HAFWAY Youth Project Annual Report 2024

HAFWAY Youth Project is a Bolton-based open access youth charity founded in 1998, serving over 500 young people a year in the deprived Halliwell area. In 2024 it engaged 501 individual young people across 4,831 youth club visits, provided 3,000 free hot meals, supported 264 in sport and physical activity, and ran two residential trips for over 100 young people. 49% of young people are from an ethnic minority background. The year was defined by the award of over £1 million from the Youth Investment Fund to completely renovate the charity's home into a modern bespoke youth centre — with building work beginning in June 2024. All sessions are free and the charity operates with just 4 staff and 45 volunteers.

Report snapshot
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📋About

Open access sports sessions (Monday, average 30–40 young people); open access youth club (Friday after school, average 50–60; Friday evening, average 35–45; Sunday, average 20–30); targeted Girls Group (Thursday, ages 10+, average 10–15); Year 12+ targeted group for older young people; 2 residential trips for 100+ young people (rock climbing, canoeing, paintball, archery); Passport to Life life skills curriculum; Duke of Edinburgh Award (Gold celebration at Buckingham Palace); schools work at St Thomas' Primary; year 6 transition sessions; Holiday Activities and Food (HAF) Programme; Summer outdoor activity week; community litter picks and volunteering Custom geography from upload: Halliwell, Bolton, Greater Manchester, UK

📊Key Metrics

501 individual young people engaged; 4,831 youth club visits; 3,000 free hot meals served across 3 sessions per week Key Metric 1
264 young people engaged consistently in sport and physical activity; 145 grew in self-awareness and social connections; 62 engaged in volunteering; 49% from an ethnic minority background Key Metric 2
£874k total income (including £757k one-off Youth Investment Fund capital grant for new youth centre); 4 staff, 15 regular volunteers and 30 young volunteers aged 11–21 Key Metric 3

Key Outcomes

  • 47 young people supported in education and employment; 45 learnt new skills in food preparation and cooking; 118 developed greater awareness of people from different faiths, backgrounds and ethnicities
  • Over £1 million Youth Investment Fund grant awarded to transform run-down building into modern bespoke youth centre — work began June 2024; Gold DofE celebration at Buckingham Palace; 2 young people progressed to university
  • All sessions free to access; hot cooked meal served 3 times per week; school teacher feedback: 'students that attend HAFWAY have a better outlook and are more mature when dealing with conflict in the playground'

📍Geography

North West

2025 Enhanced

World YMCA Annual Report 2025

CHF 3 million+ total programme funding raised in 2025 — a record — with CHF 1.3 million redeployed directly to YMCA National Movements
Key Metric 1
2.5 million people reached through digital skilling initiatives via HP partnership across 30 YMCA partners since 2021
Key Metric 2
37,000 people directly reached per Community Wellbeing project (1.3 million indirectly); 85 new Change Agents enrolled from 44 countries
Key Metric 3
5,000 jobs to be created under Igniting Youth Futures (USD 5.2 million Accenture/Macquarie-funded); 750+ young people already reached at year-end
2025 Enhanced

Allsorts Youth Project Annual Report 2023–24

95 individual young people in under-16s groups; 85 in over-16s groups; 42 in Transformers (trans/non-binary); 114 young people supported through 385 one-to-one sessions
Key Metric 1
149 parents and carers supported across 44 online and in-person groups; 3,500+ participants in training and workshops across 97 sessions
Key Metric 2
96% of young people said Allsorts groups had been of help; 75% said coming to Allsorts improved their overall wellbeing
Key Metric 3
Won Investing in Children's Member of the Year Award for extensive youth voice integration; 100% of Summer Programme participants enjoyed activities
2024

Bromley Mencap Impact Report 2023–2024

2,499 new referrals (up 298 on previous year); 1,164 members as of 31 March 2024; 6,807 people supported through telephone helpline and professional meetings; £2,407,297 total income
Key Metric 1
£817,000 in welfare benefits secured (up £200,000 on previous year); 442 people supported by Education and Employment Service; 554 young carers supported (up from 437); 170 families received 6,120 hours of Short Breaks support
Key Metric 2
74 Supported Internship students (up 70% over 2 years); 65 people matched with job coaches (up 80%); 541 autistic young adults on Autism Pathway; 607 adults with physical disabilities supported
Key Metric 3
Demand for job coaches up 80% year on year; 25% increase in young carer referrals; 50% increase in leisure activity attendance; Training Centre: all learners achieved nationally recognised qualification credits within first two terms