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How does a Dormant Company receive £9,000 in European Grant Funding?

How does a dormant company receive nearly nine thousand pounds in European grant funding and not declare it in its company’s accounts?

Tomorrow at the first Cabinet meeting under the new administration, they’ll meet to discuss Report Number C/23/01.

This report sets out the performance, achievements and closure arrangements for the Folkestone Community Works Community-Led Local Development (CLLD) programme which will end 30 June 2023. The council has been the accountable body for this European-funded programme since 2017.

What is the CLLD Programme

The Community Led Local Development (CLLD) is a new way of supporting local development projects using structural funds from Europe.

It aims to increase employment and skills and social enterprise and ensures that local people are involved in developing projects, using resources in the area to address local challenges.

The programmer, according to the Folkestone Work website, ran from 2018 to 2022 and was managed by the Council. A Local Action Group made up of local business and community leaders considered and made recommendations on which projects are funded. The Terms of reference can be found here and the people who sat on the Local Action Group in 2021 can be found here  

This fund was used to deliver three objectives in the central, eastern and harbour areas of Folkestone by 2022:

Back to the Report

Embedded in the report are two companies who received nearly £16,000 from the CLLD programme. They are:

SME049 Spice Queen £8,791
SME050 Kai’s Food Ltd* £7,087 (* Grant awarded but not taken up so excluded
from total )

When one looks at Companies House, both these companies have filed accounts for a dormant company for the year in question that being 2021/22.

Spice Queen Limited

Kai’s Food Limited

According to the Council’s purchase orders (PO) data, shows two POs to the value of £15,878 (net) .

This eventual payment of £8,791 to Spice Queen Limited, a dormant company, had to be included in its accounts for 2021/22. Yet according to Companies House the sum of £8,791, was not included in its accounts. 

Grants are treated as taxable income and have to be declared in any companies accounts, to ensure payment of corporation tax.

According to the Companies Act 2006, and Company Law, dormant companies cannot spend or receive any money, otherwise they become active for Corporation Tax. Even the smallest entry or transaction, including earning interest or paying bank charges and fees, forfeits the company’s dormant trading status. As these companies have been paid (albeit Kai’s Food Ltd did not take up the offer) one company was required to prepare full annual accounts for Companies House. This did not happen in the case of Spice Queen Limited.

The Director’s of Spice Queen Ltd are Kayrul Islam Meah and Rejia Miah both of who reside in Hythe (Kent). There are three person who have significant control; of the company, according to Companies House

Will the new cabinet members ask questions of those responsible for administering the funds, and how a company came to receive European funding, but did not comply with either the Companies Act or Company law?

Is this another financial irregularity?

We’ll leave you to make your mind up on that. 

The Shepway Vox Team

Dissent is NOT a Crime

 

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