
York Inspirational Kids charity facing uncertain future due to funding cuts
"We are in a situation where finances have been cut, there isn't enough money going into local authorities to help support, there isn't enough money within charities, so the criteria for funding is getting tighter and tighter and tighter."The charity supports a wide range of young people, from children to young adults, all of whom have a disability and/or special educational need.The post-16 group is focused on developing social skills and independence in a safe environment, with staff on hand to help.The young people play cards, table football and air hockey - and handle the running of their own tuck shop.A recent trip to the Houses of Parliament to see democracy in action was one of the supervised excursions provided by the charity, along with trips to the cinema and tenpin bowling."Instead of roaming down the streets and getting into trouble, I can come here and enjoy myself," says Kai Embleton, 20.
"It's the social high point of her week," says Sarah Smith of her daughter Eleanor, 23. "I don't know what we would do without it. It's not just for the kids, it's for the mums and dads as well, so we can meet up and discuss what's going on in their lives."Tanya Berasnevich says the experiences her daughter Masha takes part in help boost her confidence and social skills."It's the highlight of her week, she really loves it. She feels safe and relaxed. "She was very shy but then she started coming out of her shell and joining activities and now she talks a lot at home after the session."The charity receives some funding from the City of York Council and some from the National Lottery, but has to raise the rest itself.
"All the funding we try to go for, there's a lot of competition," says Ms Thompson."We are out and about all the time, bucket collecting in supermarkets, we do coffee mornings and all kinds of fundraising, as much as we can, but we're only a really small organisation."Our young people speak for themselves, they get so much out of it and it would be absolutely awful to have to start making cuts."City of York Council's Maxine Squire says reduced public sector budgets and the increasing costs of support services were increasing pressure on the voluntary sector across the country.She told the BBC that the council continues to support York Inspirational Kids "both financially and in developing a sustainable operating model for the future."The Treasury has been approached for comment.
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The Independent
17 minutes ago
- The Independent
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Times
23 minutes ago
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'It's always difficult because it's so alien, you know, a working-class kid, virtually an orphan, to come into a situation like this. And that's why theatre is so important to me, because it's family. It really is family. And I've always found that it's family. Sometimes it's not a good family and sometimes it reflects what all families go through, but it's still family as far as I'm concerned.' On arriving that day he witnessed a fistfight between two actors, one of whom was Nicol Williamson, one of the greatest performers of his day. 'The air,' he writes in his delightful memoir, Putting the Rabbit in the Hat, 'was blue'. Seeing the young Cox's horror, the actor Gawn Grainger (Zoë Wanamaker's husband, who died only this May) assured him the pair 'were just a little overexcited after a night on the bevy'. I compare his nonchalance to last year when Cox was reported to Equity for losing his temper during rehearsals for a production of A Long Day's Journey Into Night. 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When you've lost your parents — and at that age — you're incredibly free. There's nobody telling you what to do or what to be or where to go. So the world is your oyster in a way that you didn't expect it to be your oyster. So you pursue that, which led me to the theatre.' • Brian Cox: 'I woke up stark naked holding half of my tooth' Early on he found a father figure in the actor Fulton MacKay (unjustly now mainly remembered for Ronnie Barker's sitcom Porridge), who warned him not to worry about being a star and concentrate on being a good actor. He tells me he is not sure he did want to be a star but it was sound advice anyway. Cox went on to play many of the great Shakespearean roles, including Lear and Titus Andronicus, and enjoyed later success in Hollywood, often portraying villains. Yet in his seventies, thanks to Succession, he did become a supernova of a star. Rare is the day someone does not ask him to tell them, in full Logan Roy, to 'f*** off'. 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The Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Sun
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