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UK: First grant anl loan for community-owned shops
The first grant and loan from the UK programme to halt the decline in village shops in the UK has been made to the tiny village of West Meon, Hampshire
The villagers are using the money to purchase premises for a local shop and post office after the village?s former shop and post office were closed down. The West Meon Stores, like many community-owned shops, will ensure that local residents have access to vital amenities and all profits from the business will also be ploughed back into the shop, or used to create other community benefits.
During recent years many shops in small villages in the UK have closed. There are now many villages in the UK without a single shop. The exception to this trend is where members of the local community have come together to run the local shop themselves.
As reported by VITA Europe in August, the Village Retail Shop Association (ViRSA), in partnership with the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation and Co-operative and Community Finance, have launched a new programme which will provide £2m (2.8m euro) of start-up funding to new community-owned shops over the next three years.
The new programme will award grants to villages of at least 200 people which are planning to set up a community-owned shop. Start-up packages will comprise a grant of up to £20,000, complemented by a similar contribution from the community and a loan of at least the same amount from Co-operative and Community Finance. A network of ViRSA community retail advisers will be on hand to guide residents through everything from finding premises to preparing a business plan and raising finance.
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