Department for Culture Media and Sport

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In 1992 the Home Office published the White Paper "A National Lottery Raising Money for Good Causes".

The National Lottery Act 1993 established five good causes to benefit from the Lottery: sport, the arts, heritage, charities and projects to mark the year 2000 and the beginning of the third millennium. The National Lottery Act 1998 created a sixth good cause allowing Lottery money to fund innovative projects in health, education and environment and a new distributor, the New Opportunities Fund, to allocate it.

The Act also:

  • Changed the Lottery distributors' responsibility and powers and allowed them to produce strategic plans for funding
  • Allowed them to be more proactive by enabling them to solicit applications for Lottery grants
  • Allowed them to delegate grant decisions to other bodies
  • Allowed them to enter into jointly funded schemes with each other
  • Created the National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts (NESTA). NESTA helps talented individuals in the fields of science, technology and the arts to achieve their potential and helps people turn inventions and ideas into products and services that can be effectively exploited 

The National Lottery Act 2006 is an important element of the Government's reforms to the National Lottery and received Royal Assent on 11 July 2006. The Act makes the Lottery more responsive to people's priorities and to ensure that Lottery money goes efficiently to good causes.

Roles and responsibilities | National Lottery distributing bodies | National Lottery Commission | National Lottery Promotions Unit

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Roles and responsibilities 

DCMS has responsibility within Government for National Lottery policy, including the legislation governing the National Lottery. Gerry Sutcliffe MP is the minister responsible for National Lottery issues.

We set the policy and financial framework within which the distributing bodies for National Lottery grants operate. The Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport issues policy and financial directions to the English and UK wide Lottery distributing bodies.

The Policy Directions set the broad framework within which the distributing bodies operate and require them to consider certain matters in determining the persons to whom and the purposes for which and the conditions under which the body distributes Lottery money.

The Financial Directions are concerned with financial propriety and efficiency and are designed to secure the proper management and control by a distributing body of the Lottery funds available to it.

The Lottery distributing bodies in Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland have their policy directions issued to them by the Welsh Assembly, the Scottish Parliament, and the Northern Ireland Assembly respectively.

We also sponsor the National Lottery Commission, which regulates the National Lottery game and the game operator. The Commission's duties are to protect players' interests, to ensure that the Lottery is run properly, and to maximise the amount raised for good causes.

We do not give out Lottery money. Lottery money is given out by number of independent National Lottery distributing bodies. 

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National Lottery distributing bodies

The proceeds of the National Lottery support the arts, heritage, sport, charities and community and voluntary groups as well as supporting projects concerned with health, education and the environment.  

There are currently 13 independent distributing bodies responsible for distributing Lottery money. These are: Sport England; Sport Scotland; Sport Northern Ireland; the Sports Council for Wales; UK Sport; Arts Council England; Arts Council of Wales; Arts Council of Northern Ireland; Scottish Arts Council; Scottish Screen; the UK Film Council; the Heritage Lottery Fund and the Big Lottery Fund.

These bodies make their grant decisions independently of Government and of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport and in response to applications for funding which they receive. They also make their decisions based on the published criteria of each of their different Lottery funding programmes.

To apply for grant you can contact the relevant distributing body through the Lottery Funding website by telephoning the National Lottery Funding Hotline on 0845 275 0000.

Following the announcement that the 2012 Olympic Games will be hosted by London, an additional distribution body has been established - the Olympic Lottery Distributor.     

The Olympic Lottery Distributor's role it is to fund any facility, function or service it considers necessary or practical for the delivery of the 2012 Olympic Games and will monitor grants to ensure they are spent effectively.

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The National Lottery Commission

The National Lottery Commission (NLC) is a non-departmental public body and is responsible for regulating the National Lottery in accordance with legislation, regulatory and policy directions from the Secretary of State. It does so independently of Government. The Commission replaced the previous regulator, the Director General of the National Lottery on 1 April 1999.

Details of the current chair of the NLC and the five commissioners can be found on the National Lottery Commission's website. The National Lottery Commission's duties are:

  • To ensure that the National Lottery is run with all due propriety
  • To protect players' interests
  • Subject to satisfying the first two criteria, to ensure that as much money as possible is raised for the good causes

The National Lottery Commission's role includes:

  • Selecting the Lottery operator, setting the terms of its licence and ensuring that it complies with those terms
  • Vetting individuals and companies associated with the National Lottery to ensure that they are 'fit and proper'
  • Licensing individual games that form part of the National Lottery
  • Ensuring that the National Lottery operator pays the right amount of money into the National Lottery Distribution Fund

The National Lottery operator Camelot Group plc has been running the National Lottery game since it was awarded the licence in 1994. Its second seven year licence started on 27 January 2002.

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National Lottery Promotions Unit

The National Lottery Promotions Unit promotes positive public awareness and balanced media reporting of Lottery grants to good causes.

We set up the Unit with the Lottery distributing bodies and the current Lottery operator, Camelot, after our 2002 consultation on the future of the National Lottery identified a need for greater public information and awareness about what the National Lottery is funding, particularly in local communities.

The Unit’s key achievements include:

  • Successful delivery of the annual nationwide celebrations marking the National Lottery's achievements 
  • Development of a “common brand” logo in partnership with the Lottery distributors, designed to help show people how Lottery money is benefiting them, their community and the nation as a whole
  • Setting up the National Lottery Awards scheme which recognises the hard work and dedication of people who use Lottery funding to make a difference in their communities.

Find out more about Lottery good causes and the Unit’s work to promote them at http://www.lotterygoodcauses.org.uk/

 

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