Showing posts with label Newcastle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Newcastle. Show all posts

Saturday, 6 September 2014

Avondale House – One Year On

Launched in August 2013, Avondale House is an initiative by the AF&V Launchpad charity, offering subsidised rental accommodation exclusively for service veterans and their partners making the transition to civilian life.


Avondale House has proved to be more than simply a place for veterans and their partners to live while looking for civilian jobs; it’s a community of friends living on the Byker Estate with a common purpose: to look after themselves, seek employment and establish their own businesses, contributing to the wider community in Newcastle.

Residents helped clean Killingworth WWII memorial prior to ceremony to remember fallen soldiers
Launchpad’s latest figures show that even after only a year, Avondale House is already reaching its goals in regard to alleviating homelessness and increasing employment opportunities:
  • Previously homeless residents: 51
  • Previously unemployed residents now self-employed: 1
  • Residents participating in employability-improving education or training: 35
  • Previously unemployed residents now in employment: 20

In addition, Avondale House residents are genuinely engaging with the initiative and their community – and demonstrating significantly improved life-skills:
  • Residents taking responsibility for and mentoring other veterans: 14
  • Residents participating in community-based projects: 17
  • Residents showing and improved ability to manage personal finances and avoid debt: 8
Residents of Avondale House maintain the Forces’ mantra of "healthy body, healthy mind" with free fitness and wellbeing classes, open days and community events
Avondale House residents are making the most of – and contributing towards – the community, which is helping them to demonstrate improved self-confidence, self-reliance and resilience and allowing them to actively engage in planning their own futures on Civvy Street.

Find out more about Launchpad

Thanks to the partner organisations that assist us:

Newcastle City CouncilABF The Soldiers' Charity

Big Lottery FundJob Centre Plus


Wednesday, 4 June 2014

AFV-Launchpad receives £171k grant from the Big Lottery Fund

It is with great pleasure that the AF&V charity, AFV Launchpad, took receipt of a cheque for £ 171,288 from the Big Lottery Fund today. AFV Launchpad helps those vulnerable armed forces veterans returning to civilian live in Newcastle.



While in uniform, support for servicemen and women includes planning for accommodation and job search, however, all support ceases once they have left the Forces. Those who leave early may have only had a month or two with the Forces after leaving school and so are unprepared to find employment, accommodation. Older veterans have become dependent on the Forces providing them with meals, accommodation, clothing and financial budgeting. Many are slow to plan for leaving and don’t take full advantage of the support while it is offered when they are still in uniform.

AF&V Launchpad supports such veterans. The charity offers accommodation at Avondale House on the Byker Estate reserved solely for veterans and their partners where they are offered training, work placements and job search skills. They are also offered skills in cooking, welfare, benefits, GP and dentist registration, financial management and developing social networks through sport and volunteering.

David Shaw, Chairman of AF&V Launchpad, said: “The Big Lottery Fund grant that Armed Forces' & Veterans' Launchpad has just been given is hugely important - it enables the charity to pay for the manager of Avondale House in Newcastle for the next five years as well as provide some much-needed training facilities.  Through close partnership with the Byker Community Trust, Launchpad has provided 34 refurbished flats to veterans of the armed forces and their partners in Newcastle, in Avondale House, on the Byker Estate.

“The new manager will run the house, developing good connections with partner organisations, ensuring the house is full of residents, helping the residents with financial and social matters, as well as ensuring the infrastructure is well maintained.  Working with other organisations in the public, private and third sectors, the new manager will assist the veterans in finding permanent jobs and accommodation. Veterans will also receive training to ensure they stand as good a chance of finding jobs as they can.


“Since opening in August 2013, over 40 veterans have used, or are using, the facilities and assistance provide by Launchpad through Avondale House. Given that about 10 per cent of members of the armed forces come from the North East and then return home there, and given the number of applicants Launchpad has already experienced, there is no doubt that many veterans will benefit from this project in the future.  As a consequence of the creation of Launchpad and thanks to Big Lottery funding, fewer veterans in the North East will suffer homelessness, unemployment and social exclusion.”


For more information visit the AFV Launchpad website

Thursday, 4 July 2013

Growth in Property Price Reductions

Read more on "Growth in Property Price Reductions" »

According to new research from Zoopla.co.uk the average property seller has had to reduce the asking price of their home by nearly £20,000 to secure a sale. Over 40 per cent of all UK properties currently on the market for sale have experienced at least one price reduction, as sellers try to entice buyers.


The amount by which sellers have reduced their price expectations has risen significantly over the past 12 months, with the average property now being discounted by £3,500 more than this time last year. Last November, amongst those homes that had been reduced in price, the average price reduction was 6.1 per cent. Today that figure stands at 7.4 per cent which represents a discount of nearly £3 billion off the initial asking prices as sellers become both more realistic and more desperate to close a sale by the end of the year.

Glasgow tops the list of towns where the biggest discounts are on offer with the average reduction in the city currently standing at 9.1 per cent (£12,881). Newcastle and Bolton follow closely with asking prices currently discounted by an average of 8.9 per cent and 8.8 per cent respectively. All but one of the top ten areas with the highest price reductions are in the North, where the number of sellers reducing their asking price is also the highest. Sunderland tops the list of towns with the highest proportion of properties on the market that have been discounted at least once with more than half (53.6 per cent) of sellers there having to reset their expectations downwards at least once.

Whilst the London property market continues to demonstrate its resilience with the lowest proportion of price-reduced homes in the UK , nearly a third (32.6 per cent) of properties for sale in the capital have had to be reduced in price indicating that London is not entirely immune from the conditions being felt around the rest of the country.

Business development director of Zoopla.co.uk, Mr Nicholas Leeming said, “With the current economic uncertainty and difficulty buyer’s face in finding funding, it is no wonder that sellers are having to reduce prices in order to encourage sales. And with the latest economic forecasts looking decidedly gloomy, sellers may have to reduce their expectations further if they are serious about making a move.”

Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Byker Community Trust develops homes for veterans: AF&V Launchpad

The BBC Reported earlier this year on sheltered housing on Tyneside that is being converted into specialist accommodation for armed services veterans.

Work has started on 35 homes for ex-servicemen and women in Byker, Newcastle.

The scheme is being developed by the Byker Community Trust and Armed Forces and Veterans Estates.

The trust said 750 veterans were currently looking for a home in the city.

Veterans will be able to live in the properties for up to two years after leaving the forces.

Building work is being funded in part by a £250,000 Armed Forces Community Covenant grant and it is expected the properties will be complete by the summer.

The trust took over management of the Byker estate from social landlord Your Homes Newcastle last year.
Major General David Shaw, director of Armed Forces and Veterans Estates, said the project was “unprecedented”.

Pictured above Major General David Saw and Jill Haley Courtesy of the BBC.

Original Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-tyne-21558757

 Links


AF&V Launchpad