Difference between revisions of "UnLtd"

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{{note|enterprising}} http://www.enterprising-communities.org.uk/members.shtml#biog1
 
{{note|enterprising}} http://www.enterprising-communities.org.uk/members.shtml#biog1
  
{{note|Newstart}} http://www.newstartmag.co.uk/unltd.html
+
{{note|Newstart}} 'Down to earth with a bump' New Start, 8 March 2002 http://www.newstartmag.co.uk/unltd.html
  
 
{{note|Herald}} http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/archive/20-5-1999-23-41-15.html
 
{{note|Herald}} http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/archive/20-5-1999-23-41-15.html
  
 
{{note|Newstart2}} http://www.newstartmag.co.uk/unltd.html
 
{{note|Newstart2}} http://www.newstartmag.co.uk/unltd.html

Revision as of 12:05, 17 June 2006

Brings together: Ashoka, CAN, the Scarman Trust, SSE, Senscot, the Scottish network for social entrepreneurs and Comic Relief. It was given a £100m endowment by the Millenium Commission to fund pet projects and aid in the privatising of public services. [1]

Their board includes:

UnLtd wanted to turn itself into a bank (also the ambition of CAN) and lend the money rather than give it away.{ref|Newstart}} Now run by John Rafferty, once 'Tony Blair's most trusted ally in Scotland', who was briefly Chief of Staff and a Special Adviser to the late Donald Dewar. Rafferty ran Labour's campaign in Scotland with no reference to the Scottish party and he was tipped to be Dewar's chief of staff.[2] After being 'controversially dismissed', he was 'pulled in' from TimeBank (also in the Mezzanine) as UnLtd's chief executive. Rafferty was head of the National Lottery Charities Board in Scotland (UnLtd's money comes from the Lottery via the Millennium Commission).[3]


Notes

^ http://www.enterprising-communities.org.uk/members.shtml#biog1

^ 'Down to earth with a bump' New Start, 8 March 2002 http://www.newstartmag.co.uk/unltd.html

^ http://www.theherald.co.uk/news/archive/20-5-1999-23-41-15.html

^ http://www.newstartmag.co.uk/unltd.html