Lottery | Sue
Featherstone checks out who benefits from the Lottery |
If
you're a fan of the National Lottery, but are fed up with where the money's spent,
then you're not alone.
Some people are so disillusioned they've stopped
playing the Lottery altogether. They believe that the money is being wasted
on projects that don't benefit them. One of those people is Rochester resident
Sue Featherstone.
Outraged at Lottery cash going to guinea pig farmers
in Peru, she asks, are the people who spend the most on the Lottery reaping the
rewards? Inside Out gets her to visit several Lottery projects across the
South East to see what she thinks. Amongst the projects she visits are Bexhill's
De la Warr Pavilion, the Historic Docks at Chatham, and The Sunlight Centre in
Gillingham. Reaping the benefitsTwo thousand and two hundred projects
have received funding from the Lottery across the South East. Twenty eight
pence of every Lottery ticket bought goes to fund big and small projects.
The money is distributed by organisations like the Arts Council, the Millennium
Commission and National Heritage.
Sue Featherstone is shocked to learn
that the government takes a 12 per cent cut of all the money. She's more
impressed by the projects which she visits, not realising them some of them have
benefited from Lottery funding. However, she asks whether too much money
is being spent on PC projects at the expense of smaller, grass roots groups? Links
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