Par Bay Big Local


Key Focus Areas

Environment
Families and Young People
Health and wellbeing
Jobs and Income
Recreation and Culture

Par Bay Big Local (PBBL) is part of a national programme ‘Big Local’, funded by the National Lottery Community Fund and administered by Local Trust. The scheme, started in 2011, provides an opportunity for residents in 150 areas around England to use at least £1m each to make a massive and lasting difference to their communities. The programme as a whole has four key outcomes that each local Big Local needs to contribute to. These are;

  • Communities will be better able to identify local needs and take action in response to them.
  • People will have increased skills and confidence so that they continue to identify and respond to needs in the future.
  • The community will make a difference to the needs it prioritises.
  • People will feel that their area is an even better place to live.

Big Local was established with several core features that make it different from other programmes. It is:

  • Long-term – providing certainty and continuity, over 10-15 years.
  • Resident-led – working directly with individuals living, working, studying, and playing in areas rather than through organisations; building confidence and capacity amongst those wanting to make a difference to their community and their local area.
  • Non-prescriptive – enabling residents to spend on their own terms and in their own time, on the projects they judge to be most important to them.
  • Patient and non-judgemental – giving communities the time and opportunity to learn, make mistakes, resolve disagreements, and overcome challenges for themselves, on their way to achieving their ambitions.
  • Accompanied by flexible and responsive support – to help communities to build the confidence and capability to make the most of the opportunities available to them, whilst not constraining their own ambition and initiative.

More information about Big Local can be found on the Local Trust website https://localtrust.org.uk/big-local/about-big-local/.

Par Bay Big Local, one of the first Big Locals in the country, was created in 2010 to support the communities of Par, St Blazey, and Tywardreath in Cornwall.  Since the national Big Local programme started in earnest in 2012, PBBL has had consecutive Plans and activities approved and endorsed by their funders, Local Trust, allowing staged drawdown of their allocated funding.  PBBL funded programme will be completed by late 2022.

Like all Big Locals, PBBL is run by a resident-led partnership of residents, community representatives, and support agencies. To draw down the funding, this group of people have determined local needs through research and consultation, prioritised addressing those needs, again in consultation with the community, and then developed a plan to address those priorities. Plans usually cover a period of 1-3 years and are updated and renewed when a drawdown of further funding is required.

All Big Local areas identify a “trusted” partner to help them develop and the Eden Project, a near neighbour, has provided this service and significant support.  They also have been supported by a Local Trust appointed ‘Local Rep’, in this case, Ian Smith whose role was to help the partnership develop a rolling programme of implementation plans and to help the partnership review and learn from their activities.

PBBL has identified a wide range of local needs and has addressed these through working collaboratively with local organisations, providing funding and practical support where required.

Par Bay Community Trust was formed as PBBL’s charitable arm in 2014 so that Cornubia could be purchased for the long-term benefit of residents across the Par Bay area. Trustees work closely with PBBL to ensure a legacy for the future, supporting the main areas of focus identified during consultations and their own charitable aims which echo the Big Local ethos which is all about community and resident-led decision-making to bring about lasting and sustainable improvements, maximising impact and making the best use of resources and opportunities.

More information on the key focus areas here.

Early Plans

Our Plan
2018 Plan update

2012 – 2016 Community Awards

PBBL invested in more than 75 different projects and activities – including legacy premises – and continued to support local initiatives in line with the aims and ambitions contained in the approved Vision & Plans, supported by an experienced Regional Local Trust representative.

Summary of community awards

Deciding Our Focus

2016

Focus: Jobs and Employment

Became a strategic partner with Reed in Partnership able to refer any local residents to Workroutes to receive a wide range of support for jobseekers at the weekly Job Club, Mondays 9.30 – 4 pm at Cornubia.  

Start of a 3-year collaboration with UnLtd to increase employment opportunities and provide enhanced support for social entrepreneurship.  The social entrepreneur award programme ran across Par Bay and was a collaboration between Par Bay Big Local and UnLtd. Any one over the age of 18 living, volunteering or working in the Par Bay Big Local areas who wanted to start or was growing a venture that will create social benefit was eligible.

A defibrillator, part-funded by PBB, fitted on the wall between Boots and Cornubia. 

Planning application approved for Community & Business Hub.

The old award programme closed in 2017.

2017

Focus: Young People & Families

A film made by young people about the realities of living on a local estate.

Active Kids, youth consultation, young advisors

PBBL’s largest award to date:  £40K contribution towards Skate Park – Par Track

Projects supported include St Andrew’s Wetland Reserve, plans for STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) training around the St Blazey Turntable Project, Skatepark, Par Carnival, free textile-based summer workshops run by Tex, Teenage drop-in advice sessions at Cornubia run by Kernow Youth and a Par Bay Community Diary. Also been approached by Eden with a view to establishing wildflower areas in the Par Bay area.

Par Bay Big Local Funding

2018

Focus: Health & Wellbeing

End of year celebratory event hosted at Cornubia, ahead of the official launch.

Collaboration between other organisations and PBBL blossoming.

Youth worked funded to run Kernow Youth Café plus holiday activities.

Working with Locality re future of Localism.

2019

Focus: Environment, Recreation & Culture (and Creativity & Heritage)

Trust received funding for Creative Civic Change  project. For details of the Creative Civic Change project contact Liz Davies at parbaycreative@gmail.com.

Weekly drop-in evenings – changed to youth outreach work in the Par Bay area.

2020 – Covid-19 Struck

Focus on Health and Wellbeing and how PBBL could support the community with most of the panel shielding.

Reviewed Par Bay’s support in line with COVID – sustained liaison with other agencies, volunteers, etc and provided displays of useful information at Cornubia.

Some grants awarded to provide immediate community benefit, e.g., St Blazey ReUse CIC (food, etc)

Some changes to priorities, e.g., focus on Health & Wellbeing, post COVID recovery; new groups being established, eg Men’s Group.

Zoom adopted to continue meetings safely – bi-monthly meetings with Trust.

Moved closer to legacy – initial discussion of changing LTO.

Continued use of Community Garden even during lockdown – Swap & Share, music practice, crafts, Grow boxes for children, plants, vegetables, talking-to relieve stress.

2021 – Covid-19 Continues

Persevered with the Local Trust Measuring Change support offer and seeing it to a successful conclusion.

Further renovations continued at Cornubia during the lockdown, ready for swift re-opening.

Proposal submitted to change Locally Trusted Organisation, from Eden Project to Par Bay Community Trust.

Work continues on Par Bay’s “Legacy Statement” for Local Trust.

Glencliffe Community Garden adopted as a “local green space” by Par & Tywardreath Parish Council’s Neighbourhood Plan.

Par Bay Big Local has set out to address local needs as identified in the extensive consultation processes that have taken place periodically throughout the programme. These needs fall into 6 themes which have provided a focus for the partnership’s activities at different times as set out in the timeline. Below we provide a flavour of what has been achieved with each theme. This is not a comprehensive picture but is meant to illustrate the type of change that PBBL is achieving. Whilst examples of change are placed under one or other of the themes it should be recognised that many of the activities described address multiple needs.

For information on the Holiday Hunger project contact Sonia Clyne sonclyne@gmail.com or Liz Davies lizdavies@aol.com.

For other details contact parbayct@gmail.com.