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Charity Details

 

Forth Valley Inclusion

SC042540Registered charity from 26 August 2011
2MB ZIP file, with green, blue and mono style logos
2MB ZIP file, with green, blue and mono style logos
Notes:
Previous name Stirling Interfaith Community Justice Group (SCIO) from 26/08/2011 to 18/10/2023
Charity Information:
The Name the Charity is Known By Forth Valley Inclusion
Address c/o SBC-FLC
67 Murray Place
Stirling
Postcode FK8 1AP
Website www.sicjg.co.uk
Regulatory Type Standard
Object:
The advancement of citizenship or community development; To relief those in need by reason of age, ill health, disability, financial hardship, or other disadvantage; To promote the welfare and to, relieve the needs of families and individuals adversely affected by imprisonment and community sentencing believing that with the help of the faith communities men and women can be encouraged and supported to turn their lives around
Operations:
What the charity is set up to do and how it does this:
The charity supports those in prison and their families and friends mainly through the operation of Prison Visitor Centres at HMP & YOI Stirling and HMP Glenochil. The centres aim to provide a supportive, friendly and welcoming environment for friends and families visiting a prisoner. Support is provided by centre staff and trained volunteers to ensure experiences of prison visiting are less stressful and more positive than they would be otherwise, thereby encouraging more frequent visits and maintaining family ties. The intention is that this will increase the stability of children’s lives and reduce the risks of children themselves engaging in anti-social behaviours and suffering mental health issues later in life. We hope to achieve positive long-term outcomes for all of the family. In the long term it is hoped that these improved family ties will contribute to reductions in re-offending with positive implications for the wider community.
Charity Status: Active
Constitutional Form: SCIO (Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation)
Constitutional Form Date: 26 Aug 2011
Main Operating Location: Stirling
Number of Staff: 6
Number of Volunteers: 1-50
Purposes: "the advancement of citizenship or community development", "the relief of those in need by reason of age, ill-health, disability, financial hardship or other disadvantage"
Beneficiaries: "Children or young people", "Other defined groups", "No specific group, or for the benefit of the community"
Types Of Activity Undertaken: "It carries out activities or services itself"
Annual Submissions:
Year End Income Expenditure Annual Return Received Accounts Received Latest Annual Reports and Accounts
31 Aug 2022 £117,517 £114,277 20 Feb 2023 Yes
31 Mar 2023 £60,702 £79,296 25 Oct 2023 Yes
31 Mar 2024 £130,766 £123,253 12 Aug 2024 Yes
31 Mar 2025 £137,910 £123,873 23 Sept 2025 Yes Download
31 Mar 2026 No Annual Information due by 31 Dec 2026
If an annual return has been received on time (within nine months of the Year End Date), the 'Annual Return Received' box is green   . If an annual return is late, the box is red   .
Income and Expenditure:
Charity Trustees:
First Name Last Name
Marilyn Stenhouse
Margaret Dawson
Andrew Pont
Daniel Gunn
Daniel Harper
Margaret Rutherford
Margaret Slater
From 09 March 2026, OSCR is required by law to publish the names of a charity’s trustees as part of its Scottish Charity Register entry. We are also required to publish each charity’s annual report and accounts as received from this date, which may include the names of certain individuals. The only exceptions to publication are where a charity or one of its charity trustees applies for this information to be excluded, and OSCR is satisfied that publishing it would jeopardise the safety or security of a person or premises.

If the charity trustee information on a Register entry appears blank, this may mean that an exemption applies or that the charity has not yet provided the required details to OSCR. Supplying this information will become mandatory as part of future annual submissions.
Copyright

From 30 June 2025, OSCR began collecting charity trustee information through OSCR Online. Providing this information is a legal requirement for all charities. The names of trustees will be published on the Scottish Charity Register from early 2026 to promote transparency and strengthen public trust in the sector.

© Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator 2006. Crown Database Right 2006.

The Scottish Charity Register ("The Register") is subject to Crown database right.

The Scottish Charity Register is licenced under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

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When you use this information under the OGL, you should include the following attribution: © Crown Copyright and database right 2020. Contains information from the Scottish Charity Register supplied by the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator and licensed under the Open Government Licence v.3.0.

Charity accounts and constitution – what information do we publish?

The Scottish Charity Register contains key information about a charity’s operations and finances. This includes:

  • the names of a charity’s trustees (exemptions apply)
  • its annual report and full accounts, if submitted after 9 March 2026
    (Accounts submitted prior to 9 March 2026 will be redacted, or may not be published, depending on the charity’s income level or legal form.)

These changes are designed to improve transparency across the charity sector in Scotland.

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Under section 23(1)(a) and (b) of the Charities and Trustee Investment (Scotland) Act 2005, you have the right to request the following information directly from the charity:

  • a copy of the charity’s latest statement of accounts
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