The campaign for a Community Wealth Fund aims to secure funding for 225 doubly disadvantaged neighbourhoods in England from the dormant assets scheme. Doubly disadvantaged neighbourhoods have the highest levels of deprivation and the weakest social infrastructure. This scheme transfers unclaimed financial assets – in for example, bank and building society accounts – to good causes. The campaign was successful in securing dormant assets for the Community Wealth Fund.
In 2016 the government establishes an independent Commission to consider expanding the dormant assets scheme beyond bank and building society accounts to financial products like stocks and bonds. In 2017 the Commission recommends expanding the scheme; a year later the government accepts this recommendation.
Local Trust publishes a report making the case for a Community Wealth Fund.
Local Trust starts to canvass support for the proposal for a Community Wealth Fund supported by dormant assets.
The Community Wealth Fund Alliance (CWFA) – a group of organisations from civil society and the public and private sectors who support the proposal – is launched.
Local Trust commissions the Oxford Consultants for Social Inclusion to carry out research mapping neighbourhoods that are not only severely deprived but also lack social infrastructure. The research suggests that these neighbourhoods are perhaps the most ‘left behind’ and should benefit from the Community Wealth Fund.
MPs and Peers from both main parties come together in an All-Party Parliamentary Group for ‘left behind’ neighbourhoods to give these areas a voice in Westminster.
Local Trust, who provide the secretariat for the CWFA, appoint 2 members of staff to develop the campaign.
Membership of the CWFA grows
Government introduces legislation to expand the dormant assets scheme. During its passage a cross party group of peers successfully defeat the government in the House of Lords and amend the legislation to include the CWF as a beneficiary.
To demonstrate political support for the proposal, Paul Howell MP – the conservative co-chair of the APPG for ‘left behind’ neighbourhoods – presents a 10 minute rule bill proposing the CWF is set up using dormant assets.
Although the government removed the CWF amendment when the Bill went to the House of Commons, it introduced its own compromise amendment committing to consult on a CWF becoming a beneficiary of the scheme.
The government launches a consultation on expanding the dormant assets scheme. This seeks views from the public on the causes that should benefit from the expanded scheme, and lists a Community Wealth Fund as a potential beneficiary.
The CWFA responds to the consultation on the distribution of dormant assets.
Membership of the CWFA continues to grow as the campaign reaches a wider audience.
A Westminster Hall debate is held on the CWF with members of the APPG for ‘left behind’ neighbourhoods arguing the case for the funding benefitting ‘left behind’ neighbourhoods.
In its response to the consultation on dormant assets, government commits to creating community wealth funds as a fourth beneficiary of the dormant assets scheme.
The government launches a 4-week technical consultation seeking views on the design of the CWF. This proposes that the funding goes to towns with a population of less than 20,000. This means that, depending on the definition of towns used, only between 17 and 27 ‘left behind’ neighbourhoods are likely to benefit. Government also announces that community wealth funds will initially receive £87.5 million from the expanded dormant assets scheme.
The CWFA submits a response to the technical consultation.
The secondary legislation that makes community wealth funds a beneficiary of the dormant assets scheme is approved by Parliament.
CWFA membership reaches nearly 800.
A General Election is called, and parliament is dissolved before the government announces its plans for the design of the CWF following the technical consultation. The CWFA will now be working to influence the next government and ensure the Fund created aligns with the campaign’s original principles.