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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Two North East groups make list of º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's top 100 social enterprises

Big River Bakery and The Skill Mill have both been included on the SE100 list

Big River Bakery founder Andy Haddon(Image: Newcastle Chronicle)


Two organisations in the North East have been included in a list of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s top social enterprises.

Newcastle’s Big River Bakery and Gateshead-based The Skill Mill have both made the SE100 list published each year by Pioneers Post and Social & Community Capital, the independent social investment charity set up by NatWest bank.

The Skill Mill, which was set up in 2013, provides employment opportunities in water and land based management for ex-offenders. The organisation runs a number of schemes in the North East and further afield and has seen significant success in reducing re-offending rates for those on its programmes.

Big River Bakery, which operates a community bakery in Shieldfield, Newcastle, employs a workforce of 17 where more than a quarter are supported in employment. As well as providing employment and training, the social enterprise aims to provide affordable food in an area of deprivation. Last year it was chosen to lead a project to help regenerate the Byker area of Newcastle as part of a £2.5m scheme funded by the National Lottery Community Fund.

Stottie cakes on sale at the Big River Bakery(Image: Craig Connor/ChronicleLive)
Skill Mill was launched in 2013 and has worked with almost 200 former offenders(Image: The Skill Mill)

Commenting on the SE100 list, Big River Bakery founder Andy Haddon said: “It feels great to be included, for the team and for the region. It’s great to raise the profile around different ways of doing business.

“It’s important to make people around the country recognise the innovative stuff that is coming out of the North East. The social enterprise sector is often the place where innovation is coming from in terms of how we solve some of the problems we have in our communities.”

To secure inclusion on the SE100 list , social enterprises were asked to complete a detailed survey. Organisers collected data on how social businesses are performing, looking at areas such as growth and investment, as well as their prospects for future success.

Victoria Papworth, CEO of NatWest Social & Community Capital, said: “Each year, the SE100 list reminds us of the extraordinary impact that social enterprises have across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. These organisations are not only tackling some of society’s toughest challenges – they’re doing so with creativity, compassion, and lasting impact.”