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2022-12-31-accounts

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance Annual Report 2022

Company registration number 236594 Registered charity number 249678

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Walking | Welcoming | Growing

Cover image: Queen Elizabeth II remembered – ‘The Queue’ which wound past Southwark Cathedral towards the lying-in-state at Westminster Hall.

© Eve Milner

Contents

Overview

Introduction by the Bishop of Southwark 5
Chair of the Diocesan Board of Finance 6
The Diocesan Secretary 7
Our Vision: a fruitful future 8
Legal objects 10

Strategic report

Strategic report 13
Southwark Vision 2017–25 and Strategic Objectives 14
Annual Objectives for 2022 17
Progress made towards achieving 2022 objectives 18
Other activities and achievements in the year 21
Future plans 26
Financial review 30
Principal risks and uncertainties 34

Governance

Structure and governance 38
Related parties 42
Trustees’ responsibilities 43
Administrative details 44

Financial statements

Independent auditor’s report 47
Statement of Financial Activities 50
Income and expenditure account 51
Balance sheet 52
Statement of cash fows
Notes to the statement of cash fows
Notes to the fnancial statements
53
54
55
Glossary of terms 89

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

3

Overview

Introduction by the Bishop of Southwark

2022 will be a year that all of us will remember. It was the year when we emerged from pandemic restrictions in April; the year of the Platinum Jubilee of our late beloved Queen, followed by her death in early September and the accession of King Charles III to the throne. The front cover shows ‘The Queue’ which lined the South Bank past our Cathedral towards the Lying in State at Westminster Hall. Census statistics show a decrease in numbers identifying as Christians; yet I was privileged to join the teams of chaplain volunteers who engaged with the vast numbers of members of the public who wished to make their pilgrimage and pay their respects to Her Late Majesty who kept the Christian faith at the heart of her life of service to nation and Commonwealth. As I write, preparations are underway for the King’s Coronation where the Church will play a pivotal role nationally, and in our parish celebrations locally. Emerging from pandemic restrictions was a joy. We were able to have a full Cathedral not only for the Chrism Eucharist, but also for our first combined Lay Ministry Licensing and Commissioning and we continue to grow these valuable and valued ministries. It was a great joy for me and the whole Diocese to see Archdeacon Rosemarie Mallett ordained as Bishop of Croydon in our Cathedral church. During the year, Bishop Richard Cheetham retired from his long 20 years of service as Area Bishop of Kingston, and it was most fitting that we achieved our Eco Diocese Bronze award just before the fond farewells.

Yet, we live in turbulent times. I know that 2022 proved difficult for many globally, nationally, and locally. The war in Ukraine has had dreadful consequences for our brothers and sisters living there, with many families separated and

many welcomed as refuges in this and other nations. We continue to hold a peaceful resolution in our prayers. The Cost of Living Crisis also affected our clergy and parishioners; yet, from Warm Spaces to Foodbanks, our parishes have risen to the challenge and helped those struggling to provide food for their families or heat their homes. I have been particularly struck by the determination to forge ahead with thankful hearts despite the weariness around us, and sometimes within us, as we face the challenges of our Christian pilgrimage journey. Please continue to be of good heart. As the six year Living in Love and Faith process reached its conclusion, I am fully aware that our determination to speak well of each other across our differences is testing, given the spectrum of different convictions across the Diocese and more widely. However, it is my prayer that we continue to hold each other in love as Christ does us.

Despite such challenges, our parishes delivered 99.4% of their pledges. Thank you! This continues to be vital in supporting mission and ministry in our parishes. I know that the National Church hold our financial management in high regard and I am pleased to say that our fiscal health is not a result of any reduction in stipendiary clergy. This is the final Annual Report prepared under Ruth Martin, Diocesan Secretary, who retires from her post in the summer after more than eight years leading our executive administration and working with me to ensure strong Diocesan teams to serve our parishes. I express heartfelt thanks and appreciation to Ruth and I am glad she has accepted my request to take on two specific responsibilities in a part time capacity for a further two years. Without the work of the Archdeacons, Diocesan Staff, Clergy, and Parish Officers, we

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would not be able to play such a pivotal role in our local communities and I was delighted to commission Jonathan Sedgwick as Archdeacon of Southwark and Greg Prior as Archdeacon of Croydon during the last year. Sarah Docx became Vice-Chair of the Diocesan Board of Finance (DBF) as Sir David Beamish moved to his new role as Chair of the DBF and we are blessed by the quality of our team working. We must now work together to seek to build our Parish Support Fund further, to allow us to continue to maintain our parishes and resource new initiatives.

I hold you all in prayer: fellow Clergy, all who hold my Licence or Commission Lay and Ordained, together with all Lay Leaders as we serve the people of South London and East Surrey, seeking to enable mission and ministry across our wonderful, diverse Diocese, the Lord being our helper. May God Bless you and your loved ones. Thank you for our partnership in the Gospel.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

5

Chair of the Diocesan Board of Finance

I was honoured to be asked by Bishop Christopher to succeed Alan Saunders as Chair of the Diocesan Board of Finance in May 2022, having been Vice-Chair since September 2020. I am most grateful to Alan for providing me an excellent apprenticeship during my time as Vice-Chair, and for agreeing to continue as chair of the Investment Committee.

My term as Chair began a month after the pandemic restrictions finally ended after over two years. This was a cause for celebration and came after much disruption to everyone’s lives. In a large charity like the Diocese, the previous two years had required frequent reforecasting as we planned for different scenarios to enable us to ensure that our mission and ministry was sustained, and that we were still able to support our plans for growth.

Alan Saunders worked hard with the Diocesan Secretary and her team to ensure financial resilience in the event of further unexpected disruption. Our priorities have been to sustain the maximum number of stipendiary clergy (including our ongoing commitment to curates) and to continue planning for growth through Lay Ministry initiatives. As one of the largest dioceses, we need the financial resources to thrive, and I am pleased to say that we have emerged from the pandemic in a better position than we dared hope for.

This focus on financial resilience, which is also a key objective of Southwark Vision, has proved to be essential. The difficulties of 2022, including the war in Ukraine, fuel shortages, and the cost-of-living crisis, which have all had devastating effects, confirmed the importance of having sufficient financial

resources. I am delighted to be able to record that this has been achieved in the financial statements for 2022. We were able to provide support to clergy living in Diocesan properties, and an increase in stipends to counter the dramatic rise in inflation.

In 2022 we succeeded in containing costs and achieving a broadly balanced out-turn in General and Total Funds – a remarkable outcome under the circumstances. We are greatly blessed by the collaboration we have with parishes, achieving a 99.4 percent return of Parish Support Fund pledges. We seek a partnership with parishes which is grounded in the principle of informed generosity. This, together with careful management of our property has enabled us to use our resources to sustain our mission and ministry on the front line.

I have seen at first hand the importance of the teamwork in the Diocesan office, as well as the commitment by staff to serve parishes through advice, help, and information. I am also a member of the panel of chairs of Safeguarding Core Groups, where I see the exemplary way in which our Diocese prioritises its safeguarding responsibilities.

I have been fortunate to have had the benefit of Ruth Martin’s commitment and experience. She has been extraordinarily successful in putting the finances of the Diocese on a much sounder footing. We are now in a period of transition to a new Diocesan Secretary who will lead the executive administration through the next challenges, and I much look forward to supporting Nicola Thomas in her new role. As Ruth Martin steps down as Diocesan Secretary, I record my

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warmest thanks to her for all that she has achieved for the Diocese.

It will be important for us to hold on to the spirit of partnership, as well as financial resilience, as we navigate testing times ahead. We are now on the path to Carbon Net Zero including the continual review of our investment policies, while sustaining the pipeline of clergy and lay leaders vital to Parish ministry. To achieve this, we will need to focus on maximising the potential for grants from the National Church and on working together in building the Parish Support Fund further. I look forward to playing my part as Chair.

6 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

The Diocesan Secretary

This is my last annual report where I comment on behalf of the many colleagues who work with me. Amongst the pages of the annual report before you, there are some outstanding achievements which I feel we should all be pleased about.

Firstly, we ended the year not in a £1m deficit (which had been forecast) but on a broadly balanced out-turn on General and Total Funds. This was achieved not only from careful cost management but also due to the partnership with Diocesan teams, Archdeacons and parishes, such as in rental income from properties during vacancies, and notably in the remarkable achievement of the Parish Support Fund (PSF) which both Bishop Christopher and Sir David Beamish have already alluded to. In line with our property strategy, we were also able to start work on some significant property projects that had been delayed due to the pandemic and these will really help our parishes and clergy to have houses that are manageable and fit for purpose.

Secondly, the backlog of training for Safeguarding that had built up during 2020 and 2021 due to the pandemic was reduced by 57% in 2022. This was as a result of sustained effort by our Safeguarding Team and all those who support and work with them. During the previous two years it had been extremely difficult to sustain delivery of any face-to-face training and, whilst we moved as much as we could on to online provision, the combination of pandemic and turnover of volunteers and parish clergy had led to a backlog.

for those involved in unconscious bias training – part of the implementation of the Diocesan Anti Racism Charter – led by Bishop Rosemarie Mallett and Canon Wendy Robins. Thank you everyone for these significant steps forward.

The PSF continues to be the bulwark of our financial resilience and the result last year was, of course, remarkable even with the struggles parishes faced while recovering from the pandemic. Our aim, with your support, is to achieve a return to pre-pandemic levels of giving by the end of 2024. Many, if not most, parishes have seen families move away and yet parishes sustained their giving, with some giving further donations. We particularly wish to thank all those able and willing to give above their own ministry costs, as presently we have fewer than 30% covering their ministry costs in full.

The Diocese has also achieved further Church Commissioner grants including in 2022 an innovation grant for ‘Bubble Church’ aimed at preschool children and their carers and families and led from The Ascension Balham. Working in partnership with our parishes generates generosity, and not just in finances, but in supporting each other, and in volunteers to support our training, committees of the Diocese, Diocesan synod and deanery synods and deanery leadership teams. These bind us together in service to each other and to God. In the years ahead we aim to be able to do more to help our parishes apply successfully for grants, especially towards Church Buildings and in the pursuance of Carbon Net Zero.

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who supports our governance so ably, together with our Archdeacons and all my colleagues who engage so well with our values of respect for all, transparent accountability, collaborative team working and the effective stewardship of the resources entrusted to us by our parishes. As I look forward to continuing to support the Diocese parttime for two years in a different capacity may I thank you all for the privilege of serving as your Diocesan Secretary.

Another achievement central to Southwark Vision was the postpandemic opportunity to invest in face-to-face ‘training of the trainers’

I particularly wish to thank my deputies Jackie Pontin (Deputy Diocesan Secretary) and Mark Rhodes (Finance Director) and Charlie Hudson-Beddows

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 7

Our Vision: a fruitful future

We share a vision for the future in which we will see:

The Diocese of Southwark serves...

2.9 million people

Our Vision is founded on mutual commitment from all who make up the Diocesan family to walk together in the pilgrimage of faith, supporting, encouraging and resourcing each other in our common task.

in the 16 local authorities of South London & East Surrey

through 356 places of worship — a Church of England presence in every community

and 104 church schools educating more than 37,000 young people

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Pictures removed The South London Church Fund & Southwark Dioce&3n Board of Finance l Annual Keport 2022

Legal objects

The Trustees, who are also Directors for the purposes of company law, present their Annual Report, together with the audited financial statements, for the year ended 31 December 2022.

The Directors/Trustees are one and the same, and in signing as Trustees they are also signing the Strategic Report sections in their capacity as Directors.

This combined report satisfies the legal requirements for:

Legal objects

The objects of the South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance (SDBF) are “for the public benefit to assist, promote and further the religious and other charitable work (including but not limited to the educational work) of the South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance within the Diocese, and any other diocese which shall at any time be formed, wholly or in part out of the Diocese, either with or without the addition of any part or parts of other dioceses.”

Its function is to serve as the corporate body of the Church of England in the Diocese, responsible for the financial stewardship of the Diocese through performing, working and transacting business in connection with the Church and Diocese. It is the Diocese Board of Finance for the purpose of the Diocesan Boards of Finance Measure 1925 and other legislation. Through its Parsonages

Committee, it may act as the Parsonages Board for the Diocese within the meaning of the Repair of Benefices Buildings Measure 1972.

The Diocese of Southwark covers most of Greater London south of the Thames and part of East Surrey. Within the Diocesan boundaries are the Royal Borough of Greenwich, the London Boroughs of Croydon, Lambeth, Lewisham, Merton, Southwark, Sutton and Wandsworth, plus parts of the London Boroughs of Richmond upon Thames, Bromley and Bexley and the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames. In Surrey, it also includes parts of the Borough of Reigate and Banstead, Tandridge District Council and Mole Valley District Council.

The SDBF has the following responsibilities:

The SDBF is empowered to act as a committee of the Diocesan Synod, responsible for providing the the secretariat and other corporate services of the Diocese and also for raising and disbursing money and employing staff.

Its members are both Directors and Trustees.

The standing committee of the Diocesan Synod is the Diocesan Council of Trustees (Bishop’s Council). Its members are also the members of the SDBF and the Diocesan Mission and Pastoral Committee (DMPC). Each of these three bodies has coterminous membership.

The strategic priorities of the Diocese are established by the Diocesan Synod, and its standing committee the Diocesan Council of Trustees (DCT), in consultation with Deanery Synods, PCCs and the Bishop of Southwark (in respect of his responsibility for the provision of the cure of souls).

The DCT (acting as Bishop’s Council, the Diocesan Board of Finance (DBF) and the DMPC) fulfils its objectives within this framework, together with the committees and advisory groups of the Diocese shown in the governance structure on page 38. To this end, significant time and effort is committed to communication between and with these bodies, as well as with the Church nationally; this includes consultation on specific matters relating to the priorities for the forthcoming year, taking into account the commitments arising from the Diocesan Budget.

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Map of the Diocese of Southwark

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Southwark Cathedral The Diocese of Chelmsford
The Diocese of London
7 3
8
1
6
11 9
14
17 The Diocese
16 10 2 of Rochester
4
5
12
15
13 WOOLWICH AREA
18 DEANERIES
19
Archdeaconries:
Lewisham & Greenwich: 1-6
KINGSTON AREA Southwark: 7-10
DEANERIES 1 Charlton
Archdeaconries: 21 2 Eltham & Mottingham
Lambeth: 11-13 23 20 3 Plumstead
Wandsworth: 14-18 4 East Lewisham
11 Lambeth North 5 West Lewisham
12 Lambeth South 6 Deptford
13 Merton 7 Bermondsey & Rotherhithe
14 Battersea 8 Southwark & Newington
15 Tooting 22 9 Camberwell
16 Wandsworth 10 Dulwich
17 Richmond & Barnes
18 Kingston
CROYDON AREA
DEANERIES
Archdeaconries:
Croydon: 19-22
Reigate: 23-25
19 Croydon North
20 Croydon Addington
21 Croydon Central
22 Croydon South
23 Sutton
24 25
24 Reigate
25 Tandridge
The Diocese
of Guildford
The Diocese of Chichester
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Strategic report

Strategic report

The main role of the Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance (SDBF) is to identify and manage resources within the Diocese, particularly the financial aspects of the provision of ministry. This is so as to lead, enable and serve the Diocesan Synod, deaneries, parishes, schools and communities of the Diocese in furthering mission and ministry and fulfilling the vision of the Diocese, whilst also ensuring full compliance with statutory responsibilities.

The purposes are:

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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 13

Southwark Vision 2017–25 and strategic objectives

Southwark Vision

From the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Charge given to Bishop Christopher in 2011, the Diocese of Southwark has been on a journey of discernment towards a shared vision, Southwark Vision, which has been brought together from the themes and agreed outcomes described in the Strategy for Ministry final report adopted by Synod in November 2015, and Hearts on Fire Vision for Mission , with its commitment to the Five Marks of Mission and the five strategic objectives adopted by Synod in March 2016. These two documents together explain the detailed thinking behind Southwark Vision. In all we do we aim to be Christ Centred and Outward Focused. The strategic ministry and deployment vision is integral to Southwark Vision, together with Fresh Expressions of Church, Hub and Resourcing Churches.

Objective One

To grow average weekly attendance by 5% by 2025, partly through having each church develop a high-quality Mission Action Plan (MAP) which includes a course for evangelism and discipleship.

The COVID-19 pandemic continued to have an impact on the worshipping life of our churches in 2022 although its effects were less severe than in 2021. Church attendance and participation in 2022 were higher than in 2021 but remained below 2019 levels. In common with the Church of England as a whole, a variety of Church at Home (CAH) services continued to be offered although there are differing methods of calculating CAH ‘attendance’ by individual churches. Many of our churches are still offering some form of CAH which is welcomed by those not able to attend in person.

The latest available published figures below relate to 2021 (not 2022) and in-person attendance figures were as follows:

adults and children, a decrease of 29% since 2019 (CofE comparison is a decline of 28%)

Objective Two

By 2025, to increase the number of worshipping communities with a primary focus on areas of population growth through investment in Fresh Expressions of Church (fxC) in the areas where the data suggests the existing congregations are increasingly unrepresentative of the resident community and therefore unlikely to be successful in reaching them without intentional intervention.

We completed a national church enabled Strategic Development Project ‘SDF1’ in 2022 resulting in an increase over the past five years of Fresh Expressions of Church and the increase in capacity of the Diocese to support fresh expressions and Pioneering. In total £450,000 was given in grants to support and encourage fresh expressions. A significant proportion of the grants were given to churches reaching their local parish estates.

With the ending of the restrictions of the pandemic we are seeing a rebound in the number of Fresh Expressions of Church. In the summer we reviewed the fresh expressions to see the impact of the pandemic. We found that we had 96 active fresh expressions. We found that 17 fresh expressions had started post-pandemic and another

14 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

19 were still on hold. We expect this to continue to increase with time as churches engage post-pandemic. We now have eight churches engaged with the Church of England initiative Greenhouse which establishes Fresh Expressions of Church.

For the first time in the Diocese, the majority of new curates in 2022 were Pioneer Curates (a total of 10 out of 17) leading to the Diocese having 19 Pioneer Curates across the three training years, known as IME 4–6. Although this may be an exceptional year, it is good to see the continued demand from both curates and training incumbents to develop new ways of reaching their parishes.

We have been consulting on and developing an Estates Lay Pioneer pathway for which we gathered forty clergy in September to discuss the ideas.

Objective Three

To grow a financial resource base that allows investment in growth for the future. Key measurables include an annual financial surplus, maintaining working financial reserves equivalent to three months’ operating costs by 2020; 1% of Diocesan turnover annually dedicated to major Diocesan ministry and mission projects beginning in 2016, rising to 2% by 2020.

Despite the pandemic restrictions affecting our churches well into 2022 we managed to achieve a break-even and modest surplus and maintain our objective of annual financial cash reserves equivalent to three months. In 2021 we also completed repayments of the remaining Diocesan loan. We were able to transfer a Trust for London grant

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to the Southwark Vision Development Fund to further enable the Diocese to contribute at least 1% of Diocesan turnover to major ministry and mission projects. Given the successful out-turn for 2022 we have carried this forward to 2023. The financial out-turn was also, in part thanks to the reduction in the Clergy Pension Scheme deficit payments due to dioceses. Above all, however, it is thanks to the generosity of the parishes in fulfilling their Parish Support Fund (PSF) pledges which is the bedrock of Diocesan finances.

family and youth leaders, and spiritual directors); to offer relevant and enriching training; to create networks of support and celebration which reflect the diversity of the Diocese, and our commitment to evangelism and discipleship; and to deliver fully integrated and pioneering church growth and Fresh Expressions of Church.

The original target for increasing ordained vocations was achieved in 2018 (50% increase) and has continued to increase, with the growing number of UK minority ethnic (UKME) ordained vocations and potential pioneer curates a particularly encouraging development.

2023 is budgeted to have a balanced out-turn, a financial surplus will be achieved by the end of 2024.

We are working with the National Ministry Team to try to smooth some of the problems with the new Shared Discernment Process (which has replaced BAPs). Our team of ADOs are fully trained in the new process and are getting our candidates through the process in good time.

Objective Four

To grow the number of ordained and lay vocations by 50% by 2020 by enabling and discerning ordained ministers, by expanding opportunities for licensed and commissioned lay leadership, and by affirming and growing other forms of lay ministry (for example, worship leaders,

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 15

Southwark Vision 2017–25 and strategic objectives (continued)

We have begun to use the new Formation Framework for our Curates and this is working well. We will be preparing to include the cost of curates (above our agreed baseline) into the forthcoming DIP (successor to SDF).

Objective Five

By 2025, to grow leadership and representation that reflects the rich diversity of our Diocese and especially focusing where the data suggests groups are currently under-represented: through ethnicity, age (especially 18-40), educational opportunities, material well-being, or tradition.

The Diocese of Southwark Anti-Racism Charter is now being fully implemented and includes a range of specific tools and measures aimed at growing leadership that reflects the rich diversity of our many UKME and Global Majority Heritage (GMH) members. In addition, we are seeking to grow our work on urban estates to encourage leadership opportunities in our worshipping communities. In our Diocesan structures we have introduced opportunities, for example, Woolwich Youth Forum to present through videos their views on a range of synodical matters which we hope will lead to younger people becoming members and speaking at Diocesan Synod.

In our committees and trustee bodies, we seek to ensure leadership which reflects diversity across gender, physical mobility, ethnicity, age, and background.

Candidates recommended for

ordination training at selection panels included six from UKME and GMH backgrounds out of sixteen who were successful at the Stage 2 Panels.

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We continue to ensure representation of UKME and GMH in vocations advisors and Area Directors of Ordinands (ADOs). The ethnic background of clergy in senior roles also increased in 2022, nearly 15%. In the 2021 Census, the population of the communities we serve across the Diocese of Southwark with a non-white ethnic background increased (compared to the 2011 Census) by 1% in each of the key non-white ethnic categories.

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16 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Annual objectives for 2022

Objectives for 2022 reflected the continuing themes of connection and communication, and the rebuilding of finances in parishes and the Diocese post-pandemic, which continued as themes from 2021.

Southwark Vision is at the heart of our strategy, our plans and the annual objectives for 2022 reflect this, specifying actions and initiatives which speak to this vision and take us forward as a Diocese in partnership with our parishes. In particular, the Diocese maintained a firm commitment to parish structures, whilst continuing to support innovation and new projects and initiatives through our parish structures.

A key objective has been set out to rebuild the PSF to 2019 levels by the end of 2024 and continue efforts over the next 10 years to reach two thirds of parishes covering their ministry costs and supporting those who can not. Digital giving continues to be embedded through piloting contactless payments and online giving in our parishes. We also contracted for a new finance system for the Diocesan office implemented from January 2023.

Work to rebuild financial resilience with stronger cash reserves, a focus on costs and income including potential grants to support longer term change, continued with a focus on recovery from the pandemic.

The Diocesan Conference in September 2022 was a significant opportunity to maintain connection and communication with church leaders, both clergy and lay, as serving parishes continues to be a significant message

Strategic ministry deployment and vision

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Long-term financial modelling to undergird mission & ministry
Diocesan pipeline through CEMES equivalents,
vocational renewal, missional ordinands
Diocesan/Area for Southwark placements with
needs considered culture of informed generosity,
Retain supporting lay leadership/ministry,
strength of More speaking well of each other
stipendiary curates
numbers
New commissioned and enhancementDiversity & parish ministryAffirmation of self-supporting ministry,Pioneer ministry,
licensed lay ministers; includes Children & Youth, Pioneer lay workers (parish or SDF-paid), ministriesof lay & diversity inordained e.g. Mission Enabler, HE Chaplain,parish posts with other ministry
ministries TUTV leadership pipelines
apprenticeships/equivalents and UKME enhancement
Including pioneer ministry, lay and ordained
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Southwark Vision: Christ centred and outward focused

and an important reality for Diocesan teams. Focus remains on clergy during times of change with training and practical support.

Supporting mission and ministry through the work of our Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation (JPIC) team continued in 2022, as the Diocese began to develop the plan for reducing carbon emissions in line with our Diocesan Environment Policy.

The Strategic Vision Ministry and Deployment policy continued to be an integral part of Southwark Vision with a commitment on formation and development of curates seeking stipendiary and self-supporting ministries, the embedding of the Diocesan action plan for the AntiRacism Charter, establishment of Hub and Resourcing Churches to encourage and support parishes with mission and starting Fresh Expressions of Church to create new worshipping communities.

We continued to promote Eco Diocese and are now aiming for the silver award, having achieved bronze in 2022. We also continued to resource work to combat serious youth violence and support for refugees, all contributing to a Diocese that is Christ Centred and Outward Focused.

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(continued) Annual objectives

Progress made towards achieving 2022 objectives

Southwark Vision

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Objective Progress made
To continue with Mission Action Planning and enable The pandemic restrictions ended in April and the Mission Team
parishes to create COVID-19 Mission Action Plans has begun its important work visiting parishes and deaneries to
which are Christ-Centred and Outward-focused. encourage post-pandemic Action Plans.
To encourage deaneries to reach out and share The network of Deanery Leadership Teams continues to evolve and
good practice as Deanery Leadership Teams develop innovations continued to be shared at meetings of Area Deans and
and can also focus on resourcing mission. Deanery Lay Chairs. There continues to be considerable progress
on environmental initiatives at deanery level and in support for
social action, including presentations from Welcare.
To utilise Mission Accompaniers to work with This is in progress, recognising the demands on clergy and lay
Deanery Leadership Teams. ministers’ time.
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Strategic Ministry – Vocations & ministry – Lay and Ordained

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Objective Progress made
To continue to develop and embed new pathways Considerable work was undertaken to prepare for pioneer lay
for lay ministries. ministers at Commissioned Level, ready for 2023 intake. The
process for promoting these ministries has been further enabled by
a Diocesan wide Season for Lay Ministries.
To embed the new shared discernment process This is ongoing and the Vocation Team continue to work with the
(which has replaced bishops’ advisory panels). new structures and provide feedback nationally.
To participate fully in national development for lay The enlarged vocations and clergy formations teams are fully
and ordained ministerial formation. committed to participating in national developments and as one of
the largest dioceses we seek to embed new ideas in both our lay
and clergy formation.
To consider initiatives to support clergy well-being During 2022 we appointed a new part-time role of Dean of Clergy
during times of change and uncertainty. Well-being and this is already bearing fruit.
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18 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Budget & finance

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Objective Progress made
To manage expected deficit budget which is due to reduce Achieved.
compared to the three year presentation to Synod in
December 2020.
To maintain Diocesan investment in Southwark Vision Achieved.
including enlarged contingency.
To seek to build cash reserves further, in line with Reserves Achieved.
Policy, ensuring a minimum of three months’ cash reserves.
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Giving

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Objective Progress made
To strengthen regular giving with the continued rollout of Funds and number of gifts processed by PGS for Southwark
the Parish Giving Scheme (PGS). parishes increased by 250% in 2022.
To plan the 10 year programme to reach two thirds of Due to the pandemic restrictions not being lifted until April
parishes self-financing building on the reviews of smaller 2022, this has been moved to 2023.
churches underway, linked to our Deployment Vision.
To work alongside parishes and archdeacons to seek to Due to the pandemic restrictions not being lifted until April
rebuild the PSF to 2019 levels by the end of 2023 through 2022, this has been moved to 2024.
the 2023 pledges.
To embed digital giving focusing on the remaining At the end of 2022 Southwark Diocese had over 58% of
12 deaneries not covered by the 2021 contactless pilot. worshipping communities using digital giving, the highest
percentage for a diocese in the CofE. This continues to be an
important objective carried over to 2023.
Safeguarding
Objective Progress made
To implement, as required, any new actions following the The Report of the PCR2 Nationally was achieved in
IICSA Report (October 2020) and the Diocesan Past Cases October 2022, and in the Diocese of Southwark the
Review 2. work concluded in March 2022. Implementation of
recommendations is underway.
To overcome the backlog of training caused by COVID-19 This has been substantially achieved, with a reduction of 57%
building on the new successful training programmes. in the backlog.
To participate fully in national developments including, as a The Diocese of Southwark is one of the first dioceses to
pilot diocese, for the new national casework system and the pilot the new casework system and this is underway.
implementation of the new Safer Recruitment and People
Management guidance for all church bodies.
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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 19

(continued) Annual objectives

Property

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Objective Progress made
To reintroduce quinquennial inspections. Achieved.
To develop five and 10 year maintenance plans. In progress.
To review glebe land across the Diocese. In progress.
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Data & IT

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Objectives Progress made
To continue to build the integrated database across the Achieved. This continued with the establishment of the
Diocese, including data to measure the success of the Property Database.
anti-racism charter over time.
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Website & digital communications

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Objective Progress made
To develop a new Communications Strategy in the light Achieved.
of COVID-19.
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Mission & justice

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Objective Progress made
To implement the Southwark Diocese Anti-Racism Charter. Implementation is underway.
To develop the plan for reducing Carbon emissions within Progress made on the plan for 2023 approval.
Diocesan control for presentation to Synod, continuing to
promote Eco Diocese throughout the Diocese.
To continue to build Deanery Leadership Teams and ensure Progress continues as deaneries are each focusing on
Deanery-based initiatives are given space to flourish. specific areas of priority for them.
Lead and enable renewal of Children and Young People’s Progress has been made and is ongoing.
ministries during and after COVID-19 – this will include
timely youth forums in each episcopal Area and promoting
and encouraging CYP Toolkits.
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20 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Other activities and achievements in the year

In 2022, thanks to the generosity of parishes in rebuilding the Parish Support Fund (PSF) and the careful cost controls in the Diocesan Office, the Diocese has achieved a remarkable balanced budget. The PSF had another year of a collection rate of 99.4%. Consequently, the Diocese was able to deliver a range of initiatives and activities.

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Following the death of Her Late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II on 8 September 2022, the Diocese entered a period of mourning. Parishes held requiem Eucharists and services of thanksgiving, opened books of condolences, rang bells and encouraged prayers for the Late Queen and The King. Mourners queued around Southwark Cathedral to pay their respects ahead of the state funeral. This comes after parishes celebrated the Late Queen’s Platinum Jubilee in June 2022, to mark 70 years as the Sovereign.

The first Southwark Diocesan Conference since the start of the pandemic took place at Bacon’s College, Rotherhithe from Thursday 1 to Saturday 3 September 2022. The conference was a landmark event with a programme of keynote speakers and speeches where clergy and lay leaders joined together.

Ministry and discipleship

The Diocese has continued to focus on promoting Lay Ministries and 2022 saw the launch of the Season of Lay Ministries, which aims to encourage people to consider the Lay Ministries to which they may be called by focussing our preaching and teaching in the parishes on the call to lay ministry. The Season was well received and many parishes joined in and it is now to be an annual event.

In October, the first combined Lay Ministries Licensing and Commissioning service took place. Ten Readers were licensed and two Southwark Pastoral Auxiliaries (SPAs) were commissioned. A Pioneer Lay Minister was also commissioned separately. Three new people entered SPA training in 2022 and five new Readers are in training. Twelve Readers are in post-licensing training and the first licensed Lay Minister (Pastoral) began training. The Aurora Course, which is being used to train commissioned Youth Ministers, began and there are seven participants. Three others began training at St Augustine’s to become licensed Lay Pioneers.

The Discipleship and Ministry Team offered an expanding and varied series of 42 short courses (both online and in person) to which 1,088 people signed up (this does not include safeguarding training, Vocations Forums and Children’s and Youth events or courses run by Missions which are organised separately.) The Ground Floor

Guides have proven to be particularly well received. The Bishop’s Certificate is once again well subscribed with 58 people following the course which is delivered both in person and online. Of these 58 people, 21 are in touch with Vocations Advisers.

The Living in Love and Faith (LLF) process drew to a close in 2022, as in other Dioceses, and many parishes have engaged with LLF and have contacted the national church with their views.

The Lay Council met three times providing support and guidance for the work concerning Discipleship and Lay Ministry.

Broadening the diversity of our clergy continues to be a priority, with a growing number of UKME curates already in the various processes. This is an important part of the Diocesan Anti-Racism Charter currently being implemented across the Diocese. Of the 15 candidates recommended for training through the Shared

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 21

Other activities and

achievements (continued)

Discernment Process (SDP) or Candidates Panel in 2022, a third were UKME, a 26% rise from 11 people 2021. This movement is supported by a commitment to the diversity of our Vocations Advisers and ADOs. Currently, among the Vocations Advisers, 41% are women and 24% UKME. For the ADOs, 39% are women and 17% UKME.

Pioneering and fresh expressions

Innovation Funding has been awarded by the Church Commissioners to Ascension Balham, to enable Bubble Church to be shared with other churches and a new Church Mission enabler has been appointed. The largest ever number of Pioneer Curates were ordained in the Diocese. There are now 10 to add to the previous two cohorts, leading to a total of 19 Pioneer Curates in Southwark.

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Eight churches were involved in the Church of England’s Greenhouse initiative, starting Fresh Expressions of Church. Work is ongoing with Deaneries and Area Deans to encourage the take up of Greenhouse. Ongoing training continued through the year with FX101, Messy Church seminars, an introduction to Lay Pioneering, an introduction to Greenhouse sessions, as well as sharing Godsend resources, and Sharing Jesus resources.

We launched the first four Resourcing Churches across a range of traditions in the Diocese. Development of the Hub Church model continues. The target for 40 new fresh expression churches has been exceeded with an addition of 100 Fresh Expressions of Church. £450,000 has been given in FX grants, which has created a Pioneering and Fresh Expressions Department.

To assess the impact of the pandemic on fresh expression churches, the department carried out an audit and found that there are 96 active fresh expressions; although 30 had stopped due to the pandemic; there have been 17 that have started post-pandemic and another 19 were found to be on hold.

The department has been developing an Estates Lay Pioneer pathway and in September, 40 clergy gathered to consult and discuss ideas. This pathway is actively expected to launch in 2023 and a Dean of Estates Ministry has been appointed to provide a further focus on ministry with estates in the Diocese.

22 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

The Canon Missioner, along with a team of colleagues working in the episcopal areas, offered Mission Action Planning to parishes and deaneries. Online evangelism training ‘Witness without Walls’ encouraged new ways that individuals could connect and share faith within their communities online or outdoors.

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Mission and evangelism

The Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation (JPIC) team, which is funded by Benefact (formerly All Churches Trust), is located within the Mission Team, bringing together all five Marks of Mission under the Canon Missioner.

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic continued to affect school and church communities into 2022. This meant that the Children’s and Young People’s (CYP) team and the Canon Missioner (along with colleagues) responded to parishes as they adjusted to a change in attendance, volunteer commitment and renewing church services and ministries. The Aurora Course was launched in Southwark Diocese to support the training of CYP workers as affirmed or commissioned lay ministers. Working closely with SDBE, the team implemented the national church initiative ‘Growing Faith’ – a partnership between churches, schools and families. One expression of this was the response to modern day slavery ‘We See You’ partnered with the Clewer Initiative and Southwark Cathedral.

The ‘ We See You ’ event at Southwark Cathedral in November also included the Reigate Archdeaconry Social Justice Forum which organised a two-day awareness-raising event around Modern Slavery. The first day of the event was led by two SDBE Diocesan secondary schools – Bacon’s College, Rotherhithe and Christ’s School, Richmond – while the second day was aimed at parishes and individuals and we welcomed a large number of speakers, organisations and individuals to the Cathedral to learn about Modern Slavery and share worship led by Bishop Rosemarie and the Chair of the Clewer Initiative, Bishop Alastair Redfern.

The Diocesan Conference provided many learning opportunities in areas of the Five Marks of Mission as well as CYP. ‘Thy Kingdom Come’ – between Ascension and Pentecost – resourced parishes in praying for five friends and saying a prayer for the persecuted church amongst other ideas. In the autumn term, grants were given to equip parishes to reach out to their communities throughout Advent and Christmas.

Other JPIC work has focused on:

The JPIC team have also supported Diocesan work on the Fifth Mark of Mission: safeguarding the integrity of

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 23

Other activities and

achievements (continued)

creation. This has focused on two main areas – the Eco Church initiative and working towards Carbon Net Zero. The Diocese achieved the Eco Diocese Bronze Award in June 2022, thanks to the hard work and commitment of parishes and groups throughout the Diocese. 43% of churches in the Diocese are now registered for Eco Church, and we now have 44 Bronze and 16 Silver Awards. The Eco Diocese Working Group is currently reviewing the criteria for the Silver Eco Diocese award and we have an ambition to achieve this by 2028.

Graph removed

The Diocese is also engaged with the Church of England’s Routemap to Carbon Net Zero and in February submitted the Diocesan response to the consultation on the Routemap. The ambition in the Diocese is to work towards Carbon Net Zero by 2035, and to this end an update was presented to Diocesan Synod in March 2023. The Diocesan Environment Officer is trained to deliver Carbon Literacy Training and ran this twice in 2022 (making Southwark one of the first two diocese to offer this). The team also ran a small Energy Audit Scheme using a grant from the national Environment Team to work with a few of the highest-emitting churches in the Diocese to measure and reduce their energy usage.

Together Southwark, a separate charity with the Southwark DBF as sole corporate trustee, is managed through JPIC with its staff member employed by the DBF. Together Southwark has hosted a series of webinars and events and the charity continues to research and publicise funding opportunities, whilst responding to requests for help.

Safeguarding

During 2022:

5 October 2022. Southwark’s contribution, overseen by a Diocesan Project Reference Group, was submitted by an Independent Lead Reviewer. PCR2 included a comprehensive review of all Clergy Blue Files, including clergy at the Cathedral; Readers and Southwark Pastoral Auxiliaries (SPAs), Permission to Officiate (PTO) files and current and historic safeguarding casework files. This work commenced in September 2020, concluded in March 2022, and included the review of 2,536 diocesan files and records. Of these, less than 1% were referred to the Diocesan Safeguarding Team (DST) for further investigation. No major issues concerning the safeguarding of children or adults arose. The implementation of the 21 PCR2 recommendations is already underway, and an Action Plan exists. The ongoing work within the Diocese relating to the National themes is covered in the Executive Summary of this report. The full National Report and Southwark’s Executive Summary can be accessed

24 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

via the Diocesan website alongside an expression of gratitude from Bishop Christopher to the survivors who participated in the review.

recommendations from PCR2 relate to policy and process, focused in the areas of: Diocesan Safeguarding Team Recording (Southwark leading the way as early adopters of the new National Case Management System), Safeguarding Agreements (also known as Worship Agreements, designed for the purpose of safeguarding children, young people, and vulnerable adults, whilst also supporting respondents) and Survivor Engagement. The recommendations are charted in an Action Plan with strategic governance and oversight by the Bishop’s Lead for Safeguarding, and the Diocesan Safeguarding Advisory Panel (DSAP). Progress updates will be reported quarterly on the Diocesan website. The National PCR2 Board conducted very thorough scrutiny of all the Diocesan PCR2 reports including Southwark’s and it met the Board’s requirements.

Grants and funding

A high pledge base and collection rate of 99.4% for 2022 has been received, as part of the Parish Support Fund (PSF). 16 out of 25 deaneries and both Croydon and Wandsworth Archdeaconries had 100% collection rates.

The December National Parish Share report indicated that for the 35 dioceses from which they had December 2022 data, they had experienced a year to date fall of 7.5% of parish share received in comparison to the same period three years ago, before the pandemic. Southwark is 7th, with a decrease of less than 3%.

Considering inflation over the last three years, all dioceses have seen a real terms reduction in parish share of over 10%.

Personnel

In 2022, the Diocese had 510 clergy, based primarily in parishes, of which 384 were stipendiary. There were also 202 Readers, 122 SPAs and 14 other Licensed Lay Ministers, inlcuding Church Army Evangelists and Lay Pioneers.

As part of its ongoing human resources (HR) advisory service, during 2022, the Diocese helped with at least 198 enquiries, with parishes seeking advice about a variety of employment matters, ranging from the provision of templates and telephone advice, to cases requiring more extensive support about employment matters. There were seven cases requiring more intensive longer term support to parishes.

We provided 285 sessions of short-term counselling support for 37 members of clergy through the counselling services that are offered to support clergy well-being.

Church buildings and

property

During the year, the Diocesan Advisory Committee (DAC) gave 85 formal recommendations to parishes and other recipients, up from 75 in 2021. A further 117 “List B” items were approved by Archdeacons (after DAC advice), compared with 118 the previous year.

As part of the Diocese’s commitment to working towards Carbon Net Zero, the DAC continued to give advice to parishes on energy-saving measures.

In relation to clergy housing, the reintroduction of quinquennial inspections is providing valuable

information in relation to the condition of our properties and also information regarding possible improvements towards greater energy efficiency.

Work is ongoing in relation to proposals for planned works to ensure our clergy housing is fit for the long term. The initial feedback in respect of the larger pieces of glebe land is being reviewed. Plans for the next phase of this work are to be agreed prior to further work being undertaken.

Communications

The Communications Department has been preparing for the Diocesan newspaper, The Bridge, to return to print to be distributed to parishes as before the pandemic, from early 2023. The newspaper will still be available online and is the second most visited page on the website, following the homepage. Digital publications published on the website, including The Bridge and the Diocesan Conference programme of events, received 18,000 views over the course of the year.

Since the launch of the Diocese’s new website in February 2021, it continues to be a hub of information to support the Diocese in sharing the latest news, resources and contact information.

Bishop Christopher established the Cost of Living Task Group (CLTG), chaired by Bishop Rosemarie to provide an update on support available during the cost of living crisis. A bulletin has been developed to provide a regular digest of guidance and resources from JPIC, and Government and National Church initiatives for all clergy in the Diocese of Southwark, copied to Lay Ministers, Parish Secretaries, Churchwardens, Deanery Lay Chairs, Deanery Secretaries and Treasurers.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 25

Future plans

In the immediate year ahead, 2023, continuing our theme of connectedness and communication with our partners, the parishes of the diocese will be critically important. This will include supporting the rebuilding of parish finances post-pandemic, in the context of uncertainties over fuel prices and the cost of living. Our specific objectives include not only planning the 10 year programme to reach 66% parishes covering their ministry costs but also developing strategies to give greater support to parishes where they lack volunteers in critical roles, such as treasurers and churchwardens.

Graph removed

We will also consider how further advice and guidance can be given to parishes in the stewardship of their property assets, mindful of the mission and ministry imperatives to build the Kingdom of God and the cost effective management of church buildings. We will seek to participate in the national church Buildings for Mission Initiative enabling us to consider how the work of our DAC can also support this initiative.

We will be seeking to achieve Carbon Net Zero in the Diocese by 2035, recruiting a specialist officer to support parishes in their work to reduce carbon.

Our ambition is to achieve the Eco Diocese Silver award within five years. The significance of environmental justice has grown and will continue to grow as church communities, the use of our diocesan glebe land holdings and our offices seek to practise God’s care for all creation.

A significant strategic boost came when the application made to the Strategic Investment Board of the Church of England in early 2023 led to a grant of

up to £6.5 million for lay pioneer ministries in urban estates together with a range of parish focused projects to further establish the help that Hub and Resourcing Churches can give to other parishes. Several of these projects include significant investment in children’s and family workers. The project is expected to last up to five years.

The Diocese is now poised to take further Southwark Vision 2017–2025, developing a vision through to 2030 and beyond, working with the national church which has recently unveiled its Diocesan Investment Programme for the three triennia 2023-2032. The aim is to develop our vision to identify and then implement key work streams for the next 6-9 years. National priorities include a parish system revitalised for mission, a Church of England representative of communities we serve in age and diversity, and all Anglicans growing in discipleship, which are also priorities reflected closely in our Southwark Vision. In addition, our vision will work towards the doubling of children and young active disciples, another significant national priority.

Strategic planning to take forward the evolving Southwark Vision to 2030 and beyond will be a significant activity for 2023 and will be underpinned by a review of glebe land, our longer term financial model and a review of fund investments.

There will continue to be a focus on developing our clergy, their well-being and the well-being of our lay leaders.

Encouraging diversity in leadership and a plurality of voices will also continue to be a major priority for the Diocese in 2023. The implementation of the Anti-Racism Charter will be further embedded in parishes through the training of trainers, building on the training undertaken in 2022, the work of the Diocesan Racial Justice Committee and the three Episcopal Area Racial Justice Committees.

Promoting initiatives in support of refugees will be particularly important given the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine.

26 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

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With the Diocesan Past Cases Review (PCR2) report now submitted to the National Safeguarding Team’s PCR2 Project Management Board, the DST will focus on implementing any new actions arising from this as well as national direction on actions from 2020’s Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA). It is clear that information management will be a priority and a new post has been

created to deal with this and the anticipated developments nationally in information-sharing and the new casework system.The Diocese will participate fully in national safeguarding developments, including being a pilot diocese for the implementation of a new national casework system and new Safer Recruitment and People Management guidance for all church bodies.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 27

(continued) Future plans

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In 2023 we also plan to:

will now include consideration of environmental matters, and review glebe land across the Diocese

previous successful ‘fit for Purpose’ reform in the Diocese

28 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Financial review

Financial review

Financial performance

A surplus of £0.2m (2021: £4.6m) was generated before property revaluations and losses or gains on investments. The result exceeded the expectation for the year due to several factors. All sources of income were better than expected, with costs well controlled and completing the year under budget.

The Parish Support Fund (PSF) in particular remained strong, a tribute to the generosity of our parishes. Properties sold in the year were either surplus to requirements or sold to repurchase a more suitable property at a later date. The property market in South London was less strong than in 2021 but there were still significant receipts.

The increase in the value of Board and Diocesan Stipendiary property was £2.1m (2021: £9.1m).The net loss on investments was £2.6m (2021: £3.5m gain).

The donations made by parishes through the PSF are our principal source of income. Income from the PSF in 2022 was £15.9m (2021: £15.7m). The collection rate for 2022 was 99.4%, the same as in 2021, an exceptional result in both years. The collection rate is testament to the partnership working between parishes and the Diocese.

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Contributions from the Archbishops’ Council were £1.7m (2021: £1.5m) and included a new Strategic Capacity Grant. Other donations decreased significantly to £2m (2021: £4m) due to a one-off grant from the Trust for London in 2021 to assist the Diocese in recovering from the pandemic. In 2021, £0.5m of the donation was transferred to the Southwark Vision Development Fund. Given the successful outcome for

the year it has not been released, but carried forward to 2023.

Income from charitable activities was £2.5m (2021: £2.3m) as other income rose due to a payment from the Church Commissioners relating to a former Diocesan property.

Costs rose to £25.9m (2021: £24.4m). Housing costs rose significantly due to high inflation on property maintenance.

Stipends also increased year on year. The costs also include the £0.2m loss on the sale of a Board property.

The amount spent on administration as a proportion of the total gross expenditure of the SDBF amounted to 7.8% (2021: 8.2%). This expenditure continues to be monitored rigorously. It is comparable to other Dioceses and other charities of a similar size and complexity.

30 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

The value of investments fell by £2.6m (2021: £3.5m increase) as markets fell significantly in the year. During the year, net purchases of investments were £0.4m (2021: £0.5m sales). Further details on the investments and their performance can be found in the investment policy section on page 33.

There was no impairment to the value of parsonages in the year. Properties are held for the long term and our experience has been that sale prices exceed the carrying value of the asset.

The capital value of non parsonage properties rose by £2.1m (2021 £9.1m), an increase of 1.7% (2021 7.2%). This lower increase reflected the South London property market through 2022. Following the decision taken by the Trustees in 2016, whereby properties other than benefice houses were to be valued on a five-yearly cycle, one-fifth of the portfolio was revalued during the year by the SDBF’s appointed firm of chartered surveyors, and the average change in the value of the properties revalued was applied to the remainder of the portfolio.

Graphs removed

Significant property transactions

A summary of property transactions that took place during the year is shown in the table on page 32. Expenditure on property development and improvements continues to take place, to ensure that parsonage houses are fit for purpose and that the correct numbers and placement of properties are available for curates and other church workers. This is in line with the property strategy endorsed by Diocesan Synod and to support Southwark Vision.

Expenditure on property development and improvements continues to take place, to ensure that parsonage houses are fit for purpose and that the correct numbers and placement of properties are available for curates and other

church workers. This is in line with the property strategy endorsed by Diocesan Synod and to support Southwark Vision. Two parsonages were sold with both replaced early in 2023.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 31

Financial review (continued)

Our policy continues to be:

Under the Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011, the Diocesan Pastoral Account is available for the purchase and/or improvement of benefice houses. To the extent that any remaining funds are not required, or are not likely to be required, for these purposes then the Account may be applied to any general purpose of the SDBF. The policy of the SDBF is to use the Account for exceptional property expenditure and for property staff costs where they are principally engaged in the purchase, sale and maintenance of the property portfolio but not to use it for routine property administration and maintenance.

Balance sheet position

During the year, the Diocese repaid a loan from HSBC taken out in 2018 to assist with liquidity. The loan was repaid early at no penalty. The Diocese only has one loan of £1m from CCLA which it uses to fund parish loans. Other than that, the balance sheet is debt free.

The Trustees consider that the balance sheet, together with Note 20 (pages 80–81), show broadly that the restricted and endowment funds are held in an appropriate mix of investment and current assets given the purposes for which the funds are held. The net assets as at the balance sheet date totalled

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2022 2022 2021 2021
Number £’000 Number £’000
Property development and
improvement:
Parsonage 18 1,396 15 918
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund 4 152 5 197
Board 3 135 3 122
Total 25 1,683 23 1,237
Purchases at book value:
Parsonage 1 2,000 – –
Total 1 2,000 – –
Sales at book value:
Parsonage 2 1,675 2 1,470
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund 3 2,075 – –
Board 1 2,655 3 1,920
Total 6 6,405 5 3,390
----- End of picture text -----

£306.1m (2021: £306.4m). Included in this total are properties, mostly in use for ministry, whose value amounted to £275.6m (£276.3m).

largely achieved. In addition, the aim is to have this backed by cash, which has also been achieved.

Reserves invested in fixed assets

Reserves policy

Free reserves are deemed to be the total of the unrestricted General Fund. Having considered financial risk, liquidity requirements and the timing of cash flows throughout the year, the Trustees reviewed and amended the policy in 2019. The Trustees’ policy was gradually to grow working financial reserves in the General Fund such that it was equivalent to three months’ budgeted unrestricted expenditure by the end of 2020, with an aspiration to achieve six months’ budgeted unrestricted expenditure by the end of 2025. The target of three months’ unrestricted expenditure is

The General Fund comprises net assets amounting to £6.2m (2021: £5.8m), of which £2.8m (2021: £2.9m) relates to tangible fixed assets, principally freehold and leasehold property, and a further £3.0m (2022: £2.3m) is held in pooled investments.

32 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Designated funds

The Trustees may designate additional unrestricted reserves to be retained for an agreed purpose where this is prudent. Such designated reserves are reviewed on an annual basis and returned to the General Fund if the purpose of their designation is no longer considered to be adequate justification for their retention.

A description of each reserve, together with the intended use of the reserve, is set out in Note 21 (see page 82). At 31 December 2022, total designated reserves were £47.4m (2021: £49.5m). The policy of the Trustees is to gradually return as many of these funds as possible to the General Fund.

Restricted and endowment funds

As set out in Note 20 (see pages 80– 81), the SDBF holds and administers a number of restricted and endowment funds. As at 31 December 2022, restricted funds totalled £3.9m (2021: £4.3m) and endowment funds totalled £248.6m (2021: £246.7m). Neither are available for the general purposes of the SDBF.

Grant-making policy

The Articles of Association of the SDBF allow for the making of grants in pursuance of its objects. The grants made in the current and previous year are disclosed in Note 11 (see pages 68–69). All grants are made from budgets set aside for specific purposes and are subject to authorisation policies and criteria.

Investment policy

The SDBF is permitted by its Articles of Association to make investments. Note 20 (see pages 80–81) provides details of the assets of each fund, together

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Funds Proportion Income Total
at 31 of portfolio yield in return
December year in year
2022
£’000 % % %
Managed funds:
M&G Equity Investment Fund for Charities 8,213 32.8 5.7 (0.2)
J O Hambro UK Equity Income Fund 4,625 18.4 5.3 (0.89)
CBF Investment Fund 3,678 14.7 3.0 (9.16)
Savills Charities Property Fund 1,679 6.6 4.1 (4.2)
Mayfair Capital PITCH Fund 2,301 9.2 5.3 (13.1)
Sarasin Global Higher Dividend Fund 4,578 18.3 2.5 (0.91)
Total 25,074 100
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with the related purposes. Note 15 (see page 75) summarises the movements in investments during the year. The investment principles were reviewed towards the end of 2018.

The investment objectives are:

With most of its capital assets in residential housing, the focus of the Trustees is on the selection and review of investment funds to provide additional income to the Diocese whilst aiming to maintain the inflation-adjusted value of capital. The investment policy and principles in this align with the property strategy and Southwark Vision 2017–25.

Excluding purchases, sales, and transfers, the value of investments has decreased by 9.8%. The movement in the FTSE All Share index over the same period was a decrease of 3.1%. While the value of our holdings fell, the total distributions increased to £1.2m. This is a 9% increase on 2021, where total distributions were £1.1m.

The Trustees’ investment policy is to pursue an ethical investment policy. The Trustees are committed to following the ethical and climate change investment guidelines laid down by the Ethical Advisory Group of the National Investing Bodies of the Church of England, not to invest directly but through collective investment vehicles, to seek the best economic returns consistent with commercial prudence following the judgment in the Bishop of Oxford case.

The SDBF does not adopt a total return policy for its investments but looks to identify investment managers who can produce income growth whilst preserving capital subject to agreed risk tolerances.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 33

Principal risks and uncertainties

The Senior Management Team considers, evaluates and records the major areas of risk to which the SDBF is exposed, assessing both the likelihood and impact of those risks being realised, together with the measures in place to manage and mitigate such risks. These are discussed and scrutinised through the Audit and Risk Committee and the principal risks are submitted annually to the DCT for their discussion, feedback and approval.

The principal risks below reflect the risks approved by Trustees for 2022 which were revised in light of the economy and the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on society and on the church unparticular. It was recognised that while the impact of COVID-19 was still significant in 2022, mitigating the risks arising from the impact of the pandemic was incorporated into the other risk areas.

The process of identification and assessment of risk, the risks identified and the measures for mitigation are reviewed at least annually by the Audit and Risk Committee, with at least one area of principal risk reviewed in detail at each meeting. Responsibility for delivery of the mitigation strategies identified is delegated to the Diocesan Secretary. The Risk Register is presented to, discussed by, and amended as Trustees determine and formally agreed by Trustees annually. As an organic document, it is available for inspection by all Trustees.

The Risk Register for the year ended 2022 identified seven areas where the risk of either failure to act or the impact of the events was considered “high”. These areas and the associated mitigation strategies were as follows:

1. Communications

The parishes work in partnership with the DBF to promote Southwark Vision and to resource the Vision to cover the costs of ministry through the Parish Support Fund (PSF).

Constant communication is required about the work and mission of our Diocese across South London and East Surrey, including new and existing mission initiatives.

The risk is that insufficient funds are generated through the PSF and that mutual support across the Diocese wavers. Mitigants include:

An additional communications risk is that poor media coverage leads to reputational loss. This is mitigated by high quality public relations and rigorous attention to the press and and social media, in particular to any historical safeguarding issues.

2. Data and data protection

The development of the integrated database in the Diocesan Office has ensured effective collection of data, which underpins the integrity and interpretation of Diocesan data which is essential for good strategic decisions. The principal risks are that incomplete, inaccurate or misinterpreted data leads to poor decision making, wasted resources and has a negative impact on reputation. Mitigants include:

The Diocese and all parishes must comply with data protection legislation or risk both legal and reputational consequences. Mitigants include:

34 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

3. Diocesan growth

The Southwark Vision includes five strategic objects which will lead to growth. The risk, exacerbated by the lasting impact of the pandemic, is that the progress towards achieving these objectives is slowed, if not stalled. Mitigants include:

4. Financial risks

The economic downturn and speed of recovery of church congregations and income generating activities continues to result in a loss of income and cash flow difficulties for many of our churches with the consequential risk of a reduction in PSF pledges being paid. Mitigants include:

5. Governance

The compliance and regulatory framework for large charities is increasing and evolving and the risk is a lack of accountability and lack of transparency in decision-making. Mitigants include:

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 35

(continued) Principal risks

6. IT

The loss of access to electronic data, including emails, would affect the ability of Diocesan staff to fulfil their responsibilities. Mitigants include:

7. Safeguarding

As the requirements for safeguarding policy and procedures have rightly become more rigorous, there has been increased focus on this risk area. One or more occurrences of abuse by someone working for or on behalf of the Church has significant consequences for those affected and there is also a reputational risk in the event of poor safeguarding practices. Mitigants include:

36 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Governance

Structure and

governance

Summary information about the structure of the Church of England

The Church of England is the established Church and HM The King is the Supreme Governor. It is organised into two provinces (Canterbury and York) and 42 Dioceses. Each Diocese is a See under the care of a Bishop who is charged with the cure of souls of all the people within that geographical area. This charge is shared with priests within benefices and parishes which are separate charitable entities but also part of sub-divisions of the Diocese, served by the Diocese and accountable to the Diocese.

The National Church has a General Synod comprising ex-officio and elected representatives from each Diocese, and it agrees and lays before Parliament Measures for the governance of the Church’s affairs which, if enacted by Parliament, have the force of statute law. In addition to the General Synod, the Archbishops’ Council has a coordinating role for work authorised by the Synod; the Church Commissioners manage the historic assets of the Church of England; and the Church of England Pensions Board administers the pension schemes for clergy and lay workers.

Within each Diocese, overall leadership lies with the Diocesan Bishop. The Diocese of Southwark is itself divided into 25 deaneries, each with its own Deanery Synod, and within each parish there is a Parochial Church Council (PCC). The PCC shares responsibility with the parish priest for the mission of the church in that place, in a similar way to that in which the Bishop shares responsibilities with the Diocesan Synod. Whilst each Diocese

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PARISHES
elect to
DEANERY SYNOD
elect to
Diocesan Bishop members of DIOCESAN SYNOD members of Archdeacons
Area Bishops
elects 3/4 of
members of
members of feeds
into
Archdeaconry
Racial Justice Mission & Pastoral
Committee
(RJC; formerly DIOCESAN COUNCIL Committee
DMEACC) OF TRUSTEES (DCT)
All Trustees are members of:
feeds
into Diocesan
Board of Finance Mission and
Bishop’s incorporating Pastoral
Lay Council Council Parsonages Board Committee
DCT subcommittees
Audit and Policy & Finance Eco Diocese
Risk Working Group
Investment Remuneration
Committee Committee
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of charity law. Since November 2015, the Diocesan Council of Trustees (DCT, see diagram, above) has been the standing committee of the Diocesan Synod, and its members are members of the Diocesan Board of Finance (DBF), the Bishop’s Council, Diocesan Mission and Pastoral Committee (DMPC) (i.e. co-terminous membership). In November 2022 the Parsonages Board was incorporated within the DBF and so became the Parsonages Committee with the same co-terminous membership of the DCT, as with most other dioceses, it did not hold separate bank accounts or financial accounting. The Parsonages Committee sits within the DBF.

is a separate legal entity, with a clear responsibility for a specific geographical area, being part of the Church of England requires and enables each Diocese to seek support from and work in partnership with other Dioceses and national bodies.

Organisational structure

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance (SDBF) is a company limited by guarantee (No 236594) and a registered charity (No 249678) governed by its Articles of Association. It was incorporated in 1929. The Articles were updated and modernised during 2017. The Company Secretary is the Diocesan Secretary.

Under the revised governance, the DCT comprises the Diocesan Bishop (President of the Diocesan Synod), Chair and Vice Chair of the Board of Finance (both laity), Area Bishops, Archdeacons, Chairs of the

The governance and policy of the SDBF is the responsibility of the Trustees, who are also members and directors of the company and trustees for the purposes

38 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Houses of Clergy and Laity of the Diocesan Synod, six clergy (two from each Episcopal Area), 12 members of the laity elected by the House of Laity of the Diocesan Synod (including three from each Area) and up to six further lay members with up-to-date financial or other relevant expertise formally elected by the House of Laity of the Diocesan Synod. The implementation of this revised governance structure was reviewed by an external consultant during 2018 and was found to be successful and robust.

The Diocesan Synod, the statutory governing body of the Diocese, is an elected body drawn from across the Diocese with responsibility for setting the vision and strategy of the Diocese. The Synod membership is elected every three years, the last elections having been in 2021. The Synod elects from its members 12 of the lay Trustees of the SDBF and six of the clergy members. The SDBF is subject to the direction of the Synod in all its activities, unless such direction is not in accordance with the governing documents or statutory regulations. Since the DBF developed coterminous membership with the Bishop’s Council and DMPC membership, trusteeship and directorship of the SDBF also includes membership of those other bodies, all part of the DCT. The Diocesan Secretary is Secretary to each of these, except that the Deputy Diocesan Secretary is Secretary to the DMPC.

Decision-making structure

Corporate priorities and the overall financial strategy for the Diocese, in its primary object to promote, assist and advance the work of the Church of England within the Diocese of Southwark, are set by the Diocesan Synod and the

SDBF. The responsibility for ensuring that these priorities and strategies are delivered is delegated to the Diocesan Secretary who reports to the Bishop of Southwark and is also accountable to Trustees through the Chair of the SDBF. The Policy and Finance Committee, which is the standing committee of the Council of Trustees, holds the work of the Diocesan Secretary to account. The company meets once a year in a General Meeting to receive and approve the Annual Report and Financial Statements, appoint the auditors and elect the Chair and Vice Chair, nominated by the Bishop of Southwark.

Each year the Diocesan Synod receives and agrees the annual budget, prepared and approved by the Board. The Diocesan Council of Trustees (DBF) holds five meetings each year, including one all-day meeting to consider the annual budget and objectives. Trustees formulate and coordinate policies on mission, ministry and finance by:

bodies, subject to the direction of the Synod.

The Trustees are assisted in their work by two committees.

The Policy and Finance Committee

(PFC) is the standing committee of the DCT and monitors management accounts and budget, the use of assets and investment policies, and exercises the authority delegated to it by the Trustees in areas such as grants and loans. It also undertakes the Board’s operational responsibilities under the Parsonages Measures 1938 and 1947; the Repair of Benefice Buildings Measure 1972; the Parochial Church Councils (Powers) Measure 1956, as amended, and the Incumbents and Churchwardens (Trusts) Measure 1964 (with respect to parochial property); the Endowment and Glebe Measure 1976 (with regard to property assets); and the Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011 (with regard to redundant churches).

In addition, this committee considers and initiates areas of strategic policy where proposals are at an early stage of development prior to submission to the Board. It meets five times a year including one all-day meeting which particularly examines the forthcoming budget, work plans and annual objectives. It holds the work of the Diocesan Secretary to account and, through her, the work of the executive team.

The Audit and Risk Committee

scrutinises performance, oversees issues of financial probity, reviews the work of external audit, prepares the response to the external auditor’s management letter, scrutinises the effectiveness of governance and reviews the risk register and major areas of risk. It meets four times a year.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 39

Structure and

(continued) governance

In addition, the Board is advised by its Investment Sub-Committee , which provides advice to the PFC and to the Diocesan Secretary on the SDBF’s investments and funds available for investment. This meets five times a year including two all-day meetings. The board is also advised by its Remuneration Committee, which normally meets annually.

Trustee recruitment, selection and induction

Board Trustees (DBF) are also members of the Bishop’s Council, and DMPC and are selected as set out above. Potential Trustees complete skills audits, there is a role description and Trustees are given induction at the outset of the triennium and at other times as appropriate, such as when Trustees are elected or appointed during the triennium. They are also informed, before seeking membership and at all other relevant times, of the role and function of each committee and constituent element of the DCT. Some staff hold the title of ‘Director’ but this relates to their function within the organisation and has no legal meaning within the terminology associated with the Companies Act. All Trustees are required to sign the Diocesan Declaration of Eligibility, Responsibility and Conflicts of Interest statement forms. A Handbook of Governance is given to each Trustee.

Remuneration of key management personnel Remuneration of the Diocesan

Secretary is determined annually by the Remuneration Committee, which also receives the Diocesan Secretary’s remuneration recommendations for members of the Senior Management Team, which the Remuneration Committee then considers for

approval. The committee is a subcommittee of the PFC, formally reporting through it to the Board. It is chaired by the Bishop of Southwark and includes the Chair and Vice-Chair of the SDBF and any external consultants as they determine. The committee in 2022 included the Chair of the PFC.

Delegation of

day-to-day delivery

The Trustees and the committees which assist them in the fulfilment of their responsibilities delegate management to the Diocesan Secretary who, with the Senior Management Team, delivers the activities of the company in accordance with the policies of the Trustees. The Diocesan Secretary is given specific and general delegated authority to deliver the business of the Board.

Funds held as

Diocesan Authority

The Board acts as Diocesan Authority or Custodian Trustee of assets held on permanent trust by virtue of the Parochial Church Councils (Powers) Measure 1956, as amended, and the Incumbents and Churchwardens (Trusts) Measure 1964 where the Managing Trustees are PCCs and others. These assets are not aggregated in the financial statements as the SDBF does not control them, and they are segregated from the SDBF’s own assets by means of a separate bank account, separately identified investment holdings and a separate accounting system. Further details of financial trust assets, whose market value amounted to £15.9m at 31 December 2022 (2021: £17.9m), are available from the SDBF on request, and are summarised in Note 28 (see page 88). Where properties are held as Diocesan Authority, the deeds are identified as such and held

in safe custody by the SDBF’s solicitor, Winckworth Sherwood LLP.

Section 172 statement

This section serves as our Section 172 statement and should be read in conjunction with the Strategic Report on pages 12-28. Section 172 of the Companies Act 2006 requires Directors to take into consideration the interests of stakeholders in their decisionmaking. The Directors continue to have regard to the interests of the Company’s employees and other stakeholders, including the impact of its activities on the community, the environment and the Company’s reputation, when making decisions.

The majority of Directors are elected from the parishes and communities served by the Diocese, ensuring coverage geographically across the Diocese through elections from the Diocesan Synod. The presentations by the Chair of the Board to Diocesan Synod, covering budgets, objectives and the Annual Report, are examples of this.

Acting in good faith and fairly between members, the Directors consider what is most likely to promote the success of the Company in the context of being a DBF among some 40 others across the Church of England, and also in being a charity with charitable objectives focused on mission and ministry. Whilst the importance of giving due consideration to our stakeholders is not new, we are explaining in more detail this year how the Board engages with our stakeholders, to comply with the requirement to include a statement setting out how our Directors have discharged this duty.

40 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

• The Diocesan Secretary is effectively the Chief Executive Officer and is held accountable to the Board through regular meetings at least monthly with the Chair and Vice Chair, and through the Policy and Finance Committee where a range of employees attend, and through the Board meetings, any of which can be attended by employees from the Senior Management Team.

Directors of the Board include the six Archdeacons and four Bishops and they have regular and open contact with employees at all levels of the organisation. All heads of departments have team meetings and individual meetings with staff and there are also all-staff meetings. The Senior Management Team has been designated as “senior management” for the purposes of the 2018 Code but not for the purposes of section 414C(8) of the Companies Act 2006. It comprises the senior functional management roles and together is made up of those with responsibility for interacting with the charitable company’s principal stakeholders. The Board has had in place, since 2015. measures to ensure that stakeholder interests are always taken into account. Where external legal advice is required, the Directors can consult with the Diocesan Registrar or ask senior staff such as the Diocesan Secretary or Deputy Diocesan Secretary to do so on their behalf.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 41

Related parties

Picture removed

Related parties include:

maintenance and improvement of school buildings and facilities. The SDBE also supports the provision of chaplaincy in higher and further education institutions, a post funded by the SDBF. The SDBF also makes an grant to the SDBE towards the cost of delivering the Diocesan Measure for Education. The Bishop of Southwark is President of the SDBE, whilst the Rt Revd Dr Rosemarie Mallett became the Chair of the Board of Education during 2022, following the retirement of The Rt Revd Jonathan Clark. The Ven Simon Gates, Archdeacon of Lambeth, was formally appointed to the Board as Chair of Schools Committee in December 2022.

the SDBF makes a grant. Welcare is a Christian charity working in South London and East Surrey with disadvantaged children and families, irrespective of faith, culture, abilities or life choices. By offering family support, mentoring services and group work with parents and children, Welcare empowers families to rebuild their lives and family ties, helping parents to give their children happier, more confident childhoods. The Board of Welcare includes the Head of JPIC as the DBF nominee.

Southwark Cathedral (charity no. 1200866) to which the SDBF makes a grant. It is the seat of the Bishop of Southwark, and services and special events are held at the Cathedral that are paid for by the SDBF.

Together Southwark (charity no 1153362) promotes the alleviation of poverty and relief of financial hardship among children, young people and vulnerable families. The Diocese is its principal funder. The Rt Revd Karowei Dorgu, Bishop of Woolwich, Rt Revd Dr Rosemarie Mallett, Bishop of Croydon, and Mr Adrian Greenwood, Chair of the House of Laity, were among the Directors during the year. Together Southwark is not consolidated in these accounts under section 405 of the Companies Act 2006 as its inclusion is not material.

Transactions with related parties are identified in appropriate places throughout the financial statements. Where materiality of the transactions merits more detailed disclosure, this is given in Note 26 to the financial statements (see page 86).

42 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Trustees’ responsibilities

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The Trustees are responsible for preparing the Annual Report, which incorporates the Strategic Report, and the financial statements in accordance with applicable law and regulations.

Company law requires the Trustees (as Directors) to prepare financial statements for each financial year. Under that law the Trustees have elected to prepare the financial statements in accordance with United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice (United Kingdom Accounting Standards) and applicable law. Under company law, the Trustees must not approve the financial statements unless they are satisfied that they give a true and fair view of the state of the affairs of the charitable company and of the surplus or deficit of the charitable company for that period. In preparing these financial statements the Trustees are required to:

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

The Trustees are responsible for the maintenance and integrity of the corporate and financial information included in the Diocesan website.

Statement of disclosure to the auditor

So far as each Trustees are aware:

Appointment of auditor

Buzzacott LLP was appointed as the new auditor in June 2021 and re-elected in May 2022.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 43

Administrative details

Trustees

No Trustee had any beneficial interest in the Company during 2022. The following Trustees were in post during the period 1 January 2022 to the date of approval of these financial statements.

President

The Right Revd Christopher Chessun, The Bishop of Southwark

Ex-officio

The Right Revd Jonathan Clark (to 21 March 2022), The Bishop of Croydon

The Right Revd Dr Rosemarie Mallett (from 24 June 2022), The Bishop of Croydon

The Right Revd Dr Richard Cheetham (to 17 October 2022), The Bishop of Kingston

The Right Revd Dr Martin Gainsborough (from 2 February 2023), Bishop of Kingston

The Right Revd Dr Karowei Dorgu, The Bishop of Woolwich

The Venerable Dr Rosemarie Mallett (to 23 June 2022) The Archdeacon of Croydon The Venerable Greg Prior (from 4 December 2022), The Archdeacon of Croydon

The Venerable Simon Gates, The Archdeacon of Lambeth The Venerable Alastair Cutting, The Archdeacon of Lewisham & Greenwich

The Venerable Moira Astin, The Archdeacon of Reigate

The Venerable Jonathan Sedgwick (from 13 September 2022), The Archdeacon of Southwark

The Venerable John Kiddle, The Archdeacon of Wandsworth

Chair of the House of Clergy of Diocesan Synod

The Revd Lotwina Farodoye (from 13 July 2022)

Appointed by the Bishop of Southwark

Mr Alan Saunders (to 13 July 2022), Chair of the Board of Finance

Sir David Beamish (from 14 July 2022) Chair of the Board of Finance Sir David Beamish (to 13 July 2022) Vice Chair of the Board of Finance Mrs Sarah Docx (from 14 July 2022) Vice Chair of the Board of Finance

Elected by Synod (House of Clergy)

The Revd Michael John The Revd Jonathan Macy The Revd Justine Middlemiss The Revd Greg Prior (to 3 December 2022) The Revd Dr Eddie Scrase-Field The Revd Fiona Weaver

Elected by Synod (House of Laity)

Mrs April Alexander Mrs Rebecca Chapman Mrs Despina Francois Miss Vasantha Gnanadoss Mr Joseph Goswell Mr Richard Helliwell Miss Solabomi Ogun Miss Miranda Okon (from 17 August 2022) Miss Olusola Oyeleye Miss Susan Patterson (from 17 August 2022) Miss Rosemary Wilson

Lay persons elected as specialists

Dr Nicholas Burt Mr Michael Hartley Miss Gill Reynolds Mr Alan Saunders (from 14 July 2022) His Honour Nigel Seed KC (from 13 November 2022) Mr Nicholas Stansbury

Bishop’s nominees

The Revd Lotwina Farodoye (to 12 July 2022) The Revd Canon Jonathan Sedgwick (to 12 September 2022)

Chair of the House of Laity of Diocesan Synod

Mr Adrian Greenwood, (Lay Canon)

44 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Senior staff

Ms Ruth Martin (Lay Canon) Diocesan Secretary Mrs Jacqueline Pontin Deputy Diocesan Secretary Mr Mark Rhodes Director of Finance and Financial Assets Mr Colin Bushell Diocesan Surveyor Mr David Loft Director of Human Resources

Mr Mark Charlton Director of Information Technology The Revd Canon Wendy Robins Director of Discipleship, Lay Ministry and Continuing Ministerial Education

The Revd Jeremy Clark-King (from 11 September 2022) Director for Clergy Formation, and Initital Ministerial Education Ms Sophia Jones (to 31 January 2023) Director of Communications

Ms Pamela Chisholm Diocesan Safeguarding Advisor Mrs Gabby Parikh Director of Giving and Parish Funding

Registered office

Trinity House, 4 Chapel Court, Borough High Street, London SE1 1HW

HSBC UK Bank plc 10 York Road, London SE1 7ND

HSBC Private Bank (UK) Limited 8 Cork Street, London W1S 3LJ

Independent Auditor

Buzzacott LLP 130 Wood Street, London EC2V 6DL

Solicitors

Winckworth Sherwood LLP Minerva House, 5 Montague Close, London SE1 9BB

Investment Fund Managers

CCLA Investment Management Ltd Senator House, 85 Queen Victoria Street, London EC4V 4ET

J O Hambro Capital Management Ltd 1 St James’s Market, London SW1Y 4AH

M&G Securities Ltd 10 Fenchurch Avenue, London EC3M 5AG

Mayfair Capital Investment Management Ltd 2 Cavendish Square, London W1G 0PU

Sarasin & Partners LLP Juxon House, 100 St Paul’s Churchyard, London EC4M 8BU

Savills Investment Management (UK) Ltd 33 Margaret Street, London W1G 0JD

Insurers

Advisers

Bankers

Ecclesiastical Insurance Group plc Beaufort House, Brunswick Road, Gloucester GL1 1JZ

National Westminster Bank plc 91 Westminster Bridge Road, London SE1 7HW

In approving this Trustees’ Report, the Trustees are also approving the Strategic Report included on pages 13–36 in their capacity as Company Directors.

By order of the Trustees

Sir David Beamish Chair of the Board of Finance 17 May 2023

Ruth Martin (Lay Canon) Secretary 17 May 2023

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 45

Financial statements

Independent auditor’s report

To the Members of the South London Church Fund and Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance

Opinion

We have audited the financial statements of South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance (the “charitable company”) for the year ended 31 December 2022, which comprise the statement of financial activities, the income and expenditure account, the balance sheet, the statement of cash flows, and the notes to the financial statements including the principal 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 applicable in the UK and Republic of Ireland” (United Kingdom Generally Accepted Accounting Practice).

In our opinion, the financial statements:

Basis for opinion

We conducted our audit in accordance with International Standards on Auditing (UK) (ISAs (UK)) and applicable law.

Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements section of our report. We are independent of the charitable company in accordance with the ethical requirements that are relevant to our audit of the financial statements in the UK, including the FRC’s Ethical Standard, and we have fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with these requirements. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion.

Conclusions relating to going concern

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

Based on the work we have performed, we have not identified any material uncertainties relating to events or conditions that, individually or collectively, may cast significant doubt on the charitable company’s ability to continue as a going concern for a period of at least 12 months from when the financial statements are authorised for issue.

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

Other information

The Trustees are responsible for the other information. The other information comprises the information included in the Annual Report 2022, other than the financial statements and our auditor’s report thereon. 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.

Opinions on other matters prescribed by the Companies Act 2006

In our opinion, based on the work undertaken in the course of the audit:

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

47

Independent (continued) auditor’s report

Matters on which we are required to report by exception

In the light of the knowledge and understanding of the charitable company and its environment obtained in the course of the audit, we have not identified material misstatements in the Trustees’ report, including the Strategic Report.

We have nothing to report in respect of the following matters in relation to which the Companies Act 2006 requires us to report to you if, in our opinion:

Responsibilities of Trustees

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

In preparing the financial statements, the Trustees are responsible for assessing the charitable company’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 charitable company or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so.

Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements

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

Irregularities, including fraud, are instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations. We design procedures in line with our responsibilities, outlined above, to detect material misstatements in respect of irregularities, including fraud. The extent to which our procedures are capable of detecting irregularities, including fraud, is detailed below.

Our approach to identifying and assessing the risks of material misstatement in respect of irregularities, including fraud and non-compliance with laws and regulations, was as follows:

collectively had the appropriate competence, capabilities and skills to identify or recognise noncompliance with applicable laws and regulations;

We assessed the susceptibility of the charitable company’s financial statements to material misstatement, including obtaining an understanding of how fraud might occur, by:

48 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

non-compliance with laws and regulations.

To address the risk of fraud through management bias and override of controls, we:

In response to the risk of irregularities and non-compliance with laws and regulations, we designed procedures which included, but were not limited to:

There are inherent limitations in our audit procedures described above. The more removed that laws and regulations are from financial transactions, the less likely it is that we would become aware of non-compliance. Auditing standards also limit the audit procedures required to identify non-compliance with laws and regulations to enquiry

of Trustees and management and the inspection of regulatory and legal correspondence, if any.

Material misstatements that arise due to fraud can be harder to detect than those that arise from error as they may involve deliberate concealment or collusion. A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial statements is located on the Financial Reporting Council’s website at www.frc.org.uk/ auditorsresponsibilities. This description forms part of our auditor’s report.

Use of our report

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

Amanda Francis Senior Statutory Auditor

For and on behalf of Buzzacott LLP, Statutory Auditor, 130 Wood Street, London EC2V 6DL

17 May 2023

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 49

Statement of Financial Activities for the year ended 31 December 2022

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Unrestricted funds Restricted Endowment Total funds Total funds
funds funds 2022 2021
General Designated
Note £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Income and endowments from:
Donations 3
Parish contributions 15,947 – – – 15,947 15,657
Archbishops’ Council 293 – 1,450 – 1,743 1,479
Other donations 2,007 17 2 – 2,026 3,960
Charitable activities 4 2,384 74 5 – 2,463 2,279
Investments 5 1,099 – 137 – 1,236 1,128
Net surplus on disposal of properties 6 – – – 2,705 2,705 4,508
Total 21,730 91 1,594 2,705 26,120 29,011
Expenditure on:
Charitable activities 7 24,389 15 1,272 7 25,683 24,381
Net deficit on disposal of properties 8 224 – – – 224 –
Total 24,613 15 1,272 7 25,907 24,381
Net income/(expenditure) (2,883) 76 322 2,698 213 4,630
before investment gains
Net unrealised gains/(losses) on
investments 15 (250) – (215) (2,178) (2,643) 3,507
Net income/(expenditure) (3,133) 76 107 520 (2,430) 8,137
Transfers between funds 13 3,530 (3,326) (563) 359 – –
Other recognised gains: 14 – 1,087 – 1,046 2,133 9,145
Revaluation of property
Net movement in funds 397 (2,163) (456) 1,925 (297) 17,282
Total funds brought forward 5,843 49,544 4,319 246,710 306,416 289,134
Total funds carried forward 20 6,240 47,381 3,863 248,635 306,119 306,416
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All activities derive from continuing activities. The notes on pages 55–89 form part of the financial statements. The full prior year Statement of Financial Activities (SoFA) is included at Note 27 (see page 87).

50 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Income and expenditure account for the year ended 31 December 2022

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2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Total income 23,415 25,405
Total expenditure (25,900) (24,365)
Operating (deficit)/surplus for the year (2,485) 1,040
Net (losses)/gains on investments (465) 598
Net (expenditure)/income for the year (2,950) 1,638
Other comprehensive income:
Revaluation of fixed assets 1,087 3,908
Net assets transferred (to)/from endowments (359) 876
Total comprehensive (expenditure)/income (2,222) 6,422
----- End of picture text -----

The income and expenditure account is derived from the Statement of Financial Activities (SoFA) with movements in endowment funds excluded to comply with company law. All income and expenditure is derived from continuing activities.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 51

Balance sheet as at 31 December 2022

----- Start of picture text -----
Company Number 236594 2022 2021
Note £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Fixed assets:
Tangible assets 14 275,596 276,256
Investments 15 25,074 27,295
Total 300,670 303,551
Current assets:
Debtors 16 1,938 869
Cash on deposit 5,813 4,417
Cash at bank and in hand 2,148 3,176
Total 9,899 8,462
Creditors: amounts falling due within one year 17 (830) (1,687)
Net current assets 9,069 6,775
Total assets less current liabilities 309,739 310,326
Creditors: amounts falling due
after more than one year:
Other 18 (3,620) (3,910)
Net assets 306,119 306,416
Funds:
Endowment funds 248,635 246,710
Restricted income funds 3,863 4,319
Unrestricted income funds:
General Fund 6,240 5,843
Designated funds 47,381 49,544
Total funds 20 306,119 306,416
----- End of picture text -----

The financial statements were approved by the Board of Trustees and authorised for issue on 17 May 2023 and signed on behalf of the Board by:

Sir David Beamish Chair of the Board of Finance

52 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Statement of cash flows for the year ended 31 December 2022

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Net cash used in operating activities (5,059) (341)
Cash flows from investing activities:
Dividends, interest and rent from investments 1,236 1,128
Proceeds from the sale of:
Tangible fixed assets 8,886 7,898
Fixed asset investments 4,763 1,517
Purchase of:
Tangible fixed assets (3,683) (1,243)
Fixed asset investments (5,185) (981)
Net cash provided by investing activities 6,017 8,319
Cash flows from financing activities:
Loans repaid (590) (3,482)
Net cash (used in) financing activities (590) (3,482)
Change in cash and cash equivalents in the reporting period 368 4,496
Cash and cash equivalents at 1 January 7,593 3,097
Cash and cash equivalents at 31 December 7,961 7,593
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

53

Notes to the statement of cash flows for the year ended 31 December 2022

----- Start of picture text -----
Reconciliation of net income to net cash flow 2022 2021
from operating activities £’000 £’000
Net income before investment (losses)/gains for the year 213 4,630
Adjustments for:
Depreciation charges 71 109
Dividends, interest and rent from investments (1,236) (1,128)
Movement in pension deficit recovery creditor less contributions paid (591) (594)
Increase in value of Value–Linked Loans – (130)
Gains on sale of fixed assets (2,481) (4,468)
(Increase)/decrease in debtors (1,069) 1,028
Increase in creditors 34 212
Net cash used in operating activities (5,059) (341)
Analysis of cash and cash equivalents 2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Cash in hand 2,148 3,176
Notice deposits (less than three months) 5,813 4,417
Total 7,961 7,593
Analysis of changes in net debt At 1 Cash At 31
January flows December
2022 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000
Cash 7,593 368 7,961
Loans falling due within one year (300) 300 –
Loans falling due after one year (3,910) 290 (3,620)
Total 3,383 958 4,341
----- End of picture text -----

54 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Notes to the financial statements

1. Accounting policies

a. General information

The financial statements have been prepared on the historical cost basis with the exception of freehold properties, which are included at their Fair Value as determined under the applicable valuation method as detailed in 1.f), and fixed asset investments, which are included at their Fair Value at the balance sheet date.

c. Going concern

In recovery from the COVID-19 epidemic, the Directors/Trustees have reviewed forecasts for a period of at least 12 months from the date of the approval of these financial statements and consider that there are no material uncertainties regarding the SDBF’s ability to continue as a going concern.

Income is recognised in the period in which the charitable company is entitled to receipt, if the amount can be measured reliably and it is probable that the funds will be received.

Income comprises donations, including parish contributions and grants receivable, legacies, income from listed investments, interest receivable, income directly related to charitable activities (including rent receivable), the net surplus on disposal of tangible fixed assets and miscellaneous income.

Parish contributions (or parish share) are recognised by the charitable company on receipt. Amounts not received are not recognised as debtors as the pledges represent a commitment that is not legally enforceable.

Other donations and grants are recognised when the charitable company has confirmation of both the amount and settlement date. In the event of donations and/or grants pledged but not received, the amount is accrued for where the receipt is considered probable. If a donation or grant is subject to conditions that require a level of performance before the charitable company is entitled to the funds, the income is deferred and not recognised until either those conditions are fully met, or the fulfilment of those conditions is wholly within the control of the charitable company and it is probable that those conditions will be fulfilled in the reporting period.

In accordance with the Charities FRS 102 SORP 2015 volunteer time is not recognised.

Legacies are included in the statement of financial activities when the charitable company is entitled to the legacy, the executors have established that there are sufficient surplus assets in the estate to pay the legacy, and any conditions attached to the legacy are within the control of the charitable company. Entitlement is taken as the earlier of the date on which either: the charitable company is aware that probate has been granted, the estate has been finalised and notification has been made by the executor to the charitable company that a distribution will be made, or when a distribution is received from the estate. Receipt of a legacy, in whole or in part, is only considered probable when the amount can be measured reliably and the charitable company has been notified of the executor’s intention to make a distribution.

Investment income is recognised once the dividend or similar income has been declared and notification has been received of the amount due.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 55

Notes to the financial statements

1. Accounting policies (continued)

Interest on funds held on deposit is included when receivable and the amount can be measured reliably by the charitable company; this is normally upon notification of the interest paid or payable by the bank.

Income from charitable activities includes parochial fees received for occasional offices including baptisms, weddings and funerals. These are recognised as income when receivable.

Gains or losses on the disposal of property assets are calculated as the difference between the sale proceeds net of sale costs and the net book value of the asset immediately prior to disposal. They are accounted for once legal completion of the disposal has taken place.

Monies receivable from the Government’s Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme are recognised when the charitable company has entitlement to the income and the amount due to the charitable company can be measured.

e. Expenditure

Expenditure is recognised on the accruals basis and is classified in the SoFA under headings that aggregate related costs.

SDBF staff joining after July 2013 are members of the Pension Builder section of the CWPF. Contributions to this scheme paid by the SDBF are charged to the SoFA as expenditure on the accruals basis. Former members of the CWPF Defined Benefit Scheme are now members of the Pension Builder Section of the CWPF.

The pension costs for the defined benefit schemes recognised as expenditure represent the SDBF’s contributions payable in respect of the accounting period, in accordance with FRS 102.

f. Tangible fixed assets and depreciation Benefice houses

The SDBF has followed the requirements of FRS 102 in its accounting treatment of benefice houses (parsonages). FRS 102 requires the accounting treatment to follow the substance of arrangements rather than their strict legal form. The SDBF is formally responsible for the maintenance and repair of such properties and has some jurisdiction over their future use or potential sale if not required as a benefice house, but in the meantime legal title and the right to beneficial occupation is vested in the incumbent. The Trustees consider the most suitable

56 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

1. Accounting policies (continued)

accounting policy is to capitalise such properties as expendable endowment assets and to carry them at cost. For benefice houses owned at 1 January 2015, the SDBF has adopted the estimated reinstatement cost as at 1 January 2014 as deemed cost. Benefice houses purchased or built after 1 January 2015 are included at purchase or build cost. Benefice houses transferred from the Diocesan Stipendiary Fund are included at the carrying value at the date of transfer. An impairment review is carried out annually.

Non-benefice freehold and leasehold properties

Freehold and leasehold properties are initially recognised at cost and subsequently measured at Fair Value at each reporting date. Leasehold properties are not amortised over the term of the lease period on the grounds of materiality because of the very long lengths of the leases and the limited number of leasehold properties. The SDBF has appointed a firm of chartered surveyors to undertake a full valuation of its freehold and leasehold properties on a rolling basis over a five-year period. The results of these valuations are extrapolated across the remaining portfolio to ensure that the carrying value of the properties approximates Fair Value. The revaluation gains or losses are reported within other recognised gains and losses in the SoFA.

Assets under construction

Assets under construction are recorded at cost during construction. On completion they are transferred to either the Board Property Fund or Diocesan Stipendiary Fund where the properties are measured at Fair Value or the Parsonage Fund where the property is carried at the cost of construction.

Properties subject to value-linked loans

Properties that have been bought with the assistance of value-linked loans from the Church Commissioners are included in the financial statements as fixed assets and the associated loans as loan creditors. The properties are stated at Fair Value and are revalued at each reporting date. On disposal the agreed share of the net sale proceeds will be remitted to the Church Commissioners and the related loan liability extinguished.

Depreciation on buildings

Depreciation is not charged on buildings as the Trustees consider that any provision (annual or cumulative) would not be material owing to the very long expected remaining useful economic life in each case, and that their expected residual value is not materially less than their carrying value. The SDBF has a policy of regular structural inspection, repair and maintenance, which in the case of residential properties is in accordance with the Repair of Benefices Buildings Measure 1972 and properties are therefore unlikely to deteriorate or suffer from obsolescence. In addition, disposals of properties occur well before the end of their economic lives and disposal proceeds are usually not less than their carrying value.

Leasehold improvements

Improvements made to leasehold properties are amortised in the SoFA over the shorter of the term of the lease or the break clause where there is an expectation that this will be exercised.

g. Other tangible fixed assets

Other tangible assets are recognised at cost less accumulated depreciation and any accumulated impairment losses.

Depreciation is charged to the SoFA over the expected useful economic life of the asset at the following rates:

h. Operating lease commitments

The SDBF has entered into operating lease arrangements for the use of certain property assets, the rental for which is charged in full as expenditure in the year to which it relates. Rent-free periods given as part of an operating lease are amortised in the SoFA over the lease term or break clause where there is an expectation that this will be utilised.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 57

Notes to the financial statements

1. Accounting policies (continued)

i. Financial instruments: assets and liabilities Fixed asset investments

Listed investments are a form of basic financial instrument and are initially recognised at their transaction value and subsequently measured at their Fair Value at the end of each calendar month using the closing quoted bid market price.

Realised gains (or losses) on investment assets are calculated as the difference between disposal proceeds and their carrying value or their purchase value if acquired after the latest monthly revaluation. Unrealised gains and losses are calculated as the difference between the Fair Value at the year end and their carrying value at that date. Realised and unrealised investment gains (or losses) are combined in the statement of financial activities and are credited (or debited) in the year in which they arise.

Debtors

Debtors are recognised at the settlement amount due.

Cash and cash equivalents

Cash at bank and cash in hand includes cash held in short-term highly liquid investments with a short maturity of three months or less from the date of acquisition or opening of the deposit or similar account.

Creditors and provisions

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

Concessionary loans

The SDBF makes loans to further its charitable purposes, typically being loans to parishes, at nil interest or at rates below prevailing market rates. It is also in receipt of loans that are interestfree or at rates below prevailing market rates from the Church Commissioners for England and the Central Board of Finance. Such loans are classified as concessionary loans and accounted for in accordance with Section 34 of FRS 102 whereby the loans are initially recognised and measured at the amount paid or received and subsequently adjusted to reflect any repayments, accrued interest and any subsequent impairment.

Value-linked loans

The SDBF value-linked loans for which the settlement proceeds are based on the value of the related properties. As this constitutes a non-basic financial instrument under FRS 102, these loans are recognised at Fair Value and are revalued at each reporting date to match the value of the related property.

Financial instruments

The charity only has financial assets and financial liabilities of a kind that qualify as basic financial instruments. Apart from fixed asset investments held at Fair Value, basic financial instruments are initially recognised at transaction value and subsequently measured at amortised cost using the effective interest method.

58 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

j. Funds Balances are split between unrestricted (general and designated), restricted and endowment funds.

2. Critical accounting estimates and judgements

In preparing these financial statements, management has made judgements, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of the SDBF’s accounting policies and the reported assets, liabilities, income and expenditure and the disclosures made in the 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.

The key area of estimation is the measurement of the SDBF’s property assets at Fair Value. The Charity SORP requires entities that have adopted a policy of revaluation to undertake valuations on a regular basis to ensure that the carrying amount of the revalued assets does not differ materially from Fair Value at the end of the reporting period. The SDBF engages a firm of chartered surveyors for the valuation of its freehold properties, excluding benefice houses, on a rolling basis over a five-year period. In order to ensure that the carrying value of the freehold properties excluding benefice houses approximates to Fair Value, the results of the proportion of the properties valued in the year are extrapolated across the remainder of the property portfolio excluding benefice houses to arrive at year-end Fair Value.

Those properties selected for valuation are taken across the SDBF’s diverse property portfolio and the trustees consider this to be a reasonable basis for estimating the Fair Value of the SDBF’s freehold properties at the balance sheet date. Any variances from actual Fair Value and the estimated Fair Value of the portfolio will affect the value of tangible fixed assets reported on the balance sheet, and other gains and losses reported in the SoFA. Income and expenditure is not impacted except in respect of profit or loss arising on the sale of a freehold property held at estimated Fair Value.

Other key accounting estimates and judgements used in preparing the financial statements include:

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 59

Notes to the financial statements

3. Donations

Parish contributions

Donations are made by the parishes of the Diocese using an informed generosity system.

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Unrestricted General Fund:
Current year receipts from parishes 15,886 15,585
Previous year receipts from parishes 61 72
Total income 15,947 15,657
----- End of picture text -----

Church Commissioners and Archbishops’ Council

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted Restricted Total funds
General Fund funds 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000
Strategic Development grant – 618 618
Strategic Ministry and Capacity grant – 418 418
Ordinand grant – 414 414
Area Bishops grant 293 – 293
Total 293 1,450 1,743
2021 Unrestricted Restricted Total funds
General Fund funds 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000
Strategic Development grant – 651 651
Ordinand training grant – 500 500
Area Bishops grant 274 – 274
Strategic Ministry grant – 54 54
Total 274 1,205 1,479
----- End of picture text -----

One unrestricted grant was received: from the Church Commissioners, an Area Bishops grant to fund the Area Bishops’ administrative costs.

Three restricted grants were received: from the Church Commissioners, a Strategic Development grant towards the cost of resourcing mission in the Vauxhall, Nine Elms and Battersea area and through fresh expressions across the Diocese, and a grant towards six parish projects from the Archbishops’ Council, a block grant for Ordinand training; and a Strategic Ministry grant to fund additional curacies.

60 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

3. Donations (continued)

Other donations

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Restricted Total funds
funds 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Benefact grant 258 – – 258
Trust for London grant 1,690 – – 1,690
Legacy income – 17 – 17
Other grants and donations 59 – 2 61
Total 2,007 17 2 2,026
2021 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Restricted Total funds
funds 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Benefact grant 258 – – 258
– –
Trust for London grant 3,018 3,018
Legacy income – 128 – 128
Other grants and donations 63 – 493 556
Total 3,339 128 493 3,960
----- End of picture text -----*

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 61

Notes to the financial statements

4. Charitable activities

----- Start of picture text -----
Unrestricted funds Restricted Total funds Total funds
funds 2022 2021
General Designated
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Statutory fees 401 – – 401 445
Reimbursement of stipends 639 – – 639 668
Other income 254 74 5 333 120
Rents receivable 994 – – 994 1,005
Diocesan Retreat House 96 – – 96 41
Total 2,384 74 5 2,463 2,279
----- End of picture text -----

All income from charitable activities was unrestricted in 2021.

5. Investment income

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted Restricted Total funds
General Fund funds 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000
Dividends receivable 760 137 897
Interest receivable 339 – 339
Total 1,099 137 1,236
2021 Unrestricted Restricted Total funds
General Fund funds 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000
Dividends receivable 949 156 1,105
Interest receivable 23 – 23
Total 972 156 1,128
----- End of picture text -----

62 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

6. Gains on disposal of properties

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Endowment Total funds
funds 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Gains on disposal of parsonages – – 2,316 2,316
Gains on disposal of other properties – – 389 389
Total – – 2,705 2,705
2021 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Endowment Total funds
funds 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
– –
Gains on disposal of parsonages 3,606 3,606
Gains on disposal of other properties 902 – – 902
Total 902 – 3,606 4,508
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 63

Notes to the financial statements

7. Charitable activities

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted funds Restricted Endowment Total funds
funds funds 2022
General Designated
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Contributions to Archbishops’ Council:
Training for Ministry 912 – – – 912
National Church responsibilities 550 – – – 550
Retired clergy housing costs 280 – – – 280
1,742 – – – 1,742
Resourcing mission and ministry:
Parish ministry:
Stipends, National Insurance and insurance 10,292 – 146 – 10,438
Pension contributions 2,904 – 45 – 2,949
Reduction in pension scheme deficit (591) – – – (591)
Housing costs 4,183 – – – 4,183
Removal and resettlement grants 612 – – – 612
Other expenses 3,355 – – 7 3,362
20,755 – 191 7 20,953
Support for parish ministry 1,583 15 1,081 – 2,679
Diocesan Retreat House 309 – – – 309
22,647 15 1,272 7 23,941
Total 24,389 15 1,272 7 25,683
----- End of picture text -----

64 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

7. Charitable activities (continued)

----- Start of picture text -----
2021 Unrestricted Restricted Endowment Total funds
General Fund funds funds 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Contributions to Archbishops’ Council:
Training for Ministry 798 – – 798
National Church responsibilities 617 – – 617
Retired clergy housing costs 274 – – 274
– –
1,689 1,689
Resourcing mission and ministry:
Parish ministry:
– –
Stipends, National Insurance and insurance 10,070 10,070
Pension contributions 3,225 – – 3,225
– –
Reduction in pension scheme deficit (594) (594)
– –
Housing costs 3,686 3,686
Removal and resettlement grants 555 – – 555
Other expenses 2,985 – 16 3,001
19,927 – 16 19,943
Support for parish ministry 1,716 814 – 2,530
Diocesan Retreat House 219 – – 219
21,862 814 16 22,692
Total 23,551 814 16 24,381
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 65

Notes to the financial statements

8. Loss on disposal of properties

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Endowment Total funds
funds 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Loss on disposal of properties 224 – – 224
Total 224 – – 224
----- End of picture text -----

9. Analysis of expenditure on charitable activities including allocation of support costs

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Activities Grant Support Total costs
undertaken funding of costs 2022
directly activities
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Charitable activities:
Contributions to Archbishops’ Council – 1,742 – 1,742
Resourcing parish ministry 19,450 1,044 2,611 23,105
Education and social responsibility – 527 – 527
Diocesan Retreat House 309 – – 309
Total 19,759 3,313 2,611 25,683
2021 Activities Grant Support Total costs
undertaken funding of costs 2021
directly activities
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Charitable activities:
– –
Contributions to Archbishops’ Council 1,689 1,689
Resourcing parish ministry 18,901 749 2,300 21,950
Education and social responsibility – 523 – 523
Diocesan Retreat House 219 – – 219
Total 19,120 2,961 2,300 24,381
----- End of picture text -----

66 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

10. Analysis of support costs

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Unrestricted Endowment Total funds
General Fund funds 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000
Central administration 2,445 7 2,452
Governance:
External audit 33 – 33
Registrar and Chancellor 112 – 112
Synodical costs 14 – 14
Total 2,604 7 2,611
2021 Unrestricted Endowment Total funds
General Fund funds 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000
Central administration 2,162 16 2,178
Governance:
External audit 37 – 37
Registrar and Chancellor 79 – 79
Synodical costs 6 – 6
Total 2,284 16 2,300
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 67

Notes to the financial statements

11. Analysis of grants made

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 Individuals Institutions 2022 total
£’000 £’000 £’000
From unrestricted funds for National
Church responsibilities:
Contributions to Archbishops’ Council 1,742 1,742
1,742 1,742
From unrestricted funds:
Southwark Diocesan Board of Education – 355 355
Southwark Diocesan Welcare – 172 172
Southwark Cathedral – 28 28
Parishes for mission – 185 185
Other institutions for mission – 52 52
Individuals for mission 140 – 140
Parishes for incumbent status housing – 13 13
Clergy for settling in/first appointment 218 – 218
Clergy for study/sabbatical 13 – 13
Ordinands in training 260 – 260
631 805 1,436
From restricted funds for various purposes
within resourcing parish ministry:
Mission and growth (Strategic Development Fund) – 120 120
Education and development of women clergy (Gilmore Fund) 15 – 15
Clergy and lay training (Dartmouth House Fund) – – –
15 120 135
Total 646 2,667 3,313
----- End of picture text -----

68 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

11. Analysis of grants made (continued)

----- Start of picture text -----
2021 Individuals Institutions 2021 total
£’000 £’000 £’000
From unrestricted funds for National
Church responsibilities:

Contributions to Archbishops’ Council 1,689 1,689

1,a689 1,689
From unrestricted funds:
Southwark Diocesan Board of Education – 352 352
Southwark Diocesan Welcare – 172 172
Southwark Cathedral – 18 18
Parishes for mission – 119 119
Other institutions for mission 81 81
Individuals for mission 1 – 1
Clergy for settling in/first appointment 200 – 200
Clergy for study/sabbatical 9 – 9
Ordinands in training 231 – 231
441 742 1,183
From restricted funds for various purposes
within resourcing parish ministry:
Mission and growth (Strategic Development Fund) – 83 83
Education and development of women clergy (Gilmore Fund) 6 – 6
6 83 89
Total 447 2,514 2,961
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 69

Notes to the financial statements

12. Staff costs

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Employee costs during the year were as follows:
Wages and salaries 2,595 2,419
National Insurance contributions 316 280
Pension costs 500 448
Termination payments 30 –
3,441 3,147
The average number of persons employed during the year based on full-time equivalents: 2022 2021
Number Number
Administration and financial management 17.0 17.7
Property 8.9 8.6
Vocations, ministry, safeguarding and Diocesan Retreat House 14.8 14
Mission and public policy 17.4 16.8
58.1 57.1
----- End of picture text -----

The numbers of staff whose emoluments (including benefits in kind but excluding pension contributions) amounted to more than £60,000 were as follows:

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
Number Number
£60,001–£70,000 5 3
£70,001–£80,000 1 –
£90,001–£100,000 1 1
Total 7 4
----- End of picture text -----

Remuneration of key management personnel

Key management personnel are deemed to be those having authority and responsibility, delegated to them by the Trustees, for planning, directing and controlling the activities of the Diocese. During 2022 they were:

Diocesan Secretary and Company Secretary Ms Ruth Martin (Lay Canon) Deputy Diocesan Secretary Mrs Jacqueline Pontin Director of Finance and Financial Assets Mr Mark Rhodes Diocesan Surveyor Mr Colin Bushell Director of Human Resources Mr David Loft

70 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

12. Staff costs (continued)

Director of Information Technology Mr Mark Charlton Director of Discipleship, Lay Ministry and Continuing Ministerial Education The Revd Canon Wendy Robins Director of Communications Ms Sophia Jones Director of Vocation and Clergy Formation The Revd Canon Jeremy Clark-King Diocesan Safeguarding Advisor Ms Pamela Chisholm Director of Giving and Parish Funding Mrs Gabby Parikh

Remuneration, employer’s National Insurance and pensions in 2022 for these eleven employees (2021: eight) was £921,115 (2021: £724,602). We reviewed and increased the number of those considered to be key management personnel.

Trustees’ emoluments

No Trustee received any remuneration for services as Trustee. The Trustees received travelling and out-ofpocket expenses totalling £14 (2021: £121) in respect of General and Diocesan Synod duties and other duties as Trustees. The following table gives details of the Trustees who were in receipt of a stipend and/or housing provided by the SDBF during the year.

----- Start of picture text -----
Stipend Housing
The Right Revd Christopher Chessun No No
The Right Revd Dr Richard Cheetham (to 17 October 2022) No Yes
The Right Revd Jonathan Clark (to 21 March 2022) No Yes
The Right Revd Dr Rosemarie Mallett (from 24 June 2022) No Yes
The Right Revd Dr Karowei Dorgu No Yes
The Venerable Moira Astin Yes Yes
The Venerable Alastair Cutting Yes Yes
The Venerable Simon Gates Yes Yes
The Venerable John Kiddle Yes Yes
The Venerable Jonathan Sedgwick (from 13 September 2022) Yes Yes
The Venerable Dr Rosemarie Mallett (to 23 June 2022) Yes Yes
The Venerable Greg Prior (from 4 December 2022) Yes Yes
The Revd Michael John Yes Yes
The Revd Jonathan Macy Yes Yes
The Revd Justine Middlemiss Yes Yes
The Revd Greg Prior (to 3 December 2022) Yes Yes
The Revd Dr Eddie Scrase-Field Yes Yes
The Revd Fiona Weaver Yes Yes
The Revd Lotwina Farodoye Yes Yes
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 71

Notes to the financial statements

12. Staff costs (continued)

The SDBF is responsible for funding, via the Church Commissioners, the stipends of licensed stipendiary clergy in the Diocese, other than Bishops and Cathedral staff. The SDBF is also responsible for the provision of housing for stipendiary clergy in the Diocese excluding the Diocesan Bishop and Cathedral staff.

The SDBF paid an average of 307 (2021: 310) stipendiary clergy as office-holders holding parochial or Diocesan appointments in the Diocese, and the costs were as follows:

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Stipends 9,651 9,293
National Insurance contributions 746 748
Apprenticeship levy 41 41
Pension costs 2,949 3,225
Total 13,387 13,307
----- End of picture text -----

The stipends of the Diocesan Bishop and Area Bishops are paid and funded by the Church Commissioners and are in the range £39,935–£48,972 (2021 range: £37,670–£46,180). The annual rate of stipend, funded by the SDBF, paid to Archdeacons in 2022 was in the range £37,198–£38,633 (2021 range: £36,635–£38,050) and other clergy who were Trustees were paid in the range £25,609–£27,899 (2021 range: £25,630–£27,342).

72 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

13. Analysis of transfers between funds

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2022 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Restricted Endowment Total
funds funds
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Unrestricted:
General 3,530 – – – 3,530
Designated
From the Diocesan Pastoral Account to the General Fund for work – (671) – – (671)
on benefice houses and net to the Diocesan Pastoral Fund from the
purchase and sale of benefice houses
From the Board Property Fund to the General Fund from the sale – (2,655) – – (2,655)
of property
Restricted
From the Strategic Development Fund to the General Fund for the – – (577) – (577)
cost of project work
To the Gilmore Fund from the General Fund following investment – – 8 – 8
revaluation
To the Dartmouth Fund from the General Fund following investment – – 6 – 6
revaluation
Endowments
To the Ministry Fund from the General Fund following investment – – – 20 20
revaluation
To the Diocesan Stipendiary Fund from the General Fund following – – – 14 14
investment revaluation
To the Parsonage Capital Fund net from the purchase and sale of – – – 325 325
benefice houses
Total 3,530 (3,326) (563) 359 –
2021 Unrestricted funds
General Designated Restricted Endowment
funds funds
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
From General Fund to Diocesan Stipendiary Fund for reduction
in CEFPS pension scheme deficit (594) – – 594
From Parsonage Capital Fund to Diocesan Pastoral Account
for the sale of benefice houses – 1,470 – (1,470)
From Board Property Fund to General Fund for sale of property 1,671 (1,671) – –
To Southwark Vision Development Fund from General Fund for project costs (500) 500 – –
Total 577 299 – (876)
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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 73

Notes to the financial statements

14. Tangible fixed assets

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Freehold & Leasehold Furniture & Total
leasehold improvements equipment
properties
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Cost or valuation:
At 1 January 2022 275,990 355 527 276,872
Additions 3,683 – – 3,683
Disposals (6,405) – – (6,405)
Revaluation 2,133 – – 2,133
At 31 December 2022 275,401 355 527 276,283
Depreciation:
At 1 January 2022 – 176 440 616
Charge for the year – 31 40 71
At 31 December 2022 – 207 480 687
Net book value at 31 December 2022 275,401 148 46 275,596
Net book value at 31 December 2021 275,991 179 86 276,256
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Freehold and leasehold properties in the balance sheet are all vested in the SDBF, except for benefice houses which are vested in the incumbent. All properties in the current year and prior years are stated at Fair Value, except for benefice houses which are stated at deemed cost. The carrying value of benefice houses held at deemed cost at the balance sheet date is £143,253,000 (2021: £143,505,000).

All properties other than benefice houses were revalued to Fair Value at 31 December 2015 and are subject to revaluation on a five-year cycle. Properties with a Fair Value of £27,650,000 at 31 December 2022 (2021: £23,976,000) were revalued. The revaluation was carried out by Rapleys LLP in accordance with Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors’ professional standards and valuation practice

statements and resulted in a net increase in the value of these properties, excluding impairments, of £572,000 (2021: £1,921,000). An impairment review was carried out on certain parsonage houses. There was no write down in 2022 (2021: £nil).

To maintain consistency with the SDBF’s accounting policy of measuring properties other than benefice houses at Fair Value, the results of this valuation have been extrapolated across those assets not revalued at the balance sheet date. This has resulted in an additional revaluation gain in the year of £2,133,000 (2021: £9,275,000).

The carrying value of leasehold properties included within freehold and leasehold properties amounts to £2,476,000 (2021: £2,442,000).

74 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

14. Tangible fixed assets (continued)

Certain properties have been purchased with the help of value-linked loans from the Church Commissioners. The properties are revalued to Fair Value annually. On disposal the agreed share of the net sale proceeds will be remitted to the Church Commissioners and the related loan liability extinguished. The value of these properties included

within freehold and leasehold properties amounts to £2,620,000 (2021: £2,620,000). The revaluation gain on these properties amounts to £nil (2021: £130,000 gain) and has been netted off against the matching movement in the linked liability.

15. Fixed assets investments

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At 1 Additions Disposal Realised At 31
January proceeds and December
2022 unrealised 2022
losses
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Unrestricted funds:
Unit trusts and similar funds 2,286 1,000 – (250) 3,036
Restricted funds:
Unit trusts and similar funds 3,126 772 (759) (215) 2,924
Endowment funds:
Unit trusts and similar funds 21,883 3,413 (4,004) (2,178) 19,114
Total 27,295 5,185 (4,763) (2,643) 25,074
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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 75

Notes to the financial statements

16. Debtors

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2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Due within one year:
Loans to parishes 220 239
Loans to others 8 –
Debtor from sale of investments 625 –
Other debtors and prepayments 825 443
1,678 682
Due after more than one year:
Loans to parishes 257 182
Other debtors 3 5
260 187
Total debtors 1,938 869
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17. Creditors: amounts falling due within one year

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2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Bank loan repayment instalments due in one year – 300
Other taxes and social security 102 79
Other creditors and accruals 728 717
Church of England Funded Pension Scheme – 591
Total creditors: amounts falling due within one year 830 1,687
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76 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

18. Creditors: amounts falling due after more than one year

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Loans repayable in instalments due after more than one year:
Commercial loans – 290
CBF loan 1,000 1,000
Church Commissioners’ value-linked loans 2,620 2,620
Total creditors: amounts falling due after more than one year 3,620 3,910
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
The maturity of the above loans may be analysed as follows:
Between two and five years 1,000 1,290
In five years and more 2,620 2,620
3,620 3,910
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The commercial loan comprised a five-year loan repayable in monthly instalments with HSBC UK Bank plc. The loan was repaid during the year.

The CBF loan is a 10-year loan repayable at the end of the term under the Diocesan Loan Scheme. Interest is charged at 0.55% per annum above the CBF Church of England Deposit Fund Rate.

Value-linked loans from the Church Commissioners are repayable on the sale of the property to which they relate. Interest is charged at 4% per annum. On disposal the agreed share of the net sale proceeds will be remitted to the Church Commissioners and the related loan liability extinguished.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 77

Notes to the financial statements

19. Summary of fund movements

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2022 Balances Income Expenditure Transfers Gains and Balances
at 1 losses at 31
January December
2022 2022
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Unrestricted funds:
General 5,843 21,730 (24,613) 3,530 (250) 6,240
5,843 21,730 (24,613) 3,530 (250) 6,240
Designated funds:
Diocesan Pastoral Account 3,806 74 – (671) – 3,209
Board Property Fund 44,743 – – (2,655) 1,087 43,175
Southwark Vision Development Fund 995 17 (15) – – 997
49,544 91 (15) (3,326) 1,087 47,381
Restricted funds:
Strategic Development Fund 367 618 (408) (577) – –
Gilmore Fund 370 20 (17) 8 (30) 351
Dartmouth House Fund 2,994 117 (74) 6 (157) 2,886
Strategic Ministry Fund – 418 (418) – – –
Ordinand Training Fund 69 414 (355) – – 128
Other restricted 519 7 – – (28) 498
4,319 1,594 (1,272) (563) (215) 3,863
Endowment funds:
Ministry Fund 4,008 – – 20 (282) 3,746
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund 102,585 389 (7) 14 (850) 102,131
Parsonage Capital Fund 140,117 2,316 – 325 – 142,758
246,710 2,705 (7) 359 (1,132) 248,635
Total funds 306,416 26,120 (25,907) – (510) 306,119
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78 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

19. Summary of fund movements (continued)

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2021 Balances Income Expenditure Transfers Gains and Balances
at 1 losses at 31
January December
2021 2021
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Unrestricted funds:
General 5,136 23,423 (23,551) 577 258 5,843
5,136 23,423 (23,551) 577 258 5,843
Designated funds:
Diocesan Pastoral Account 2,336 – – 1,470 – 3,806
– –
Board Property Fund 42,506 (1,671) 3,908 44,743
– – – – – –
Multi Academy Trust
Southwark Vision Development Fund 367 128 – 500 – 995
45,209 128 – 299 3,908 49,544
Restricted funds:
Strategic Development Fund – 664 (297) – – 367
– – – – – –
Diocesan Stipend Income
Gilmore Fund 323 16 (6) – 37 370
Dartmouth House Fund 2,594 101 – – 299 2,994
Ordinand Training Fund 26 500 (457) – – 69
Strategic Ministry Grant – 54 (54) – – –
Other restricted – 519 – – – 519
2,943 1,854 (814) – 336 4,319
Endowment funds:
Ministry Fund 3,640 – – – 368 4,008
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund 94,225 – (16) 594 7,782 102,585
– –
Parsonage Capital Fund 137,981 3,606 (1,470) 140,117
235,846 3,606 (16) (876) 8,150 246,710
Total funds 289,134 29,011 (24,381) – 12,652 306,416
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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 79

Notes to the financial statements

20. Summary of assets by fund

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2022 Fixed assets Investments Current Creditors Net
tangible assets assets
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Unrestricted funds:
General 2,815 3,036 4,839 (4,450) 6,240
2,815 3,036 4,839 (4,450) 6,240
Designated funds:
Diocesan Pastoral Account – – 3,209 – 3,209
Board Property Fund 47,352 – (4,177) – 43,175
Southwark Vision Development Fund – – 997 – 997
47,352 – 29 – 47,381
Restricted funds:
Gilmore Fund – 315 36 – 351
Dartmouth House Fund – 2,156 730 – 2,886
Ordinand Training Fund – – 128 – 128
Other Restricted Fund – 453 45 – 498
– 2,924 939 – 3,863
Endowment funds:
Ministry Fund – 2,957 789 – 3,746
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund 80,176 16,157 5,798 – 102,131
Parsonage Capital Fund 145,253 – (2,495) – 142,758
225,429 19,114 4,092 – 248,635
Total funds 275,596 25,074 9,899 (4,450) 306,119
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80 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

20. Summary of assets by fund (continued)

----- Start of picture text -----
2021 Fixed assets Investments Current Creditors Net
tangible assets assets
£’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Unrestricted funds:
General 2,886 2,287 5,676 (5,006) 5,843
2,886 2,287 5,676 (5,006) 5,843
Designated funds:
Diocesan Pastoral Account – – 3,806 – 3,806
– –
Board Property Fund 48,785 (4,042) 44,743
Southwark Vision Development Fund – – 995 – 995
48,785 – 759 – 49,544
Restricted funds:
Strategic Development Fund – – 367 – 367
Gilmore Fund – 339 31 – 370
Dartmouth House Fund – 2,306 688 – 2,994
Ordinand Training Fund – – 69 – 69
Other Restricted Fund – 481 38 – 519
– –
3,126 1,193 4,319
Endowment funds:
Ministry Fund – 3,219 789 – 4,008
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund 81,080 18,663 3,433 (591) 102,585
– –
Parsonage Capital Fund 143,505 (3,388) 140,117
224,585 21,882 834 (591) 246,710
Total funds 276,256 27,295 8,462 (5,597) 306,416
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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 81

Notes to the financial statements

21. Description of funds

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General Fund The fund represents the unrestricted, undesignated fund available for any of the SDBF’s purposes.
Diocesan Pastoral Account This is a designated fund for the purposes defined in the Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011.
It represents capital receipts released following the sale of benefice houses (parsonages) and
redundant churches. To the extent that any remaining funds are not required, or are not likely to
be required, for these purposes then the funds may be applied to any general purpose of the SDBF.
Board Property Fund This fund is a designated fund. It represents the Fair Value of properties held by the SDBF at the
year end.
Southwark Vision This is a designated fund to support Southwark Vision 2017-25 across the Diocese.
Development Fund
Strategic Development Fund This is a restricted fund. It represents grants received from the Church Commissioners and
Archbishops’ Council for specific projects to fund mission and growth across the Diocese.
Gilmore Fund The Isabella Gilmore Fund is a restricted fund for the purpose of the education and development
of licensed, commissioned or ordained women.
Dartmouth House Fund This is a restricted fund for the purpose of facilitating clergy and lay training, retreats or confer-
ences to assist and promote the work of the Church of England in the Diocese of Southwark and
to use the monies to acquire any buildings which may be necessary to forward such purposes,
subject always to the consent in writing of the Bishop of Southwark.
Ordinand Training Fund This is a restricted fund. It represents the block grant received from the Archbishops’ Council to
fund Ordinand training.
Other Restricted Fund This represents other restricted funds held by the Diocese. These include amounts gifted for use
in the Croydon Episcopal Area and to assist the training of ordinands throughout the Diocese.
Ministry Fund This is a permanent endowment fund held under the Endowments and Glebe Measure 1976 from
which the income arising and/or benefit of use of the asset has been passed to the SDBF for the
purpose of supporting clergy stipends within the Diocese. Investment income from the fund is
credited to the General Fund where it is used only to fund clergy stipend payments.
Diocesan Stipendiary Fund This is a permanent endowment fund. It represents the glebe assets of benefices from which the
income arising and/or benefit of use has been passed to the SDBF under the provisions of the
Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011. Investment income from the fund is credited to the General
Fund where it is used only to fund clergy stipend payments.
Parsonage Capital Fund This is an expendable endowment fund. It represents the capital assets relating to benefice houses
(parsonages) but which under the Repairs of Benefice Buildings Measure 1972 are maintained by
the Diocese. Under the Mission and Pastoral Measure 2011, capital receipts released following the
sale of benefice houses are held in the Diocesan Pastoral Account, a designated fund. To the extent
that the funds are not required for future building or improvement works to benefice houses, the
funds may be applied to any general purpose of the SDBF.
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82 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

22. Capital commitments

At 31 December 2022, the SDBF had no capital expenditure commitments authorised but not contracted for (2021: none), and commitments contracted for but not provided for of £27,000 (2021: £30,000).

23. Operating leases

Total commitments under non-cancellable operating leases are as follows:

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Minimum lease payments payable:
Within one year of the balance sheet date 389 205
In the second to fifth years inclusive of the balance sheet date 96 66
Total 485 271
----- End of picture text -----

Total lease rental payments expensed in the year are £588,000 (2021: £512,000).

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Minimum lease payments receivable:
Within one year of the balance sheet date 454 482
In the second to fifth years inclusive of the balance sheet date 358 313
More than five years from the balance sheet date 658 658
Total 1,470 1,453
----- End of picture text -----

24. Members’ liability

The charitable company is a company limited by guarantee, Company Registration Number 236594 (England and Wales). The trustees are the members of the charitable company for company law purposes. In the event of the charitable company being wound up the liability in respect of the guarantee is limited to £1 per member of the charitable company.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 83

Notes to the financial statements

25. Pensions

The SDBF participates in two pension schemes administered by the Church of England Pensions Board: the Church of England Funded Pensions Scheme (CEFPS) for stipendiary clergy and the Church Workers’ Pension Fund (CWPF) for lay staff.

Church of England Funded Pensions Scheme

The SDBF participates in the CEFPS for stipendiary clergy, a defined benefit pension scheme. This scheme is administered by the Church of England Pensions Board, which holds the assets of the schemes separately from those of the Responsible Bodies.

Each participating Responsible Body in the scheme pays contributions at a common contribution rate applied to pensionable stipends.

The scheme is considered to be a multi-employer scheme as described in Section 28 of FRS 102. This means it is not possible to attribute the scheme’s assets and liabilities to each specific Responsible Body, and that contributions are accounted for as if the scheme were a defined contribution scheme. The pensions costs charged to the SoFA in the year are contributions payable towards benefits and expenses accrued in that year (2022: £2,935,000, 2021: £2,631,000), plus the figures highlighted in the table overleaf as being recognised in the SoFA, giving a total charge of £3,526,000 for 2022 (2021: £3,225,000).

Following the 31 December 2018 valuation, a deficit recovery plan was put in place until 31 December 2022 and the deficit recovery contributions (as a percentage of pensionable stipends) were as set out in the table below. An interim reduction to deficit contributions to 3.2% of pensionable stipends was made with effect from 1 April 2022. Following finalisation of the 31 December 2021 valuation, deficit contributions ceased with effect from 1 January 2023, since the Scheme was in surplus.

As at 31 December 2020 and 31 December 2021, the deficit recovery contributions under the recovery plan in force were as set out in the table below. For senior office holders, pensionable stipends are adjusted in the calculations by a multiple, as set out in the Scheme’s rules.

----- Start of picture text -----
January January
2018 to 2021 to
December December
2020 2022
Percentage of pensionable stipends:
Deficit repair contributions 11.9% 7.1%
----- End of picture text -----

A valuation of the scheme is carried out once every three years. The most recent scheme valuation completed was carried out at 31 December 2021. The 2021 valuation revealed a surplus of £560m, based on assets of £2,720m and a funding target of £2,160m, assessed using the following assumptions:

84 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

25. Pensions (continued)

Church of England Funded Pensions Scheme (continued)

Section 28.11A of FRS 102 requires agreed deficit recovery payments to be recognised as a liability. However, as there are no agreed deficit recovery payments from 1 January 2023 onwards, the balance sheet liability as at 31 December 2022 is nil. The movement in the balance sheet liability over 2021 and over 2022 is set out in the table below.

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
Balance sheet liability as at 1 January 591 1,185
Contributions paid (352) (601)
Interest cost (recognised in the SoFA) – 2
Remaining change to the balance sheet liability (recognised in the SoFA) (239) 5
Balance sheet liability as at 31 December – 591
----- End of picture text -----*

*Comprises change in agreed deficit recovery plan, and change in discount rate and inflation assumptions between year-ends.

This liability represents the present value of the deficit contributions agreed as at the accounting date and has been valued using the following assumptions. No assumptions are needed for December 2022 as there are no agreed deficit recovery payments going forward. No price inflation assumption was needed for December 2021 since pensionable stipends for the remainder of the recovery plan were already known.

----- Start of picture text -----
December December December
2022 2021 2020
Discount rate N/A 0.0% pa 0.2% pa
Price inflation N/A N/A 3.1% pa
Increase to total pensionable payroll N/A (1.5%) pa 1.6% pa
----- End of picture text -----

The legal structure of the scheme is such that if another Responsible Body fails, Southwark DBF could become responsible for paying a share of that failed Responsible Body’s pension liabilities.

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 85

Notes to the financial statements

25. Pensions (continued)

Church Workers’ Pension Fund

The SDBF participates in the Pension Builder Scheme section of CWPF for lay staff. CWPF is administered by the Church of England Pensions Board, which holds the CWPF assets separately from those of the Employer and other participating employers.

CWPF has two sections:

  1. the Defined Benefits Scheme

  2. the Pension Builder Scheme, which has two subsections; a. A deferred annuity section known as Pension Builder Classic, and,

  3. b. A cash balance section known as Pension Builder 2014.

Pension Builder Scheme

Both sections of the Pension Builder Scheme are classed as defined benefit schemes.

Pension Builder Classic provides a pension, accumulated from contributions paid and converted into a deferred annuity during employment based on terms set and reviewed by the Church of England Pensions Board from time to time. Discretionary increases may also be added, depending on investment returns and other factors.

Pension Builder 2014 is a cash balance scheme that provides a lump sum which members use to provide benefits at retirement. Pension contributions are recorded in an account for each member. Discretionary bonuses may be added before retirement, depending on investment returns and other factors. The account, plus

any bonuses declared is payable, unreduced, from age 65. There is no sub-division of assets between employers in each section of the Pension Builder Scheme.

The scheme is considered to be a multi-employer scheme as described in Section 28 of FRS 102. This is because it is not possible to attribute the Pension Builder Scheme’s assets and liabilities to specific employers and means that contributions are accounted for as if the scheme were a defined contribution scheme. The pensions costs charged to the SoFA in the year are the contributions payable (2022: £500,000, 2021: £306,000).

A valuation of the Pension Builder Scheme is carried out once every three years. The most recent valuation was carried out as at 31 December 2019. The next valuation is due as at 31 December 2023.

For the Pension Builder Classic section, the valuation revealed a deficit of £4.8m on the ongoing assumptions used. At the most recent annual review, the Board chose to grant a discretionary bonus of 10.1% following improvements in the funding position over 2022. There is no requirement for deficit payments at the current time.

For the Pension Builder 2014 section, the valuation revealed a surplus of £5.5m on the ongoing assumptions used. There is no requirement for deficit payments at the current time.

The legal structure of the scheme is such that if another employer fails, the SDBF could become responsible for paying a share of the failed employer’s pension liabilities.

26. Related party transactions

The SDBF has related party relationships with connected organisations as detailed on page 42 of this annual report. Grants made in the current and previous year to these related parties are disclosed in Note 11 (see pages 68-69) to these accounts.

There are no other related party transactions requiring disclosure (2021: none).

86 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

27. Prior year Statement of Financial Activities

----- Start of picture text -----
2021 Unrestricted funds Restricted Endow- Total funds
funds ment funds 2021
General Designated
Note £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000 £’000
Income and endowments from:
Donations 3
Parish contributions 15,657 – – – 15,657
Archbishops’ Council 274 – 1,205 – 1,479
Other donations 3,339 128 493 – 3,960
Charitable activities 4 2,279 – – – 2,279
Investments 5 972 – 156 – 1,128
Net gains on disposal of properties 6 902 – – 3,606 4,508
Total 23,423 128 1,854 3,606 29,011
Expenditure on:
Charitable activities 8 23,551 – 814 16 24,381
Total 23,551 – 814 16 24,381
Net (expenditure)/income
before investment gains/(losses) (128) 128 1,040 3,590 4,630
Net gains on investments 15 258 – 336 2,913 3,507
Net income 130 128 1,376 6,503 8,137
Transfers between funds 13 577 299 – (876) –
– –
Other recognised gains: 3,908 5,237 9,145
Revaluation of tangible fixed assets
Net movement in funds 707 4,335 1,376 10,864 17,282
Total funds brought forward 5,136 45,209 2,943 235,846 289,134
Total funds carried forward 20 5,843 49,544 4,319 246,710 306,416
----- End of picture text -----

The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 87

Notes to the financial statements

28. Funds held as Diocesan Authority

The SDBF acts as Diocesan Authority or Custodian Trustee for many trust funds by virtue of the Parochial Church Councils (Powers) Measure 1956, as amended, and the Incumbents and Churchwardens (Trusts) Measure 1964

where the managing trustees are PCCs and others. Assets held as Diocesan Authority are not controlled by the SDBF and are not included in these financial statements. They are summarised as follows:

----- Start of picture text -----
2022 2021
£’000 £’000
CBF Church of England Investment Fund 9,529 10,938
M&G Equities Investment Fund for Charities 1,680 1,776
CBF Church of England Global Equity Income Fund 898 1,061
Other CBF Church of England funds 848 1,122
Other Common Investment and OEIC holdings 980 983
Direct holdings in UK equities 286 258
CBF Church of England Deposit Fund 1,694 1,717
Cash 10 4
Total assets held as Diocesan Authority 15,925 17,859
----- End of picture text -----

29. Subsidiary undertaking

The SDBF is the beneficial owner of a subsidiary undertaking, Southwark DBF Trading, a company limited by guarantee, which is registered in England and supplies property and administrative services to the SDBF. The

company did not trade during the current or prior year and had no assets or liabilities at the Balance Sheet date (2021: £nil).

88 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022

Glossary of terms

----- Start of picture text -----
Acronym Meaning
ADOs Area Directors of Ordinands
aSa Average Sunday Attendance
BAP Bishops’ Advisory Panel
CAH Church at Home
CBF Central Board of Finance
CEFPS Church of England Funded Pensions Scheme
CEMES Church of England Ministry Experience
Scheme
CTBI Churches Together in Britain and Ireland
CWPF Church Workers’ Pension Fund
CYP Children and young people
DAC Diocesan Advisory Committee
DBF Diocesan Board of Finance
DBS Disclosure and Barring Service
DCT Diocesan Council of Trustees
DIP Diocesan Investment Programme
DMPC Diocesan Mission and Pastoral Committee
DSAP Diocesan Safeguarding Advisory Panel
DST Diocesan Safeguarding Team
FRC Financial Reporting Council
FRS Financial Reporting Standard
fxC Fresh Expression of Church
GDPR General Data Protection Regulation
GMH Global Majority Heritage
HR Human resources
IICSA Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse
IME2 Initial Ministerial Education Phase 2. The four
years of curacy also referred to as IME 4-6.
ISAs (UK) International Standards on Auditing (UK)
JPIC Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation
LLF Living in Love and Faith
LL&LMAG Lay Leadership & Lay Ministry Advisory
Group
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Acronym Meaning
MAP Mission Action Plan
MAT Multi Academy Trust
MFA Multi-factor Authentication
PCC Parochial Church Council
PCR2 Past Cases Review 2
PFC Policy and Finance Committee
PGS Parish Giving Scheme
PSF Parish Support Fund
RJC Racial Justice Committee
SDBE Southwark Diocesan Board of Education
SDBF South London Church Fund & Southwark
Diocesan Board of Finance
SDF Strategic Development Funding
SDP Shared Discernment Process
SIR Serious Incident Reporting
SMT Senior Management Team
SoFA Statement of Financial Activities
SORP Statement of Recommended Practice
for Charities
SPA Southwark Pastoral Auxiliary
SVDF Southwark Vision Development Fund
TUTV Turning up the Volume
UKME United Kingdom Minority Ethnic
uSa Usual Sunday Attendance
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The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance[|] Annual Report 2022 89

Notes 90 The South London Church Fund & Southwark Diocesan Board of Finance l Annual Report 2022

Printed on carbon-captured paper accredited as FSC[®] Mix Credit.

Hearts on Fire Loving G( Walking with Jesus Led by Lhe Spirit The Diocese of The DIDEe5e of SDUth¥rfark Southwark