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Elizabeth Borg

Grassroots Grants gives way to new Communities First fund - Third Sector - 1 views

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    Grasssroots funding to be replaced by Communities first fund. Does this mean that, if Angels access Grassroots, then we won't be able to apply for Communities First?
william doust

Creating Inclusive Communities >>> - 0 views

shared by william doust on 18 Mar 09 - Cached
  • Initiatives include: the ‘electronic village hall strategy’,ensuring that everyone has free access to ICT at a time and place convenient to them; the development of a pool of community e-champions;
    • william doust
       
      Eliz - here are some useful words! for the digital project!
  • The social inclusion through ICT work is being taken forward in 2004-6 through the LSP’s e-neighbourhoods initiative,supported by t
    • william doust
       
      LSP e-neighbourghood initiative near you Eliz?
    • william doust
       
      What about a Neighbourhood renewal fund? - could you tap into it, or piggy-back off it?
    • william doust
       
      IF bubble at top of page, then the first statement corresponds to way below here...
    • william doust
       
      go to pp.5 of this google indexed doc.
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    Thanks, Will. Some really useful language and phrases to nick! I like social inclusion through ICT... waiting to hear back from CVS if Reaching Communities is the fund for our project.
william doust

Stanford Social Innovation Review : Articles : The Price of Commercial Success (April 1... - 0 views

  • In 1981, Garrison Keillor, the popular host of Minnesota Public Radio’s satirical “A Prairie Home Companion,” offered listeners a free poster of his mythical sponsor’s “Powdermilk Biscuits.” To everyone’s surprise, more than 50,000 requests poured in; the station faced a $60,000 printing bill. To avert “financial disaster,” as MPR president William Kling later recalled, the station used the back of the poster to advertise products for sale, such as a Powdermilk Biscuits T-shirt. The idea worked. “I think we netted off that poster, which was really our first catalog, $15,000 or $20,000,” Kling said. “It instantly became clear that there were things like that you could do.”1
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    public radio (community radio) how a potential joke-clanger turned into money making opp
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