– Debbie Lye, Spirit of 2012 Chief Executive
Aileen Campbell, minister for public health and sport, announced the latest awards, saying: “I’m delighted on the second anniversary of the best-ever Commonwealth Games to announce the latest round of legacy funding. We know how important an active lifestyle is for both our physical and mental health, so it’s fantastic to see communities right across Scotland embrace the Games legacy and come together to deliver projects that are helping people become more active.”
The Legacy 2014 Physical Activity Fund projects are spread throughout Scotland from Cairngorms to the Borders, and work with a wide variety of people, from the elderly to young mums, providing a wide range of accessible physical activities and volunteering opportunities.
Spirit is a legacy partner of the 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games, and was initially awarded £800,000 by the Scottish Government to scale up existing local projects, nominated by the Community Planning Partnerships, aimed at getting the least active people in Scotland more active and generating learning for the benefit of the rest of Scotland. This recent additional funding takes the total funding awarded to Spirit by the Scottish Government up to £1million over an 18 month period. Spirit and the Scottish Government will hold a conference to share the learning from the first 11 projects in Spring 2017.
Further information:
About the Legacy 2014 Physical Activity Fund
Spirit of 2012’s Fourteen Programme