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| The CCPR works very closely with many different organisations whose activities complement its own.
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| Sports Leaders UK |
Sports Leaders UK’s (BST) Five Core Values explain the mission: - Developing leadership
- Teaching key skills for life
- Providing a stepping-stone to employment
- Encouraging volunteering in communities
- Reducing youth crime
- Supporting more active, healthy communities
There are four Leadership Awards: - Level 1 Award in Sports Leadership
- Level 1 Award in Community Sports Leadership
- Level 2 Award in Basic Expedition Leadership
- Level 3 Award in Higher Sports Leadership
Click here for further information www.sportsleaders.org No organised sporting activity can take place without willing volunteers, giving up their time and talents free of charge. If you watch a sports match on any sports pitch, municipal park or school playing field on a Saturday afternoon 99.9% of the organisers, officials and leaders are there in a voluntary capacity. Sports Leaders UK are helping to support these volunteers by offering four awards for budding Sports Leaders. The awards trained 48,000 such people last year. |
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| The Confederation of British Sport |
| The Confederation includes representatives from the Central Council of Physical Recreation, the British Olympic Association (BOA), the Northern Ireland Sports Forum, the Scottish Sports Association and the Welsh Sports Association. Meeting on a regular basis, the Confederation provides a forum for the governing bodies of the home countries, the CCPR and the BOA to integrate their respective activities. |
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| Sports Dispute Resolution Panel |
| As recent experience confirms, the actions and decisions of governing bodies are increasingly liable to challenge, making the risk of disputes and litigation more real. The CCPR has worked tirelessly for a number of years to establish an independent dispute resolution service for sport in the UK, and this has now been achieved with the Sports Dispute Resolution Panel (SDRP) now up and running. This move has been made possible through a grant from UK Sports who have been active in their encouragement. This important initiative has also been established with the support of the Athletes Commission, the Institute of Professional Sport and the Institute of Sports Sponsorship, the British Olympic Association (BOA), the Northern Ireland Sports Forum, the Scottish Sports Association and the Welsh Sports Association. The SDRP service aims to provide a simple and effective mechanism for parties to resolve differences by referral to SDRP’s arbitration and mediation services. SDRP maintains standing panels of expert arbitrators and mediators, both professional and lay, to whom disputes may be referred on a range of matters including doping, eligibility, selection, and commercial contracts. The CCPR encourages all its members to consider carefully the benefits of using the SDRP service to complement their own disciplinary and dispute resolution procedures. For further information please contact SDRP on 0207 7854 8590, Email: resolve@sportsdisputes.co.uk or visit the website on http://www.sportsdisputes.co.uk/. |
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| Sports Sponsorship Advisory Service |
| As of the 1 April 2004, The Sports Sponsorship Advisory Service formally provided by the CCPR and funded by Sport England now no longer exists. For further information please contact the European Sponsorship Association by clicking here. |
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| EU Sports Office |
| The connections between sport and Europe are as diverse as they are different in their consequences. However, European legislation and policy seldom reveal their impact on sport at first glance. It is thus indispensable that the organized sport, as the biggest citizen movement in the community, represents its interests in Brussels and establishes itself as a contact for dialogue with EU institutions. CCPR is a member of the EU Sports Office. Based in Brussels, the office provides CCPR with a direct link to the European Parliament and European Commission, enabling the CCPR to extend its lobbying powers and ensure that sport and recreation remain high on the European agenda. Over 80% of UK legislation now originates in the EU and it is becoming increasingly important that the voice of sport and recreation is heard across Europe. For further information, contact Judith Wood at CCPR on 020 7854 8500 or click here to visit the EU Sports Office website. |
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| Torch Trophy Trust |
| Celebrating the Unsung Heroes of Sport
The Torch Trophy Trust is a charitable organisation, working to encourage voluntary work in sport. The Trust presents approximately 20 Awards each year to individuals who have worked at the grass roots of a particular sport on a voluntary basis, in order to enable others in the community to participate in their chosen activity. The Trust particularly wishes to recognise those who have received no previous national recognition for their voluntary work. Without willing volunteers, working at all levels, sport would simply not happen. From cricket teas on a Sunday afternoon to 2 hour coaching sessions on a wet wintry evening, the services given by unpaid volunteers are too numerous to mention. Nominations are made by various Governing Bodies of Sport and other sports related organisations throughout the United Kingdom. The successful candidates are presented with a miniature replica of the Olympic Torch, the symbol of the Trust at a ceremony, which is also attended by a number of sporting personalities who are pleased to have the opportunity to express their appreciation to these ‘unsung heroes’ of sport. The trust was founded in 1962 by the late Commander Bill Collins, the organiser of the 1948 Olympic Torch Relay from Olympia in Greece to Wembley in London. In addition, the Trust is actively engaged in encouraging and helping voluntary work at club level, through a Bursary Scheme, named after the founder. The aim of the ‘Commander Collins Bursaries’ is to provide financial aid for those individuals wishing to increase their knowledge and their ability to help others, on a voluntary basis, by taking courses to qualify as club coaches or officials, but are unable to do so without financial support. The Chairman of the Torch Trophy Trust is Ian Peacock, Chair of the English Golf Union and former Chief Executive of the Lawn Tennis Association. Eleven Trustees representing a cross section of sports, many of which were themselves leading sports personalities or administrators, assist him in his work. 1999 saw the appointment of the Trust’s first President, Sir Bobby Charlton CBE. The CCPR, with its link to the National Governing Bodies of Sport and Recreation is pleased to assist the Trust with the administration of the Awards and the Presentation Ceremony. For further information please contact the Honorary Secretary, Mrs Patricia Day OBE on 01438 840 391 or Sibley Pyne at the CCPR on 020 7854 8511 or click here for the website |
The Confederation of British Sport The Confederation includes representatives from the Central Council of Physical Recreation, the British Olympic Association (BOA), the Northern Ireland Sports Forum, the Scottish Sports Association and the Welsh Sports Association.
Meeting on a regular basis, the Confederation provides a forum for the governing bodies of the home countries, the CCPR and the BOA to integrate their respective activities.
The CCPR works very closely with many different organisations whose activities complement its own.
EU Sports Office The connections between sport and Europe are as diverse as they are different in their consequences. However, European legislation and policy seldom reveal their impact on sport at first glance. It is thus indispensable that the organized sport, as the biggest citizen movement in the community, represents its interests in Brussels and establishes itself as a contact for dialogue with EU institutions.
CCPR is a member of the EU Sports Office. Based in Brussels, the office provides CCPR with a direct link to the European Parliament and European Commission, enabling the CCPR to extend its lobbying powers and ensure that sport and recreation remain high on the European agenda.
Over 80% of UK legislation now originates in the EU and it is becoming increasingly important that the voice of sport and recreation is heard across Europe.
For further information, contact Judith Wood at CCPR on 020 7854 8500 or click here to visit the EU Sports Office website.
Sports Dispute Resolution Panel As recent experience confirms, the actions and decisions of governing bodies are increasingly liable to challenge, making the risk of disputes and litigation more real.
The CCPR has worked tirelessly for a number of years to establish an independent dispute resolution service for sport in the UK, and this has now been achieved with the Sports Dispute Resolution Panel (SDRP) now up and running.
This move has been made possible through a grant from UK Sports who have been active in their encouragement. This important initiative has also been established with the support of the Athletes Commission, the Institute of Professional Sport and the Institute of Sports Sponsorship, the British Olympic Association (BOA), the Northern Ireland Sports Forum, the Scottish Sports Association and the Welsh Sports Association.
The SDRP service aims to provide a simple and effective mechanism for parties to resolve differences by referral to SDRP’s arbitration and mediation services. SDRP maintains standing panels of expert arbitrators and mediators, both professional and lay, to whom disputes may be referred on a range of matters including doping, eligibility, selection, and commercial contracts.
The CCPR encourages all its members to consider carefully the benefits of using the SDRP service to complement their own disciplinary and dispute resolution procedures.
For further information please contact SDRP on 0207 7854 8590, Email: resolve@sportsdisputes.co.uk or visit the website on http://www.sportsdisputes.co.uk/.
Sports Leaders UK Sports Leaders UK’s (BST) Five Core Values explain the mission:
- Developing leadership
- Teaching key skills for life
- Providing a stepping-stone to employment
- Encouraging volunteering in communities
- Reducing youth crime
- Supporting more active, healthy communities
There are four Leadership Awards:
- Level 1 Award in Sports Leadership
- Level 1 Award in Community Sports Leadership
- Level 2 Award in Basic Expedition Leadership
- Level 3 Award in Higher Sports Leadership
Click here for further information www.sportsleaders.org
No organised sporting activity can take place without willing volunteers, giving up their time and talents free of charge.
If you watch a sports match on any sports pitch, municipal park or school playing field on a Saturday afternoon 99.9% of the organisers, officials and leaders are there in a voluntary capacity. Sports Leaders UK are helping to support these volunteers by offering four awards for budding Sports Leaders. The awards trained 48,000 such people last year.
Torch Trophy Trust Celebrating the Unsung Heroes of Sport
The Torch Trophy Trust is a charitable organisation, working to encourage voluntary work in sport. The Trust presents approximately 20 Awards each year to individuals who have worked at the grass roots of a particular sport on a voluntary basis, in order to enable others in the community to participate in their chosen activity. The Trust particularly wishes to recognise those who have received no previous national recognition for their voluntary work.
Without willing volunteers, working at all levels, sport would simply not happen. From cricket teas on a Sunday afternoon to 2 hour coaching sessions on a wet wintry evening, the services given by unpaid volunteers are too numerous to mention.
Nominations are made by various Governing Bodies of Sport and other sports related organisations throughout the United Kingdom. The successful candidates are presented with a miniature replica of the Olympic Torch, the symbol of the Trust at a ceremony, which is also attended by a number of sporting personalities who are pleased to have the opportunity to express their appreciation to these ‘unsung heroes’ of sport.
The trust was founded in 1962 by the late Commander Bill Collins, the organiser of the 1948 Olympic Torch Relay from Olympia in Greece to Wembley in London.
In addition, the Trust is actively engaged in encouraging and helping voluntary work at club level, through a Bursary Scheme, named after the founder. The aim of the ‘Commander Collins Bursaries’ is to provide financial aid for those individuals wishing to increase their knowledge and their ability to help others, on a voluntary basis, by taking courses to qualify as club coaches or officials, but are unable to do so without financial support.
The Chairman of the Torch Trophy Trust is Ian Peacock, Chair of the English Golf Union and former Chief Executive of the Lawn Tennis Association. Eleven Trustees representing a cross section of sports, many of which were themselves leading sports personalities or administrators, assist him in his work. 1999 saw the appointment of the Trust’s first President, Sir Bobby Charlton CBE.
The CCPR, with its link to the National Governing Bodies of Sport and Recreation is pleased to assist the Trust with the administration of the Awards and the Presentation Ceremony.
For further information please contact the Honorary Secretary, Mrs Patricia Day OBE on 01438 840 391 or Sibley Pyne at the CCPR on 020 7854 8511 or click here for the website
Sports Sponsorship Advisory Service As of the 1 April 2004, The Sports Sponsorship Advisory Service formally provided by the CCPR and funded by Sport England now no longer exists.
For further information please contact the European Sponsorship Association by clicking here.