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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Skill Mill rolls out nationwide after unlocking £1m investment package

The social enterprise helps young people break the cycle of reoffending

The Skill Mill has received a £1m investment package.(Image: The Skill Mill)

A pioneering initiative that helps young people break the cycle of reoffending has gone nationwide after it received a £1m investment package.

Headquartered in Gateshead, The Skill Mill delivers a six month work programme designed to get individuals back into employment and away from crime.

The programme has been commissioned by seven local authorities across England, including Birmingham, Croydon, Durham, Leeds, Nottingham, Rochdale/Bury and Surrey, meaning 224 young offenders will now benefit from mentoring, support and a guaranteed job on environmental maintenance and construction projects over the next three years.

The national expansion has been triggered by support from The Life Chances Fund and four social investors jointly led by Newcastle-based Northstar Ventures and Big Issue Invest, plus backing from CAF Venturesome and the Resonance West Midlands’ SITR Fund.

The latter means The Skill Mill will become the first organisation in the North East to access Social Investment Tax Relief, which offers social enterprises and community groups the opportunity to access repayable finance at a lower rate of interest and on more patient terms, whilst giving investors up to 30% back in tax relief.

Davie Parks, founder of The Skill Mill, said: “This is a massive boost for the vital work we have been undertaking in Newcastle since 2014 and will now let us take our initiative to seven new areas, helping rehabilitate 224 more young people.

“We engage with individuals that are highly vulnerable and in a vicious cycle of re-offending. Our aim is to break that chain by giving them a job for six months and, during that time, they will receive accredited training, mentoring and support to hopefully secure them long-term employment at the end of it.


“To date, we have had just 15 re-convictions out of the 158 people we have helped so far, that equates to a 9.5% rate compared to the Ministry of Justice national average of 72% for young people who have been convicted of eleven or more previous offences.