'Government gets a good deal from charities'
Body Positive Dorset supports sufferers of HIV and AIDs. Executive director Barbara Heffernan says the charity only attracts about two and a half thousand pounds a year in donations. She thinks it's because HIV is no longer a highly publicised cause like it used to be. The charity relies heavily on the government instead, but their funding has been cut.
A green paper released in May 2008 by the Conservative party saw them promising to give charities more money in the form of grants, with less contractual restrictions to provide services at a community level.
Kyriaki Karadelis paid a visit to Body Positive and also met up with one of their patrons, Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood.
Providing public services: what the donors don't know
Charities are increasingly being financed by the Government in return for providing public services
Giving money for nothing is 'old fashioned'
AUDIO: If it's not obvious to donors how their money will be spent, you can't expect them to give you any
The Donkey Sanctuary: seeing is believing
VIDEO: The Donkey Sanctuary got over £20m in donations in 2007. Kyriaki Karadelis went to Devon to find out why
The man who keeps 'chuggers' in check
Kyriaki Karadelis catches up with Mick Aldridge from the association that regulates face to face fundraisingNews
It’s early days yet, but self-regulation is working for fundraising charities, a spokesperson from the Fundraising Standards Board (FRSB) has said.
Charities that get a lot of money from bequests will feel the blow of falling house prices, according to the director of a legacy market research project.
Donations to religious organisations could increase if they lose their charitable status, according to a group whose members support ethical living without religion.
The umbrella organisation representing 13 UK aid agencies has warned it’s too early to say if the credit crunch has impacted on charity donations.