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30th East Belfast Scout Group

  • Status

    Received: on time

  • Income

    £58.5K

  • Spending

    £56.1K

  • Charity no. 103844
  • Date registered. 17/09/2015

Public benefits

The benefit that flows from our purpose is that young people are empowered to make a positive contribution to society through being engaged and supported in their personal development including physically, intellectually, socially and spiritually. This benefit is demonstrated through scouting making a positive impact in our communities; preparing

young people to be active citizens, embracing and contributing to social change; being as diverse as the communities in which we operate; these are evidenced by feedback from our beneficiaries and the wider community. There is no harm arising from our purposes. Scouting operates within a framework of safety to enable young people to take part in adventurous activities safely. Scouting's beneficiaries are children and young people. The only private benefit from this purpose is that adult volunteers are trained to deliver the programme but this is incidental and necessary because it is needed to operate in today's society working with young people.

What your organisation does

Scouting actively engages and supports young people in their personal development, empowering them to make a positive contribution to society.

The charity’s classifications

  • The advancement of education
  • The advancement of religion
  • The advancement of health or the saving of lives
  • The advancement of citizenship or community development
  • The advancement of amateur sport
  • The advancement of environmental protection or improvement

Who the charity helps

  • Children (5-13 year olds)
  • Youth (14-25 year olds)

How the charity works

  • Community development
  • Cultural
  • Education/training
  • Religious activities
  • Sport/recreation
  • Volunteer development
  • Youth development

Charitable purposes

Promoting the development of young people in achieving their full physical, intellectual, social and spiritual potentials, as individuals, as responsible citizens and as members of their local, national and international communities.

Governing document

Other

Other name

  • 30th Belfast (Gilnahirk) Scout Group
  • 6 Trustees
  • 0 Employees
  • 12 Volunteers

Trustee board

  • Mrs Betty Robb
  • Mr David George Hawthorne
  • Dr David Bell
  • Mrs Lorna Thompson
  • Mrs Donna Margaret Hawthorne
  • Mrs Alison Moss

Public Address

Dr David Bell, Gilnahirk Presbyterian Church, 161 Gilnahirk Road, Belfast, BT5 7QP

List of regions

  • In Northern Ireland

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