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Notting Hill carnival to go ahead this year after £1m funding boost

Notting Hill carnival to go ahead this year after £1m funding boost

The Guardian09-07-2025
Notting Hill carnival will go ahead this year after almost £1 of funding was raised to provide extra safety and infrastructure measures.
City Hall, Kensington and Chelsea council and Westminster city council provided £958,000 for the event following pleas from organisers for support after a review recommended several changes to make the event safe.
Chair of Notting Hill Carnival Ltd, Ian Comfort, who had appealed to culture secretary Lisa Nandy for additional support, said the event's future was secured only a few weeks before it was due to take place.
'Although this support comes just weeks before the event, it is a much-needed and welcome commitment,' he said. 'This support reinforces the importance of Notting Hill carnival as a cultural institution – central to London's identity and to the nation's creative and economic life.'
In June, it emerged that the annual celebration could be in jeopardy without 'urgent funding' from the government, according to a leaked letter from its organisers.
It followed a review of the festival, which identified 'critical public safety concerns' that needed additional funding to address, the letter said.
Each year about 7,000 police are deployed, and figures released in 2023 put the cost of policing the event at £11.7m.
The independent safety review, whose findings and recommendations have not been made public, was commissioned by the carnival's organisers and paid for at a cost of £100,000 by the Greater London Authority, Kensington and Chelsea council and Westminster city council.
Notting Hill carnival was established in its current form in 1966 and sees 2 million revellers fill the streets of west London each August bank holiday weekend.
It is the biggest festival of its kind in Europe and is an annual celebration of Black British culture that brings in people from around the globe, featuring parades, sound systems and mas bands.
Comfort said that, although Arts Council England provides some funding to organisations involved in carnival, 'a major gap remains'.
He added: 'The essential operational funding required to ensure participants can perform and engage safely has historically not been provided directly by either Arts Council England or central government. This is despite carnival's significant cultural importance and its substantial contribution to the UK economy.'
Deputy leader of Kensington and Chelsea council, Kim Taylor-Smith, said that because of the £80m budget gap the council is facing, the additional funding it provided would be for 'this year only'.
The mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: 'The event burst on to our streets nearly six decades ago and has grown to become one of the world's biggest street festivals, generating almost £400m for our economy. This incredible growth has led to the need for a number of safety measures to be introduced, as identified in an independent review earlier this year.'
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