | 1,230,543 | (86,883) | |||||
| Realised and unrealised gains on investments | 589,951 | 5,360,886 | 761,616 | 6,712,453 | (1,061,213) | |||||
| Net income/(expenditure) | (1,509,411) | 8,555,057 | 897,350 | 7,942,996 | (1,148,096) | |||||
| Transfers between Funds | - | - | - | - | - | |||||
| Transfers - Schools Building Fund Levy | - | - | - | - | - | |||||
| Transfers - Diocesan Levy | 1,894,585 | (1,894,585) | - | - | - | |||||
| Net movement on funds | 385,174 | 6,660,472 | 897,350 | 7,942,996 | (1,148,096) | |||||
| Reconciliation of funds | - | - | ||||||||
| Fund balances brought forward | 2,181,921 | 62,431,266 | 3,855,648 | 68,468,835 | 69,616,931 | |||||
| Fund balances carried forward | 2,567,095 | 69,091,738 | 4,752,998 | 76,411,831 | 68,468,835 |
51
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
19. CHARITABLE EXPENDITURE AND SUPPORT COSTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2021
| Direct Costs The Office of the Bishop Chancery Tribunal Hospital Chaplaincies Parish Initiatives Seminary Fees Maintenance of Catholic Schools Caritas/ERF Parish Costs Clergy Staff Church Running Costs Office and Presbetry Running Costs Parish Centre Running Costs General: books, events, donations, fees etc Insurance Repairs and Maintenance Depreciation Parochial Restricted Funds Support Costs Communications Estates People IT Finance Governance Curia Property and overheads Safeguarding Bishops Confrence Levy Total |
Support of Parish Life |
Vocation | Education | Evangalisation | Total 1,299,429 180,173 4,166 37,535 64,319 - 333,083 276,661 147,103 1,545,948 1,814,804 1,267,827 1,333,808 279,644 127,074 309,086 885,971 798,452 379,010 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Locally Incurred Costs Centrally Incurred Costs - - - 180,173 - 4,166 - 37,535 - 64,319 - - - - - 147,103 1,545,948 - 1,814,804 - 1,267,827 - 1,333,808 - 279,644 - 127,074 - 309,086 - 885,971 - 798,452 - 379,010 |
|||||
| 8,741,624 433,296 Localy Incurred Costs Centrally Incurred Costs 68,678 68,678 131,678 - 100,532 - 86,187 - 281,085 13,933 192,864 9,560 137,781 40,534 104,249 - - 191,808 |
458,785 428,943 18,258 497,851 40,649 124,801 46,753 54,313 238,820 Training New Clergy Supporting Clergy in ministry Supporting Retired Clergy Supporting Catholic Education Youth and University Chaplaincies Supporting the Poor and Marginalised - Inspired by the Love of Christ New Evangelisation Fundraising Trading Subsidiaries 13,736 13,736 - 13,736 13,736 13,736 13,736 54,942 - - - 65,839 65,839 - - - - - 1,053 1,053 526 2,105 1,053 1,579 526 526 - 3,610 3,610 1,805 7,220 3,610 5,415 1,805 1,805 - 14,752 13,793 587 16,008 1,307 4,013 1,503 1,746 - 10,122 9,464 403 10,984 897 2,753 1,031 1,198 - 6,324 6,240 9,872 16,689 3,972 4,219 2,950 8,595 - 1,032 2,064 - 1,032 7,225 2,064 2,064 - - |
11,084,093 274,711 263,355 108,954 115,066 348,727 239,276 237,177 119,732 191,808 |
|||
| 9,844,677 757,808 |
509,413 478,902 97,290 631,464 72,448 158,581 70,369 123,127 238,820 |
12,982,899 |
52
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
20. PERMANENT ENDOWMENT FUNDS COMPARATIVE FIGURES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2021
| Parochial Funds Properties Other St Mary’s Mission Curial Funds |
Balance at 01 Sep 2020 Net Incoming / (Outgoing) Resources Movement On Investments Balance at 31 Aug 2021 £ £ £ £ 363,997 - - 363,997 146,757 - 26,031 172,788 214,514 - 9,792 224,306 |
|---|---|
| 725,268 - 35,823 761,091 |
|
| 39,571 - - 7,757 47,328 |
|
| 764,839 - 43,580 808,419 |
53
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
21. RESTRICTED FUNDS COMPARATIVE FIGURES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2021
| RESTRICTED FUNDS CURIAL Social Welfare Clergy Training Bamenda Fund Clergy Assistance Lourdes Fund Youth Funds Vicariate Triple Trust Edmund Rice Fund School Building Fund Other Restricted Funds Diocesan Caritas PAROCHIAL Parish Fund Raising Investment Funds Foundation Masses Caritas Jersey Ltd |
Balance at 01 Sep 2020 Incoming Resources Resources Expended Transfers Movement On Investments Balance at 31 Aug 2021 £ £ £ £ £ £ 163,776 2,983 - - 37,359 204,118 631,428 31,546 - - 379,812 1,042,786 30,100 55,941 - - 887 86,928 88,056 15,210 - - 69,310 172,576 173,248 2,903 (29) - 29,409 205,531 782 - - - - 782 54,320 1,244 - - 15,575 71,139 278,635 4,427 (10,038) - 55,437 328,461 113,130 240,677 (276,661) - - 77,146 56,611 2,294 - - 9,880 68,785 103,230 39,000 (137,035) - - 5,195 |
|---|---|
| 1,693,316 396,225 (423,764) - 597,669 2,263,446 |
|
| 377,306 452,283 (353,098) - - 476,491 843,089 - - - 120,367 963,456 159,862 - - - - 159,862 17,236 90,000 (25,912) - - 81,324 |
|
| 1,397,493 542,283 (379,010) - 120,367 1,681,133 |
|
| 3,090,809 938,508 (802,773) - 718,036 3,944,580 |
54
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
22. DESIGNATED FUNDS COMPARATIVE FIGURES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2021
| CURIAL Education Fund Diocesan Caritas Insurance Risk Fund Pastoral Development Fund Living Our Faith Fund Diocesan Buildings Fund PAROCHIAL Living Our Faith Fund Diocesan Buildings Fund Other Parochial Funds |
Balance at 01 Sep 2020 Incoming Resources Transfers/ Resources Expended Movement On Investments Balance at 31 Aug 2021 £ £ £ £ £ 77,125 10,049 - 125,842 213,016 - 197,208 (67,050) - 130,158 (8,797) - - - (8,797) 1,125,868 - - - 1,125,868 1,805,096 4,708 - 10,535 1,820,339 3,075,504 - - - 3,075,504 |
|---|---|
| 6,074,796 211,965 (67,050) 136,377 6,356,088 |
|
| 1,131,440 2,354 (256,789) - 877,005 39,158,371 - - - 39,158,371 22,141,454 10,273,943 (8,840,354) 4,481,255 28,056,298 |
|
| 62,431,265 10,276,297 (9,097,143) 4,481,255 68,091,737 |
|
| 68,506,061 10,488,262 (9,164,130) 4,617,632 74,447,825 |
55
PORTSMOUTH ROMAN CATHOLIC DIOCESAN TRUST NOTES TO THE ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2022
23. ALLOCATION OF NET ASSETS COMPARATIVE FIGURES FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31 AUGUST 2021
| ALLOCATION OF NET ASSETS | Fixed Assets Investments Cash & Debtors Current & Long Term Liabilities Parish Loan Accounts Total - 31 Aug 21 |
|---|---|
| £ £ £ £ £ £ |
|
| Permanent Endowment Funds Curial Parochial Restricted Funds Curial Parochial Unrestricted funds Curial Parochial Total Net Assets |
- - 47,328 - - 47,328 510,650 134,345 116,096 - - 761,091 - - 259 2,263,188 - - 2,263,447 - 1,123,318 557,815 - - 1,681,133 3,035,864 9,544,269 (509,487) (9,645,277) 141,726 2,567,095 38,654,621 22,740,190 8,083,144 (244,492) (141,726) 69,091,737 |
| 42,201,135 33,542,381 10,558,084 (9,889,769) - 76,411,831 |
56
Please pray that our endeavours are blessed; we place them all in the hands of the Lord.
57
IN CORDE IEAII 58