stevebradley wrote: Sat Feb 01, 2025 10:22 pm
IfYouTolerateThis wrote: Fri Jan 31, 2025 5:28 pm
I know that Steve insists that the money is there, and whilst he is correct,
The £36.2m is there - that's just a fact. I dont need to insist on it
IfYouTolerateThis wrote: Fri Jan 31, 2025 5:28 pm I would not be in any way confident that the promised funding for the completion of the MF Stand will ever make its way to the club.
I'm of similar mind here. If there was a lot more money in the pot then I think we'd be a shoe-in. But with so many applications for it, there are a hell of a lot of mouths to feed. So I'd put our chances as 50/50 - with the risk being that they may think we'll finish the stand anyway even without the Stormont money (amd they'd probably be right on that).
Having read the various media reports & the documents that have been released by the Dept of Communities it appears that there are three tiers of funding. Tier 1 any projects up to 1.5m, Tier 2 any projects from £1.5m-£6m & Tier 3 any projects over £6m; as part of the application process the applicants have to cost their project & apply to the relevant tier. E.g. the Loughgall chairman (who is an architect) is on record saying their project is estimated to cost £3.5m so they're only allowed to apply to tier 2 & therefore Loughgall will compete with the likes of Institute for the money rather than Derry City or Glentoran.
There is a scoring matrix in place based around footballing need (existing facilities), footballing need (new build), the benefits your project will bring to the community, disability groups, underrespresented groups & finance - basically contributions the applicant are making towards the project.
There is also an extra section for applicants to score extra points which is based on previous investment to improve your facilities - this is where I think the initial redevelopment in 2017 & the ongoing development of the new stand comes into play. I'd assume we'll be competing with Glentoran, Cliftonville, Crusaders & Coleraine in tier 3 & where we might fall down in the scoring matrix in some areas this is an area where we can make up those points especially over Glentoran who have done nowhere near the type of work DCSDC & Derry City FC have done to the Brandywell to improving facilities for players & spectators. Their owner Ali Pour reckons Glentoran deserve the money because he's forked out £500k to keep the ground open & meet licensing requirements yet they had a match abandoned 2 weeks ago because their generator failed causing the floodlights to go out.
I suspect anyone who applies will get something, they just won't get the full amount. The disadvantage Derry City will have as opposed to other clubs like Cliftonville, Glentoran, Crusaders & Coleraine is that they only have to contribute 5% but DCSDC will have to contribute 40%. Applicants are allowed to get help with their contributions but this has to be demonstrated in the application form e.g. Philip O'Doherty could put up the 40% on behalf of the council which is probably what will happen