Disadvantaged communities across the UK empowered to let nature flourish thanks to £5m National Lottery funding

Disadvantaged communities across the UK empowered to let nature flourish thanks to £5m National Lottery funding

Nextdoor Nature – a new natural legacy to mark the Queen’s Jubilee – will help nature flourish in Cumbria
Image of children holding a bird box credit Paul Harris/2020Vision

Cumbria is one of the areas of the UK that will benefit from Nextdoor Nature © Paul Harris/2020Vision

Nextdoor Nature will let communities set their own agenda about the environmental issues they want to tackle
Stephen Trotter
CEO, Cumbria Wildlife Trust

The National Lottery Heritage Fund today announced a £5million investment in a ground-breaking initiative to create a huge matrix of community-led rewilding projects – improving the lives of people from some of the most disadvantaged areas across the UK and leaving a lasting natural legacy in honour of the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. The funding is part of The National Lottery’s £22million investment to mark the Jubilee and Cumbria is one of the areas that will benefit with its own project.

Delivered by Cumbria Wildlife Trust, Nextdoor Nature will give people the skills, tools, and opportunity to take action for nature. This could include establishing wild habitats and green corridors in areas of economic and nature deprivation, rewilding school grounds, or naturalising highly urbanised or unused areas. The pandemic has demonstrated just how important access to a well-cared for natural environment is to communities across the UK.

Examples of communities that Cumbria Wildlife Trust will work alongside include a cluster of primary schools in socio-economically disadvantaged or nature-deprived areas of Carlisle.

The UK is one of the most nature-depleted countries in the world and research shows  85% of people in nature-deprived areas say more natural spaces would improve their quality of life. The majority also say that having access to local natural spaces is more important, post-pandemic.  Nextdoor Nature will enable people to make this happen and in doing so, take steps to tackle the nature and climate crisis whilst also addressing important health and wellbeing needs.

Simon Thurley, Chair of The National Lottery Heritage Fund, says: “As part of The National Lottery family’s £22m investment to mark the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, we are delighted to launch Nextdoor Nature, a transformational initiative which will give access to the natural environment to thousands of people who may not have fully enjoyed or appreciated it before. We hope that many people will, for the first time, get hands on with nature creating a new generation of champions for our precious natural environment.”

Liz Bonnin, President of The Wildlife Trusts, says: “We humans are key to solving the climate crisis and restoring our natural heritage. The UK is one of the most nature depleted countries in the world, but Nextdoor Nature is working to set that right, putting local communities at the heart of helping our wild places to recover, and making sure that no matter where we live, we can be part of this crucial endeavour.

“The Wildlife Trusts are firmly rooted in communities and can provide support and advice to those willing to lead the charge in bringing wildlife back to homes and workplaces – in turn inspiring those around them to do the same. we can achieve incredible things when we work together!”

Image of children digging credit Ben Hall/2020Vision

We will work with a cluster of schools in the Carlisle area © Ben Hall/2020Vision

Stephen Trotter, Chief Executive of Cumbria Wildlife Trust, said: “We are very excited to receive funding from National Lottery Heritage Fund, as it will allow us to do more work with local communities and enable more people to take action for nature. Thanks to this funding, we’ll help a group of schools in Carlisle to bring nature into everything they do throughout the school day. We’ll be building close connections with the schools, and strengthening the links between them and their local communities.

Stephen continued: “We know that people want to take action to improve their neighbourhoods but often it’s hard to know where to start. Nextdoor Nature will let communities set their own agenda about the environmental issues they want to tackle and we’ll be looking at different ways of bringing people together and giving them support, skills and confidence to take the next step. We’re looking forward to starting on this exciting project.”

Evidence shows that people are increasingly disconnected from nature, with profound consequences for health and it also means they are less likely to protect their natural heritage. In the words of Sir David Attenborough, President Emeritus of The Wildlife Trusts, “No-one will protect what they don’t care about; and no-one will care about what they have never experienced.”

Notes

85% of people in nature-deprived areas say more natural spaces would improve their quality of life – the majority also say that having access to local natural spaces is more important post-pandemic. See poll data in “New campaign calls for legal right to local nature in Levelling Up reforms” here.

The health and wellbeing benefits that come with having more nature around homes and neighbourhoods are immense and well documented. Read some of the evidence here and, for example, Doses of Neighborhood Nature: The Benefits for Mental Health of Living with Nature here.

Evidence shows that people are increasingly disconnected from nature, with profound consequences. It negatively impacts our health and wellbeing and leads to a long-term reduction in people’s affinity to nature, which means they are less likely to protect their natural heritage. See Human-nature interactions and the consequences and drivers of provisioning wildlife, Cox & Gaston, 2018). Also see A Growing Disconnection from Nature Is Evident in Cultural Products here.

The National Lottery Heritage Fund

Using money raised by the National Lottery, we Inspire, lead and resource the UK’s heritage to create positive and lasting change for people and communities, now and in the future. www.heritagefund.org.uk.

As part of the National Lottery’s £22million investment to celebrate the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee, The National Lottery Heritage Fund is investing £7m to create a lasting legacy for communities and nature across the UK. The funding will empower disadvantaged communities to take action for nature on their doorsteps and enable 70 young people to undertake paid placements in the nature heritage sector.

Follow @HeritageFundUK on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram and use #NationalLotteryHeritageFund #PlatinumJubilee