Issue - meetings

Councillors' Pride Fund 2024/25: Helping to Protect, Care and Invest to Create a Better Borough

Meeting: 04/12/2025 - Cabinet (Item 35)

35 Councillors' Pride Fund 2024/25: Helping to Protect, Care and Invest to Create a Better Borough pdf icon PDF 1 MB

To receive a report on the Councillors' Pride Fund 2024/25: Helping to Protect, Care and Invest to Create a Better Borough.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Councillor Paul Davis, Cabinet Member for Communities and Civic Pride, presented a report, which updated Cabinet on the impact of the Councillors’ Pride Fund allocated during the financial year 2024/25.

 

The report outlined the incredible impact the Councillors’ Pride Fund had had across the borough’s communities during 2024 - 25.  The fund continued to make a real difference where it mattered most, in the heart of the borough’s communities and neighbourhoods. The report showed the full £270,000 budget allocated (£5,000 per Councillor) to support local projects had been spent and, that a further £145,000 had been secured in matched funding, meaning that a further 53p for every pound spent had added value and impact to those projects.

 

Since 2011, the Council had invested over £2.2m in such schemes and investing in the borough’s communities was a key part of the Council's aim to protect, care and invest to create a better borough.

 

The report was full of inspiring examples which reflected the Council's priorities and some of these successes were highlighted, which included children, young people and adults having been supported to live well via trips to London and Stratford-upon-Avon for residents in Woodside, Madeley and Sutton Hill and Lawley.  The scheme had supported the vibrant youth art project, which had built community pride and brought the Sambrook Centre to life with the help from local young people and a boxing programme to engage females had built confidence.  An anti-vaping workshop had engaged over 800 students from multiple wards using an interactive theatre to explore peer pressure and health risks; a warm space in Priorslee had offered comfort in winter, and social clubs in Donnington had managed to keep people connected.

 

The scheme ensured that a thriving economy was championed through support to celebrate community and heritage with events in Malinslee and Dawley Bank, Lawley, Ironbridge Gorge and Priorslee; a market in Donnington, and heritage projects such as the reopening of Lawley Station in Horsehay and Lightmoor and supporting the move to create a new museum in Newport North. 

 

Neighbourhoods had been invested to make them great places to live by improving play areas in Ironbridge Gorge, Muxton and Newport East, with a new community garden in Hadley and in Leegomery, nature-based artwork on the bus stops in The Nedge, and bulb planting in neighbourhoods and parks such as in Newport West.

 

Councillor pride applications had also ensured that the borough’s natural environment was protected, and the Council continued to take a leading role in tackling climate emergency through the introduction of a bug hotel in Oakengates and Ketley Bank, an orchard in Haygate and Park, climate training in Newport North and litter-picking kits for a school in Lawley. Community-focused, efficient, effective and quality services had been supported, such as road safety schemes in Church Aston and Lilleshall and in Ketley; defibrillators in Donnington, Priorslee and Ironbridge Gorge; improved lighting in Wrockwardine Wood and Trench and Oakengates and new noticeboards to help keep residents informed in Shawbirch, Dothill and  ...  view the full minutes text for item 35