Church Admin
The Church Building Support Officer is currently refreshing the content for this page
In the meantime, if you need any advice or support in the management and or development of the church building for whioch you are responsible, please contact gareth.greenwood@derby.anglican.org
The Cathedral & Church Buildings Department’s expanded £5million conservation grants programme is now open for applications on our website Conservation Grants | The Church of England.
If you have a conservation project in mind relating to bells and bell frames, books and manuscripts, church plate, churchyard structures, clocks, monumental brasses and decorative metalwork, monuments, organs, paintings and wall paintings. stained glass, textiles or wooden objects, you can now include related fabric repairs up to a maximum of £25k.
An example might be a PCC looking to conserve an alabaster sculpture in a niche where there is existing water ingress due to a building defect adversely affecting the area. As part of the application for money to conserve the sculpture, a request for additional monies to rectify that defect can now be considered.
You will be familiar with our conservation grants programme (long funded by The Pilgrim Trust, the Radcliffe Trust and other funders) to support the conservation of special features in church, including bells, clocks, organs, stained glass, wall paintings and monuments. All this remains, with additional funding to help more churches. The expanded programme allows us to make grants towards building repairs of up to £25,000 that are linked to the conservation of an object.
Bids for specialist surveys and help for existing recipients’ conservation projects to reach completion will be considered for funding as well.
For further information, please contact colleagues in CCB via conservationgrants@churchofengland.org
2025
Conservation Reports
rolling deadline - 2 week response time
Monuments, Textiles, Wooden Objects, Books & Manuscripts, Church Plate, Curchyard Sytructures, Monumental Brasses and Decorative Metalwork
13th October - decision by 28th November
Organs and organ cases
6th October - decision by 28th November
2026
Paintings & Wall Paintings
5th January - Decision by 20th February
Bells and Bell Frames
26th January - Decision by 13th March
Stained Glass
23rd February - Decision by 10th April
Clocks
16th March - Deceision by 1st May
>> Guide to Parochial Fees 2025 - includes Parochial Fees Table [PDF]
>> Parochial Fees Table 2025 [PDF]
>> Parochial Fees Form 2025 [Excel file]
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The Diocesan Board of Finance has extended a joint subscription so that all churches in the diocese can access this grant searching platform for free.
This gives every PCC the opportunity to search a maintained list of local and national grant funders and trusts, that are tailored towards church buildings and Christian project work.
All you need to start looking for that vital funding is your 6 figure parish reference code and the name of your church building.
If you don't know your parish reference code email the Church Buildings Support Officer or you can find it on the Church Heritage Record portal.
Here is the link to the Diocese of Derby Church Grants site
Fundraising Support and Advice
If you have a clear project plan and are beginning to think about how to fundraise, we have made available 30 minute pro bono bespoke consultations online sessions, with Matthew and Andrew from ChucrhGrants - contact the Chucrh Buildings Support Officer if you would like to arrange a call with the ChurchGrants Team.
>> January 2024 [PDF]
>> February 2024 [PDF]
>> March 2024 [PDF]
>> April 2024 [PDF]
>> May 2024 [PDF]
>> June 2024 [PDF]
>> July 2024 [PDF]
>> August 2024 [PDF]
>> September 2024 [PDF]
>> October 2024 [PDF]
>> November 2024 [PDF]
>> December 2024 [PDF]
>> Parochial Fees Guidance 2024 [PDF]
Click the links below to download the monthly report.
The annual clergy conference takes place at The Hayes Conference Centre, Swanwick, Derbyshire.
>> Visit the Clergy Conference website
Licensed Lay Ministers (Readers) are lay people licensed by the diocesan bishop to lead, preach, teach, and enable others. They are lay theologians who are engaged with their communities and the culture around them and are called to teach the faith, enable mission in the everyday, and lead in church and society. As people admitted to the office of Reader, their ministry is voluntary, nationally accredited, episcopally licensed and governed by Canon Law.
They do this both inside and outside the existing Church by:
- Explaining the Christian faith
- Responding pastorally to need
- Being role models for, and fellow disciples with, people seeking to live out the Christian gospel in today’s world
The role is often described as ‘theologically educated and culturally engaged.
Readers were first used in the 19th Century, when there was a massive increase in the population of England. In response the Victorians built lots of churches and then had to work out how to respond to the spiritual and pastoral needs of the people who flocked to them, as well as their expectations for well-led services.
Part of the answer was to licence a group of lay people to work with the clergy. They were called “Readers” because one of their more obvious jobs was to read out loud Morning and Evening Prayer from the Book of Common Prayer, so that congregations could join in.
Readers come from all walks of life. There are currently around 150 Readers (licenced and with Permission to Officiate) involved in mission and ministry around the Diocese of Derby.
Some are involved in chaplaincy in schools, prisons, workplaces and hospitals, others are involved in pioneer ministry or community development, and still more are involved with preaching and teaching in the parish and leading worship.All Readers in the diocese are licenced to a parish or benefice to enable them to have direct relationships of accountability and support.However, this doesn’t mean that they are restricted to working within one parish or the work that the parish or benefice is already doing.Many Readers initiate new pieces of work and projects formed out of their relationships with ordinary people going about their everyday lives.
To support and enable LLM (Readers) in mission and ministry, the Diocese provides pastoral support and care for them, email update, a programme of learning opportunities and various social events.