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Millions of pounds of British Cycling's grassroots funding reportedly at risk due to independent review

Sport England is set to provide governing body with £17.3m over next four years but some directors have concerns over governance, says The Times

British Cycling could reportedly lose millions of pounds of funding for its grassroots programmes unless it makes changes at the top of the organisation, it has been reported.

The funding, which comes from Sport England, is separate to the £26 million in elite funding that UK Sport has allocated for the current Olympic cycle to the beleaguered governing body.

In December, British Cycling was the biggest beneficiary of Sport England funding awarded to various governing bodies for the next four years, being allocated £17.3 million which comes from the public purse as well as the National Lottery.

The money is aimed at getting more people active, including becoming involved in sport, and would be spent on initiatives such as building facilities – British Cycling has helped finance a number of new off-road circuits across the country in recent years – training coaches, and programmes aimed at getting people onto two wheels and develop their cycling skills.

But according to The Times, some of the directors of Sport England, which has a board meeting next Tuesday, want to see changes in British Cycling’s leadership following last week’s leaking of the independent review panel’s report into allegations of bullying and discrimination at the governing body.

> British Cycling's leadership reportedly condemned by independent review

The report said that there was a “serious question whether the composition of the British Cycling Board is fit to govern a national sporting body.”

In order to access the grant, British Cycling needs to comply with certain standards of governance and Sport England told The Times that “The conditions for the grant of British Cycling have not yet been finalised.”

Among senior British Cycling figures in the firing line are Jonathan Browning, who was appointed chairman last month replacing Bob Howden, who remains president. His appointment was sanctioned by both UK Sport and Sport England.

The independent review found that the governing body’s board “sanitised” an internal report into allegations of sexism raised by track sprinter Jess Varnish against former Great Britain Cycling Team technical director Shane Sutton.

That may have repercussions for Browning, since before taking on his current role he was a non-executive director of the organisation, although last week, UK Sport denied reports that it had demanded that he resign.

> UK Sport denies calling for resignation of British Cycling chairman

British Cycling has already announced details of an action plan to address the issues raised by the independent review, and a spokesman said: “The board of British Cycling is wholly committed to embracing the draft recommendations and findings of the independent review, and has already drawn up a detailed action plan.

> British Cycling responds to independent review with apology and action plan

“While the board may disagree with the factual accuracy of certain points or commentary in the draft independent review, it believes the sport is best served by driving forward the implementation of the action plan that was announced with the support of UK Sport and Sport England.”

In the year to 31 March 2016, grants to British Cycling – primarily from UK Sport and Sport England – stood at £17.0 million and made up 56 per cent of the organisation’s £30.6 million funding for the year.

Fees from members, at £4.0 million, were the next biggest item on the income statement followed by sponsorship and rights fees at £3.2 million and income from events at £3.0 million.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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Yorkshire wallet | 7 years ago
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Some people get shouted at and some people buy jiffy bags but at but why ruin a good thing that's bringing in medals?
Politicians make me sick when they do things for perceived moral needs then go and wank a generation's educational money away on bombing people. Concerned about shouting at people , not concerned with hundreds of thousands of deaths over the last 15 years.

Rant, rant.

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