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Covering Hurworth, Middleton St George, Croft, Sadberge, Bishopton, High Coniscliffe, Piercebridge, Heighington and Neasham and other surrounding villages
5:12pm Sunday 21st March 2010 in
A COUNCIL which was criticised for the amount of money raised at its annual charity ball has been further embarrassed after it emerged that neighbouring authorities collected up to five times as much.
306 guests paid £50 a ticket for Darlington Borough Council's showpiece fundraiser in October, but only £1,662 was collected for charity - or £5.43 a head.
£34 a head went back into council coffers to cover in-house catering and the hire of the Dolphin Centre.
Councillors labelled the sum "extremely disappointing" and called for the annual Mayor's Charity Ball to be revamped to make sure more good causes benefit in future.
A survey of unitary councils across the North-East conducted by The Northern Echo has discovered that Darlington's takings fall way below those at comparable authorities.
Although a number have cancelled the event and now raise money for charity through other means, another four councils still hold them.
Last year, 230 guests paid 50 a ticket and raised £5,950 at Stockton Borough Councils ball. The figure equates to £25.86 a head - nearly five times more than Darlington.
Sunderland raised £8,787.64 after 538 guests paid £40 to attend. The sum works out at £16.33 a head.
At Redcar and Cleveland 200 guests at £35 a ticket raised £3,300 - or £16.50 a head.
Newcastle raised £5,000 with 347 guests at £45 a ticket, or £14.41 a head.
Labour and Conservative councillors at Darlington have called for a review to make sure charities benefit more.
Tory Coun Charles Johnson said: "We all agree that the way the ball is organised does need to be looked at again.
"The charitable return has not been very good. Some councils raise more than £25 a head for charity, which is excellent."
He said costs could be cut by moving the event to a different venue. Catering and hire of the Dolphin Centre cost £10,404.
"If the venue and food is too expensive, we should take it elsewhere."
Labour Coun Ian Haszeldine, said: "It really needs looking at to ensure that the ball is and remains a charitable function.
"There are businesses out there who are willing to do such events. The council should ensure that we can maximise the benefit of the ball.
"It is a spectacular event, and it is part of Darlington's culture. It would be diabolical if it didn't exist. It's a great occasion for everybody."
Comments(3)
markdarlo
says...
12:37pm Mon 22 Mar 10
merryn
says...
12:49pm Mon 22 Mar 10
markdarlo wrote:i thought that too! as it was a charity fund raiser they should have donated the fee for the use of the hall to the charity. i am sure as a tax payer we pay our council tax so the council are able to maintain their buildings and they dont need the money. they just greedy!
im sorry, but the council have to pay themselves to hire a venue which they own?? how does that work, surely it should be free to hire it out and seems though its for charity they should donate all the money... looks like the chairty is DBC
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merryn says...
11:34pm Sun 21 Mar 10