SajeImpact to support the Dying Well APPG

SajeImpact to support the Dying Well APPG

Whilst SajeImpact is best known in the field of sport and physical activity it has never been the sole purpose of the team of Andy & Sarah. The purpose has always been about having a wider positive Impact on wider society.

Given the wide experience Andy gained in Parliament it is important to deal with a wide range of issues to create a just and healthy society.

The All Party Parliamentary Group for Dying Well promotes access to excellent care at end of life and stands against the legalisation of doctor assisted suicide in the UK.

In recent years there have been huge strides in palliative medicine. It is now possible to effectively manage pain as people die. We believe the future is one of high-quality, universally available palliative care for all – not the requirement to decide whether or not to take lethal drugs to end your life early.

SajeImpact Post Covid Plans

SajeImpact Post Covid Plans

As we get nearer the end of #lockdown restrictions across the sectors where SajeImpact work Director Andy Reed has set out plans for the next phase of business.

Andy said

“It has been my plan to step back from the business in 2020-21 but Covid meant I have stayed around a little longer than planned. I have been keen to help the team we have built during these exceptional times and we have manged like a lot of businesses to ‘scrape through’. I won’t pretend it has been easy and if i had not been at this stage of my life - and that of the Business I am not sure we would have been able to carry on.

However, as the number of enquiries and diversified work continues to grow I am confident the Team will step up and be looking after our clients well into this next decade! I will still have a role to play, but increasingly in the background as I help develop the people and organisations I work with.

Sport for Development Coalition welcomes survey showing increased public support for community activity

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Sport for Development Coalition welcomes survey showing increased public support for community activity

Findings from a survey conducted by the National Lottery Community Fund show that seven in 10 people in the UK (69%) feel like they are part of their local community, with over a third (35%) saying that the pandemic has made them feel even more so.

Most importantly three in 10 people (30%) report that they plan to become more involved in their local community this year because of Covid-19.

2020 also appears to have opened people’s eyes to the great work being done by many within their communities with a majority (65%) saying that local community groups and projects, volunteers and charities deserve more recognition. And when thinking of what they most want for their local community in 2021, just over a third (34%) want to see support for community projects and charities.

The National Lottery Community Fund is the largest funder of community activity in the UK. Its survey of over 7,000 UK adults across the UK asked how people are feeling about their community and their ambitions for their local area in the year ahead.

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Plans for 2021 for Saje Impact

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Plans for 2021 for Saje Impact

As we finally get into the home straight of 2020 we know it has been a tough year for so many - including a number of our clients. We have seen too many good people leave the organisations we work with.

We are changing too. A longer blog will probably follow but I was always going to slow down in 2020 as I hit 55, but the pathway has been slightly altered by another global crisis.

I won’t use the word retired but I am entering a new season and working differently as you can see.

Looking forward to catching up and renewing friendships in a post pandemic environment

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Reed Welcomes Jason Douglass as new Chair of SAPCA

Reed Welcomes Jason Douglass as new Chair of SAPCA

Director Andy Reed ended his term as Chair of SAPCA today and welcomed the appointment of Jason Douglass

“We’re delighted to announce that Jason Douglass, Group Director of S&C Slatter, has been appointed the new chair of SAPCA for a two-year term. Jason, who was elected to the role at today’s Annual General Meeting (15 December), will replace the outgoing Andy Reed OBE. During the AGM we also re-elected Garry Martin from Replay Maintenance Ltd and elected Alex Talton from Halliday Lighting as vice chairs.

State of the Charity Sector 2020

State of the Charity Sector 2020

Charities are in crisis. Beyond the immediate funding shortfall, the economic and social changes brought about by Covid-19 will create a raft of new challenges that charity leaders will have to grapple with, from big questions around governance and longer-term funding models, to how to equip themselves to continue delivering services. But the crisis also gives us great opportunities. We don’t want or need to go back to all the ways we did things in the past. How radical we are will depend upon our appetite for bold change.

Achieving Levelling-Up: The Structures and Processes Needed

Achieving Levelling-Up: The Structures and Processes Needed

‘Levelling-up’ is one of this Government’s flagship ambitions. This report, Achieving Levelling-Up, focuses on the structures and processes needed to achieve it, finding that there is zero chance of achieving it without significant changes to the current system at a national and local level.

The report, conducted as part of the LIPSIT (Local Institutions, Productivity, Sustainability and Inclusivity Trade-offs) project by Demos and the Universities of Birmingham, Cardiff, Surrey and Warwick, identifies a number of problems with the current system for managing local economic policy, and suggests a new framework in which levelling-up should be possible.

Progress for #ME Stop GET Campaign as NICE recommend changes to Guidelines

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Progress for #ME Stop GET Campaign as NICE recommend changes to Guidelines

After 13 years of recommending graded exercise therapy (GET) to people with Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME), a new draft guideline on ME/CFS from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) advises against “any programme based on fixed incremental increases in physical activity or exercise, for example graded exercise therapy”.

#MEAction UK spokesperson, Sian Leary, who has ME herself, said: “A national institution recognising there is no treatment or cure for ME represents a paradigm shift in the UK. This guideline is an improvement, but also highlights just how far we have to go. Removing graded exercise therapy from the guideline should end the institutional harm of people with ME, and work to ensure those at risk of developing ME after having Covid-19 are not made worse. Now, health professionals must do the crucial work of providing appropriate care for people with ME, and research funders must set about expediting research into this devastating disease.”

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Loughborough Town Deal - £32 million bid is submitted to transform Loughborough –

Loughborough Town Deal - £32 million bid is submitted to transform Loughborough –

An ambitious £32 million bid to transform Loughborough has been submitted to Government.

The Loughborough Town Deal is an exciting, once-in-a-generation opportunity to bring significant social and economic improvements for residents, communities and local businesses.

A Town Investment Plan outlining a range of projects has been drawn up that will seek to improve skills and boost job prospects, redefine the town centre to ensure it remains well-used and vibrant, improve the local environment and showcase the town’s heritage.

Backing the case for #SportRecovery funding

Backing the case for #SportRecovery funding

The UK’s sport and physical activity sector has joined forces to launch a new campaign called Save Our Sports, urging the Government to save grassroots sport, fitness and leisure facilities from permanent closure due to COVID-19.

Leaders from more than 150 bodies wrote to the Prime Minister in September asking him to provide ringfenced funding for the recovery of the sport and activity sector – or risk fuelling physical inactivity and related illnesses for a generation. There has so far been total inaction from the Government on this issue and neither the Prime Minister, nor any of his Cabinet, have as yet responded to this letter.

The sport and physical activity sector request replicates that already provided to the culture and arts sector, which faces many of the same challenges, and is already benefiting from a sizeable rescue fund of £1.57bn as well as a VAT reduction to 5%, whilst at the same time being permitted to stage socially distanced performing arts events with audiences at both indoor and outdoor venues.

The Savanta ComRes COVID-19 tracker shows that the public now feel that places of leisure are the part of our economy least supported by government, below that of the self-employed, small businesses and the NHS.

Using the campaign hashtag #SaveOurSports, the group requests a support package which:

  • Creates a Sports Recovery Fund to ensure that COVID-19 doesn’t lead to a lost generation of sport and activity

  • Extends the VAT reduction that has been applied to the culture and hospitality sectors to the sport and physical activity sector

  • Maximise access, in a safe way, to sport and physical activity during any local lockdowns or additional national restrictions

This request comes off the back of enforced closures of gyms and leisure centres as part of the Tier 3 restrictions which came into place in Liverpool on Wednesday morning. The restrictions on these facilities ignores the scientific data evidencing their safe operations and has been directly challenged by both Liverpool Mayor, Joe Anderson, and Metro Mayor of the Liverpool Region, Steve Rotherham. The sector is now considering further options to reverse this decision, including taking appropriate legal action.

The Tier 2 and 3 restrictions announced by Government also limit opportunities to participate in adult indoor sporting activity to within a single household/bubble, despite the strict health protocols that indoor sports operators have put in place to ensure that they are COVID-secure. This will have a further financial impact for indoor sport and leisure facilities in England, as well as on the health and wellbeing of those who cannot take part in these sports outdoors in the winter months.

Whilst restrictions have been put in place on indoor group exercise in Scotland and Northern Ireland through their stricter guidelines, gyms and leisure centres remain open for individual users.

Last month, data reported by ukactive from more than 1,500 community sport and leisure facilities, accounting for more than 22 million public visits, showed just 78 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among customers in England (a rate of 0.34 cases per 100,000 visits).

Research from Sheffield Hallam and Sport England shows that sports clubs and public leisure facilities contribute more than £72bn of social value annually across England and play a critical role in supporting rehabilitation from many conditions such as cancer, heart disease, mental health issues and COVID-19.

The Sports Recovery Fund would help prevent the closure of facilities which form the bedrock of communities across the country which have a disproportionately greater impact on people from lower income backgrounds, BAME, and disability groups. Without financial support, nearly half of public leisure facilities face risk of permanent closure by Christmas.