The Resilience and Recovery Loan Fund – One year on
Just over one year on since the Resilience and Recovery Loan Fund launched, our CEO Nick Temple reflects not just on the figures, but also on the strength of partnerships we built, and how we'll be taking our learnings forward into our successor loan fund.
It does not seem like well over a year since the plan was hatched for the Resilience and Recovery Loan Fund (RRLF), but it is, and the Fund has now officially closed after our last investment committee a week or so back completed the final approvals from the applications that came in ahead of the 1 April 2021 deadline. It's been quite the thing, and although people rightly say that numbers don't tell the whole story, I think in this instance they give a flavour.
- £24m: the total investment amount successfully approved from the £25m from Big Society Capital
- £3.9m: the total grant amount approved from the £4m emergency grants from Access
- 7: the number of social investment partners who helped us design and then deliver the fund (Big Issue Invest, CAF Venturesome, Charity Bank, Resonance, Social and Sustainable Capital, Social Investment Scotland and the Wales Council for Voluntary Action)
When we set out on establishing the Fund back in March 2020 to make the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CBILS) more accessible to charities and social enterprises, we set out three main underlying principles of operation:
- Put the customer at the centre - so we emphasised responsiveness, proportionate process and clarity of communications.
- Work in open partnership - we designed the investment process together with our partners, and worked out a fair cost structure for their time; and the openness was reinforced by our live and public dashboards.
- Review and adapt - we knew that (without wishing to go full Rumsfeld) we didn't know what we didn't yet know; and that we would need to change and flex as things happened in the pandemic.
