MOOR HOUSE SCHOOL & COLLEGE
Charity overview
Activities - how the charity spends its money
Moor House exists to provide children and students who have severe developmental language disorder with an education that prepares them for life as confident and independent members of society.
Income and expenditure
Data for financial year ending 31 August 2024
Total income:
£13,920,159
| Donations and legacies | £156.13k | |
| Charitable activities | £13.51m | |
| Other trading activities | £62.18k | |
| Investments | £194.58k | |
| Other | £0 |
Total expenditure:
£11,988,488
| Raising funds | £83.37k | |
| Charitable activities | £11.91m | |
| Other | £0 |
£0 investments gains (losses)
Total income includes £12,824,861 from 217 government contract(s) and £492,703 from 5 government grant(s)
Charitable expenditure
Charitable expenditure with investment gains
Charitable expenditure
Some charities generate all, or a substantial part, of their income from investments which may have been donated to the charity as endowment or set aside by the charity from its own resources in the past. Such investments usually take the form of stocks and shares but may include other assets, such as property, that are capable of generating income and/or capital growth.
In managing their spending and investments charities need to strike a balance between the needs of future and current beneficiaries. They also need to take account of spending commitments that may stretch over a number of future years. To do this, charities will normally adopt an investment strategy designed to generate both income and capital growth. To maximise returns trustees may commit to investment strategies for several years.
Investments can experience large swings in value so trustees may, in a particular year, decide to realise and spend part of their charity’s capital or to invest part of its income.
By clicking the investment gains checkbox the charitable spending bar is adjusted to take account of capital growth as well as income. This shows the balance the charity is striking, between spending on current beneficiaries and retaining resources for future beneficiaries.
| Raising funds and other expenditure | £83.37k | |
| Charitable expenditure | £11.91m | |
| Retained for future use | £1.93m |
People
202 Employee(s)
9 Trustee(s)
20 Volunteer(s)
Employees with total benefits over £60,000
| Number of employees | |
|---|---|
| £60k to £70k | 7 |
| £70k to £80k | 4 |
| £80k to £90k | 2 |
| £130k to £140k | 1 |
Fundraising
Trading
Trustee payments
What, who, how, where
- Education/training
- Children/young People
- Other Charitable Activities
- Throughout England
Governance
- 05 November 1968: Standard registration
- MOOR HOUSE SCHOOL AND COLLEGE (Working name)
- MOOR HOUSE SCHOOL (Previous name)
- Ofsted (Office For Standards In Education)
- Bullying and harassment policy and procedures
- Campaigns and political activity policy and procedures
- Complaints handling
- Complaints policy and procedures
- Conflicting interests
- Financial reserves policy and procedures
- Internal charity financial controls policy and procedures
- Internal risk management policy and procedures
- Investing charity funds policy and procedures
- Paying staff
- Risk management
- Safeguarding policy and procedures
- Safeguarding vulnerable beneficiaries
- Serious incident reporting policy and procedures
- Social media policy and procedures
- Trustee conflicts of interest policy and procedures
- Trustee expenses policy and procedures
Trustees
Trustees are the people responsible for controlling the work, management and administration of the charity on behalf of its beneficiaries. Generally trustees are treasurer, chair, board member etc. The trustees are responsible for keeping this list up to date and can do this by updating their details as they happen through the online service
9 Trustee(s)
| Name | Role | Date of appointment | Other trusteeships | Reporting status of other trusteeships | ||||
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| Stuart James Dennison | Chair | 11 February 2014 |
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| Julia Vivian Harley IRVINE | Trustee | 01 September 2024 |
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| Dr Judith Maxwell Ireson | Trustee | 18 March 2024 |
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| Ryszard Jozef Piskorz | Trustee | 22 November 2022 |
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| William David Gunston | Trustee | 01 September 2022 |
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| Steven James Gooch | Trustee | 01 September 2021 |
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| Kevin Maskell | Trustee | 10 December 2018 |
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| David Marnham | Trustee | 10 December 2018 |
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| Laura Middleditch | Trustee | 01 September 2018 |
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Financial history
Financial period end date
| Income / Expenditure | 31/08/2020 | 31/08/2021 | 31/08/2022 | 31/08/2023 | 31/08/2024 | ||
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Total gross income | £10.52m | £10.49m | £10.67m | £12.53m | £13.92m | |
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Total expenditure | £8.02m | £8.67m | £9.72m | £11.31m | £11.99m | |
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Income from government contracts | £8.92m | £9.70m | £10.21m | £11.67m | £12.82m | |
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Income from government grants | £168.17k | £331.75k | £287.56k | £342.80k | £492.70k | |
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Income - Donations and legacies | £976.85k | £83.79k | £174.18k | £85.21k | £156.13k | |
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Income - Other trading activities | £35.23k | £12.85k | £49.09k | £65.72k | £62.18k | |
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Income - Charitable activities | £9.50m | £10.39m | £10.86m | £12.30m | £13.51m | |
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Income - Endowments | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Income - Investment | £9.05k | £1.67k | £0 | £75.16k | £194.58k | |
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Income - Other | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Income - Legacies | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Expenditure - Charitable activities | £7.90m | £8.57m | £9.62m | £11.21m | £11.91m | |
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Expenditure - Raising funds | £118.15k | £101.43k | £100.43k | £96.25k | £83.37k | |
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Expenditure - Governance | £29.48k | £25.58k | £25.80k | £54.37k | £70.42k | |
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Expenditure - Grants institution | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Expenditure - Investment management | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Expenditure - Other | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 |
Assets and liabilities
Definitions for assets and liabilities
These are assets, other than investments, which are held for more than 12 months and used to run and administer the charity such as buildings, offices, exhibits and fixtures and fittings.
Long term InvestmentsInvestments are assets held by the charity with the sole aim of generating income which will be used for their charitable purposes such as deposit accounts, shares, rental property and unit trusts.
Investment assets are re-valued every year and included in the balance sheet at their current market value.
Long term investments are held for more than 12 months.
These are assets held generally for less than 12 months such as cash and bank balances, debtors, investments to be sold within the coming year and trading stock.
Defined benefit pension scheme asset or liabilityThis is a surplus or deficit in any defined benefit pension scheme operated and represents a potential long-term asset or liability.
Total liabilitiesThese are all the amounts owed by the charity at the balance sheet date to third parties such as bills due but not yet paid, bank overdrafts and loans and mortgages.
| Asset / Liability | 31/08/2020 | 31/08/2021 | 31/08/2022 | 31/08/2023 | 31/08/2024 | ||
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Own use assets | £6.38m | £6.33m | £7.90m | £7.88m | £8.11m | |
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Long-term investments | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Other assets | £6.77m | £8.70m | £8.48m | £9.62m | £11.36m | |
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Defined benefit pension scheme asset or liability | -£2.77m | -£2.90m | £0 | £0 | £0 | |
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Total liabilities | £5.91m | £6.04m | £6.04m | £5.94m | £5.98m |
Accounts and annual returns
| Title | Reporting year | Date received | Received | Download |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Annual return | 31 August 2024 | 19 June 2025 | On time | |
| Accounts and TAR | 31 August 2024 | 19 June 2025 | On time | Download Open in new window |
| Annual return | 31 August 2023 | 26 April 2024 | On time | |
| Accounts and TAR | 31 August 2023 | 26 April 2024 | On time | Download Open in new window |
| Annual return | 31 August 2022 | 08 June 2023 | On time | |
| Accounts and TAR | 31 August 2022 | 08 June 2023 | On time | Download Open in new window |
| Annual return | 31 August 2021 | 21 June 2022 | On time | |
| Accounts and TAR | 31 August 2021 | 21 June 2022 | On time | Download Open in new window |
| Annual return | 31 August 2020 | 28 April 2021 | On time | |
| Accounts and TAR | 31 August 2020 | 28 April 2021 | On time | Download Open in new window |
Governing document
It is not the full text of the charity's governing document.
SCHEME DATED 01/06/1998 AS AMENDED BY RESOLUTION DATED 09/12/2013 AS AMENDED ON 15 MAY 2017 AS AMENDED ON 18 OCT 2024
Charitable objects
(1) THE OBJECTS OF THE CHARITY ARE THE ADVANCEMENT OF EDUCATION FOR THE PUBLIC BENEFIT OF CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE WITH SPECIAL SPEECH AND LANGUAGE EDUCATIONAL NEEDS AND ASSISTING CHILDREN AND YOUNG PEOPLE WITH SPECIAL SPEECH AND LANGUAGE EDUCATIONAL NEEDS TO DEVELOP THEIR SPEECH, LANGUAGE, COMMUNICATION AND LIFE SKILLS, IN PARTICULAR, BUT NOT EXCLUSIVELY, BY MEANS OF: (A) THE RUNNING OF A SPECIAL SCHOOL & COLLEGE, INCLUDING ASSOCIATED RESIDENTIAL PROVISION, AND DEVELOPING AND SHARING SPEECH AND LANGUAGE EXPERTISE; (B) UNDERTAKING RESEARCH INTO LANGUAGE DISORDERS AND ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS AND PUBLISHING THE USEFUL RESULTS OF THE RESEARCH; (C) PROVIDING TRAINING, AIDS OR RESOURCES IN LANGUAGE DISORDERS AND ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS. (2) THE LAND IDENTIFIED IN PART 1 OF THE SCHEDULE OF THE SCHEME (AND ANY OTHER LAND FROM TIME TO TIME PROVIDED) MUST BE RETAINED BY THE TRUSTEES FOR THE OBJECTS OF THE CHARITY AS PERMANENT ENDOWMENT.
Area of benefit
COUNTY OF SURREY
Contact information
- Address:
-
MOOR HOUSE SCHOOL
MILL LANE
OXTED
RH8 9AQ
- Phone:
- 01883 712271
- Email:
- info@moorhouseschool.co.uk
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