Northern Ireland

North Down and Ards council to double VE Day 80th anniversary funding

Ratepayers will have to fork out £60K after funding pot doubled

VE Day 75th Anniversary
The Royal Air Force Red Arrows passing over the London Eye on the banks of the River Thames marking VE Day in 2023. (Marc Ward/PA)

RATEPAYERS in north Down will have to fork out £60,000 for the 80th anniversary VE Day events after the council was split on the move.

An Alliance councillor at Ards and North Down Borough Council said he was “uncomfortable” with a DUP proposal to double the funding pot put forward by council officers, from £500 per event to £1,000 per event.

In the latest meeting of the council at Bangor Castle, the chamber was split on the matter.

On a non-recorded vote 24 elected representatives were in favour of a DUP proposal, from the DUP, UUP, and others, while 14 were against from the Alliance Party and others, with one abstaining from voting.

That means doubling the pot of funding for the ratepayers in the borough from £30,000 to £60,000, a rise from the originally proposed 30 grants of £500 to 60 grants of £1,000.

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A notice of motion was agreed at committee level in the summer for the council to fund commemorations to mark on 8th May 2025 80 years since VE Day – the official end of the Second World War in Europe.

Officers were asked to outline potential ways the historic anniversary could be commemorated.

One query was raised at committee level by unionists as to why proposed grants should only be £500 per group.

In response council officers stated: “In the paper presented to the committee, £500 was suggested as the upper limit for grants from the perspective that this can be paid in full in advance in line with policy.

“Anything above this would require the applicant to have the ability to have sufficient cashflow to pay for 50 per cent of their claim before claiming it back. However, if applicants were able to do this then administering grants above £500 would be possible.

“It was felt from past experience, that this fund would more likely be utilised by those groups, whereas larger groups could avail of the Community Festivals Grant.”

At the recent full council meeting DUP Councillor Jennifer Gilmore put forward the proposal to lift the limit from £500 to £1,000 which was seconded by a UUP councillor.

However Alliance Alderman Martin McRandal said: “I agree with the reasoning for increasing the individual maximum amount that can be claimed for to £1,000, but I am uncomfortable with the idea of just doubling the budget like that from £30K to £60K.

“It has just landed on us tonight. I don’t think it is the way we should be doing things, and it should have to go back to committee.”

A further report will return to the council giving further options for funding applications within the new £60,000 budget.