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Charity Details

 

The DRC Youth Project (SCIO)

SC050035Registered charity from 13 March 2020
2MB ZIP file, with green, blue and mono style logos
2MB ZIP file, with green, blue and mono style logos
Charity Information:
The Name the Charity is Known By DRCYP
Address The DRC Youth Project
9 Kelso Place
Yoker
Postcode G14 0LL
Website No Link Provided
Regulatory Type Standard
Object:
The prevention or relief of poverty- The DRC Youth Project SCIO will support young people along the Dumbarton road corridor and throughout Glasgow NW. It will have a specific focus on the socially excluded and most vulnerable and hard to reach young people and will use a community learning and development approach that is responsive to the particular needs identified by young people and relevant agencies. We aim to empower young people to take control of their lives and maximise the opportunities available to them and thereby live their lives to their fullest potential through developmental youth work methodologies. We focus on areas such as Mental and physical health, Alcohol, drug and substance misuse, youth employability and territorial issues with an aim to provide an alternative to crime, anti-social behaviour, addictions and unhealthy lifestyles. We use a young person centred holistic approach and offer non judgemental and confidential spaces that allows young people to address the issues that affect them in their day to day lives. Advancement of Health – To develop youth work programmes to encourage young people to become more active and to lead healthier lifestyles. We also aim to increase young people’s understanding and awareness of key health issues such as drugs and alcohol misuse, smoking, sexual health, diet and nutrition and mental/physical health and wellbeing. The advancement of citizenship or community development – To continually consult and empower young people who are both within and out with our youth work provision to ensure that the youth work services we develop and deliver meets everyone’s needs supporting YP to become independent and responsible adults. We aim to always encourage the meaningful participation of young people, involving them in all decision making processes. We also aim to encourage young people to volunteer within their communities so they have respect for the people and things that make them up. We believe that ownership of tasks, events and buildings is the key to ensure that future generations make the most of and enhance the environments they live in. The Dumbarton Road Corridor Youth Project is also an equal opportunities project and works with all young people regardless of race, sex, religion, ability, disability, sexuality and identity as outlined in our Equal Opportunities policy. maximum text reached, further full information can be obtained directly from the Charity
Operations:
What the charity is set up to do and how it does this:
The DRC Youth Project is set up to improve the life chances of children and young people, particularly those affected by poverty, disadvantage and inequality. We work to support young people to build confidence, develop skills, improve wellbeing and progress into positive destinations such as education, training, volunteering and employment. We do this by providing accessible, community-based youth work, employability support and accredited learning opportunities. Our work includes one-to-one and group support, targeted programmes, volunteering pathways, skills development and partnership working with schools, employers and community organisations. We take a trauma-informed, strengths-based approach, ensuring young people are supported at their own pace and are actively involved in shaping their goals. Our services are designed to remove barriers, create opportunity and enable young people to achieve sustainable, positive outcomes.
Charity Status: Active
Constitutional Form: SCIO (Scottish Charitable Incorporated Organisation)
Constitutional Form Date: 13 Mar 2020
Main Operating Location: Glasgow City
Number of Staff: 16
Number of Charity Trustees: 6
Number of Volunteers: 51-100
Purposes: "the prevention or relief of poverty", "the advancement of health", "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"
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 Mar 2021 £113,780 £80,301 06 Jan 2022 Yes
31 Mar 2022 £237,026 £224,882 09 Jan 2023 Yes
31 Mar 2023 £256,350 £251,241 19 Dec 2023 Yes
31 Mar 2024 £378,279 £374,917 10 Jan 2025 Yes
31 Mar 2025 £416,609 £409,225 05 Jan 2026 Yes
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
No charity trustee information available
*OSCR is required by law to publish the names of a charity’s trustees and its principal office address as part of the charity’s Scottish Charity Register entry. They are also required to publish the annual report and accounts for each charity, including the names of some individuals. The only exceptions to this are where a charity or one of its trustees applies for this information to be excluded from the Register entry and where OSCR is satisfied that if it were published then the safety or security of a person or premises would be jeopardised.
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.

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