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Ground-breaking Sports Commission Report launched in Parliament
The Chiles Webster Batson Commission will share the report and recommendations at a reception in the House of Lords. The Commission is chaired by broadcasters Adrian Chiles and Charlie Webster, along with former footballer Brendan Batson OBE. It was set up to explore the important role local community organisations have in providing community sport to low income neighbourhoods in England and Wales and supporting young people and their communities to improve their life chances. The focus was on understanding and amplifying the experiences of children, young people, and the neighbourhood organisations that support them.
Combining hard academic evidence, and in-depth conversation with community organisations themselves, the Chiles Webster Batson Commission’s Summative Report includes a number of key recommendations. These include working towards a funding model that provides long-term consistent funding for community sports organisations and recognising these organisations as valuable community assets that can be trusted to deliver real change for young people in low-income neighbourhoods.
It found that community sport has a demonstrable impact on tackling issues such as community safety. It also calls on policy makers to do more to ensure that community sport is given greater recognition and support within the wider sporting landscape.
The Commission explored the role of community sport in areas including community safety, mental health, and increasing youth volunteering participation. It heard from community workers, young people, and experts from a range of sectors to understand how and why neighbourhood organisations use sport to mitigate against the health and social inequalities that impact on young lives in low-income areas.
Dr Kris Southby, Research Fellow in Leeds Beckett University’s Centre for Health Promotion, said:
“Leeds Beckett University was delighted to be involved in this vital project. The key findings of the research showed that young people living in low income neighbourhoods have less access to sport and opportunities, so are not able to benefit from the many advantages that sport can bring, particularly to their health and wellbeing.
“Locally Trusted Organisations (LTOs) are uniquely placed to reach and engage with these young people, who otherwise might miss out. They can provide positive role models and future pathways as well as diverting children and younger people away from negative influences. LTOs need to be appreciated as valuable, neighbourhood assets that complement more traditional national and local sports organisations that may be more focused on competition. LTOs need long-term and consistent funding to continue their work with young people.”
Speaking about the positive role sport had in her own life, Commission Co-Chair Charlie Webster said: “I come from the same background as a lot of the kids in these community groups. My mum had me as a teenager and I didn’t have much, or anything really. I know how important it is to have that positive engagement through physical activity and sport. At the age of 11, I started running and that was my escape – for my mental health, and from family trauma.
“Sport helped me with my self-esteem and my identity and helped me to realise that I could achieve something. So, for me, this could be the difference in someone achieving their potential. Often what young people need is very little; it doesn’t have to be a facility; it can just be someone taking an interest and believing in them. These youth and community groups give the message that young people matter.”
Adrian Chiles said: “Kids need a place in their lives where they can feel safe to be themselves and have fun in a safe environment. That’s what these organisations provide. I’ve been astounded by the work these organisations are doing; they’re not much short of a lifeline to so many families.
These clubs operate on a shoestring at the best of times, so they really are imperilled at the moment. Many of them, starved of the small amount of funding they need, are going under. It’s plainly a false economy to let them go. Without them the kids who did have somewhere to go, will have nowhere to go. And that won’t end well. The costs to society further down the line, in terms of mental health issues and crime and so on, will be far greater than the paltry sums needed to keep them going.”
Brendon Batson OBE said: “This commission has shone a light on the value that trusted community sports organisations bring to local communities, but too often they are working with one hand tied behind their back. With all the challenges young people today are facing, we need these organisations more than ever and we need to do more to give them the support they need.”