Community funding scheme faces freeze
War memorial upkeep and lunches for the elderly are among the local schemes that could have their funding scrapped in Derbyshire, amid a planned anti-waste drive from the new Reform UK administration.
The Community Leadership Scheme enables individual councillors to access funding for projects that benefit the local area.
It is understood a council officer confirmed the scheme was on hold in an email to a councillor who was seeking to access the funding.
Reform Derbyshire spokesperson Stephen Reed told the BBC that the party were committed to "reviewing everything".
He added: "We know how vital these grants are to the community and they are an important part [of] supporting vital services."
Reform UK has pledged to carry out audits of the local council budgets it will soon control after winning several councils in the local elections, in an attempt to combat wasteful spending.
The scheme currently costs Derbyshire County Council about £120,000 each year.
However, it is among the areas whose funding is facing uncertainty as the authority's new Reform leaders assess where money can be saved on the council's books.
The leader of Derbyshire Conservatives, Alex Dale, said the scheme was "a lifeline for countless grass roots projects".
"Putting this scheme under review is worrying and suggests Reform are clearly unaware of the positive impact it's had on Derbyshire communities."
The Conservatives defended their decision to halve funding for the scheme in the past as "a responsible move to reduce council costs", adding that "it was preserved due to its direct and tangible benefits to local people."
A British Legion branch in the High Peak area received £4,880 from the fund to carry out specialist essential repairs to a war memorial in Chapel-en-le-Frith's market place, which is central to annual commemoration events.
The remainder of the cost is being covered by supporters of the legion.
Jason Adshead, a local parish councillor, said paying for the costly repairs would not have been possible without the fund.
"It's a major part of our town... it's important we keep these monuments in tip top condition. It's the very least we can do.
"I would ask [Reform] to think long and hard before they make any drastic decisions."
The Friends of Dronfield group have received funding from the scheme for the past few years, which is used to host Christmas lunches for roughly 40 local elderly residents to combat loneliness during the festive period.
They cost about £900 to run, half of which has been funded by the scheme.
David Goater, who organises the events, said groups like his would struggle without the funding.
"The community is very important. I know that funds are tight, but there are a lot of people out there doing good things. We should be celebrating that."
Reform UK will take control of the council on 21 May after winning 42 seats on the authority in the local elections.
Derbyshire County Council were approached for comment.
Follow BBC Derby on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210.
Reform takes control of Derbyshire County Council
Derbyshire County Council
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
North Korea internet hit by a major outage, analyst says
SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korea's internet is experiencing a major outage on Saturday, said a UK-based researcher, adding that the cause may be may be internal rather than a cyberattack. North Korea's main news web sites and its Foreign Ministry internet site were inaccessible on Saturday morning, according to checks by Reuters. "A major outage is currently occurring on North Korea's internet - affecting all routes whether they come in via China or Russia," said Junade Ali, a U.K.-based researcher who monitors the North Korean internet. North Korea's entire internet infrastructure is not showing up on systems that can monitor internet activities, he said. "Hard to say if this is intentional or accidental - but seems like this is internal rather than an attack," he said. Officials at South Korea's Police cyber terror response centre which monitors North Korea's cyber activities could not be reached for comment.


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
US-China Future, Cheap Gas, UK Losing Millionaires, Investing in Big Law
This week, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers and Hoover Institution's Niall Ferguson debate US and China's "hostile codependence." And, as President Trump touts lower gasoline prices, some experts explain why it's concerning. Plus, more millionaires in the UK are packing their bags for Italy, but will it be for good? Later, how will private equity change Big Law? (Source: Bloomberg)
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Reform UK struggles to find friends to share council power
Reform UK's success in the recent local elections has propelled many councillors with limited or no political experience into council chambers across England. While Reform UK's rise was the big story of those elections, almost half of the councils up for grabs were not won outright by any single party. That means many of those newbie councillors are now navigating so-called hung councils, where parties with little in common often work together to get the business of local government done. But so far, it hasn't panned out that way for Reform UK, which isn't involved in any formal coalitions, pacts or deals in areas where there were local elections this year. This was despite rampant speculation about Reform-Conservative coalitions ahead of the polls, with party leaders Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage not ruling out council deals. So, what's going on? In some places - Warwickshire, Worcestershire and Leicestershire - Reform UK has enough councillors to form minority administrations and is attempting to govern alone. In other areas where coalitions were possible, Reform UK has either shunned co-operation or vice versa. Where Reform UK has explored potential partnerships locally, its policies have been viewed with suspicion by the established parties. In Cornwall, the Liberal Democrats, Labour and the Conservatives refused to work with Reform UK, even though it was the biggest party and had won the most seats. Instead, the Lib Dems teamed up with independent councillors to run Cornwall Council as a minority administration. That infuriated Reform UK's group leader in Cornwall, Rob Parsonage, who branded the coalition deal "undemocratic" and "a total stitch-up". Did other parties contrive to exclude Reform UK? The newly minted Lib Dem council leader, Leigh Frost, does not think so. "The reality is our core values at heart of it just stand for two very different things and it makes working together incompatible," Frost told the BBC. "And then Reform was given two weeks to try to form an administration and chose not to." Frost said Reform UK's Cornwall candidates mainly campaigned on immigration. This was echoed in conversations with other local party leaders across the country. The BBC was told Reform's candidates had little local policy to offer and mostly focused on national issues, such as stopping small boats crossing the English Channel. Slashing "wasteful spending" by councils, like Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (Doge) in the US, was also a common campaign theme. In Worcestershire, where Reform won the most seats but fell short of a majority, the party's supposed lack of local policy was a major sticking point for the Conservatives. "They haven't got a local prospectus and that was part of the problem," said Adam Kent, Tory group leader on Worcestershire County Council. "They didn't stand on any local issues. It was on national politics. How can you go into coalition with somebody if you don't even know what they stand for?" Joanne Monk, the Reform UK council leader in the county, said she only had "a brief couple of chats" with other party leaders but was uncompromising on coalitions. "I'm damned sure we're not on the same wavelength," she said. She followed the lead of Farage, who ruled out formal coalitions at council level but said "in the interests of local people we'll do deals", in comments ahead of the local elections. In Worcestershire, Reform UK's minority administration may need to do deals to pass key decisions and avoid other parties banding together to veto their plans. Recognising this, she acknowledged other parties were "going to have to work with us at some point". In Northumberland, the Conservatives retained their position as the largest party and gave the impression they were willing to entertain coalition talks with Reform UK, which gained 23 seats. "I said I would work with anyone and my door is open," said Conservative council leader Glen Sanderson. "But Reform the next day put out a press release saying the price for working with the Conservatives would be extremely high. So on that basis, I assumed that was the door closed on me." No talks were held and the Conservatives formed a minority administration. Weeks had passed after the local elections before Mark Peart was voted in as Reform UK's local group leader in the county. As a result, he wasn't in a position to talk to anybody. "Everything had already been agreed," Peart said. "It was too late." Reform UK sources admitted the party was caught a bit flat-footed here and elsewhere as many of its new councillors got the grips with their new jobs in the weeks following the local elections. A support network for those councillors, in the form of training sessions and a local branch system, is being developed by the party. But this week Zia Yusuf, one of the key architects behind that professionalisation drive and the Doge cost-cutting initiative, resigned as party chairman, leaving a gap in the party's leadership. Reform UK's deputy leader, Richard Tice, said the party's success at the local elections "was partly because of the significant efforts and improvements to the infrastructure of the party" spearheaded by Yusuf. Though Yusuf is gone, the party has considerably strengthened its foundations at local level, after gaining 677 new councillors and two mayors. A Reform UK source said party bosses will be keeping an eye out for stand-out councillors who could go on to become parliamentary candidates before the general election. They said in areas where Reform UK runs councils as a minority administration, it's going to take some compromise with other parties and independents to pass budgets and key policies. In the messy world of town halls and council chambers, that could be a tough apprenticeship. Reform UK prepares for real power on a council it now dominates Sir John Curtice: The map that shows Reform's triumph was much more than a protest vote Reform UK makes big gains in English local elections