• Search
  • About us
  • Jobs
  • Contact Us
  • Shop
  • Donate
  • Join Us
  • Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife
        • Wildlife Directory
      • Record Your Sighting
        • Nature Counts
      • Injured Animals & Emergencies
        • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
        • Reporting Wildlife Crime
        • Wildfire safety advice
        • The Countryside Code
      • Image of Wildlife in Sheffield and Rotherham Reserve
        Wildlife in Sheffield and Rotherham

        Take a look, through some of the common species of wildlife that live in the South Yorkshire area around Sheffield and Rotherham.

  • Our Work
      • News
        • Conservation
        • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
        • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
        • Nature Reserves
        • Partnerships
        • Nature Recovery
        • Campaigning & Appeals
        • Events & Activities
        • Videos
      • Nature Recovery Programmes
        • Nature Based Solutions
        • Rotherham Rivers
      • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
        • Green and Blue Social Prescribing
        • Wild at Heart
        • Nextdoor Nature
      • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
        • Primary and Early Years
        • Secondary Schools
        • Further and Higher Education
        • Training and support
      • Evidence-led Conservation
        • What is Evidence-Led Conservation?
        • Working with Nature: Woodhouse Washlands
      • Partnerships
        • South Yorkshire Woodland Partnership
        • South Yorkshire Local Nature Partnership
        • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
        • Sheffield Lakeland Partnership
      • Advice & Consultancy
        • Wildscapes
        • The BNG Hub
        • Land Management Advice Service
  • Nature Reserves
      • Nature Reserves in Sheffield
        • Blacka Moor
        • Carbrook Ravine
        • Carr House Meadows
        • Crabtree Ponds
        • Fox Hagg
        • Greno Woods
        • Moss Valley Woodlands
        • Salmon Pastures
        • Sunnybank
        • Wyming Brook
      • Nature Reserves in Rotherham
        • Woodhouse Washlands
        • Centenary Riverside
        • Kilnhurst Ings
      • Special Conservation Spaces
        • Agden Bog
        • Hammond’s Field
      • Nature Friendly Farming
        • Ughill Farm
      • Image of Fox Hagg Reserve
        Fox Hagg

        A recently extended patch of heathland and woodland, neighbouring Wyming Brook.

  • Events & Activities
      • What's On
        • Volunteer Work Days
        • Family Events
        • Guided Walks
        • Online Events
        • View All Events
      • Activities
        • 30 Days Wild
        • Activities for Children
        • Activities for Adults
        • Nature Detectives!
  • Get Involved
      • Nature Recovery
        • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
        • Nature Recovery Sheffield
        • Nature Recovery Rotherham
        • Sheffield Swift City
        • New Government Priorities for Nature
      • Volunteering
        • Volunteer with us
      • Campaigning for Wildlife
        • # Defend Nature
        • Action for Insects
        • Badgers and bTB
        • Birds of Prey
        • Go peat free!
        • Our Moors
        • Wilder Future
      • Image of Badgers and bTB Reserve
        Badgers and bTB

        Help stop the badger cull coming to Sheffield and Rotherham!

  • Support us
      • Become a Member
        • Individual Membership
        • Joint Membership
        • Family Membership
        • Gift a Membership
        • Renew your Membership
      • Corporate Partnerships
        • Corporate Membership
        • Wild Work Days
        • Employee Wellbeing Packages
      • Make a Donation
      • Appeals
        • Taking Action for Nature Appeal
        • Acorn Fund
      • A Gift in Your Will
        • A Gift in their Memory
        • How Gifts Can Help us
      • Image of Kingfisher Magazine Reserve
        Kingfisher Magazine

        Unveil the hidden world of insects in Sheffield & Rotherham with the newest issue of Kingfisher magazine.

  • Join Us
  • Donate
  • Online Shop
  • About us
  • Jobs
  • Wildlife
    • Wildlife Directory
    • Nature Counts
    • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
    • Reporting Wildlife Crime
    • Wildfire safety advice
    • The Countryside Code
  • Our Work
    • News
    • Nature, Health & Wellbeing
    • Evidence-led Conservation
    • Schools, Education & Outdoor Learning
    • South Yorkshire Woodland Partnership
    • South Yorkshire Local Nature Partnership
    • Sheffield Street Tree Partnership
    • Sheffield Lakeland Partnership
    • Wildscapes
  • Nature Reserves
    • Agden Bog
    • Blacka Moor
    • Carbrook Ravine
    • Carr House Meadows
    • Crabtree Ponds
    • Fox Hagg
    • Greno Woods
    • Hammond’s Field
    • Moss Valley Woodlands
    • Salmon Pastures
    • Sunnybank
    • Wyming Brook
    • Woodhouse Washlands
    • Centenary Riverside
    • Kilnhurst Ings
    • Ughill Farm
  • Events & Activities
    • What's On
    • 30 Days Wild
    • Activities for Children
    • Activities for Adults
    • Nature Detectives!
  • Get Involved
    • Volunteer with us
    • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
    • Nature Recovery Sheffield
    • Nature Recovery Rotherham
    • Campaigning For Wildlife
  • Support us
    • Become a Member
      • Individual Membership
      • Family Membership
      • Joint Membership – Last chance!
      • Gift a Membership
    • Donate
  • Home
  • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
  • Looking after your local green space
  • Starting a new community group

Starting a new community group

Information and guidance on starting a new community group in your area.

© Melanie Savas of S6 Swifts and Jan of Nest Box Solutions.
  • Businesses
  • Case studies – what other local people are doing for nature
  • Community Action for Nature Map
  • Expert advice
  • How to work with your local councillors
  • Lobbying your MP
  • Looking after your local green space
    • Case studies – what other local people are doing for nature
    • Funding
    • Local groups in Sheffield and Rotherham
    • Starting a new community group
    • Taking over a green space in your area
  • More Nature in your Neighbourhood
  • More nature in your neighbourhood
  • Nature friendly gardening
  • Nature Recovery Toolkit Feedback Form
  • Places of worship
  • Schools
  • Wilder Green Spaces and Verges

Are you thinking about setting up a group in your community to look after a local green space or take action locally to improve the area for nature?

With some careful planning, you can make sure setting up your community group will be a success.

Initially, it’s worth taking some time to think about the activity you are planning to undertake and how you will run it. If you will be part of a small group, consider who will be responsible for what area of activity and document it. Good planning at this stage will save a lot of time later on.

If you are planning to start a formal ‘Friends of’ group to carry our activity on an area of council-owned land, then you will need to contact the relevant council about this first.

If the land belongs to Sheffield City Council, you’ll need to contact the Parks and Countryside Service about this first. You can email them at parksandcountryside@sheffield.gov.uk and find other supporting information here.

Two people gardening

Sheffield City Council have also produced a very helpful document – Starting a Community Group – which includes a great deal of useful information, such as how to create a Management Committee and officer roles, finances, insurance and more. They also provide a web page with lots of useful links for community groups for support, funding and advice.

In Rotherham, it’s worth making enquiries with Rotherham Federation and Voluntary Action Rotherham for initial advice. They can provide you with advice, support and identify suitable funding opportunities. If you’re planning to undertake an activity in a park or green space owned by Rotherham Council, you’ll need to make an enquiry with their Green Spaces team – find out more here. You can also find out more about what’s already happening in your area, with contact details for your local councillors and neighbourhoods teams here.

You may have already done a lot of work around setting up your group, but it’s always worth making sure your plans are well thought out. Have a look at the information below which may help your process.

Things to consider
• Working with partners/stakeholders
• Building and maintaining networks
• Engaging community members
• Sustainability
• Managing resources
• Generating ideas
• Communicating effectively
• Links to insurance, legal structures, governance etc.

  1. Decide what type of activity you want to run and whether you need to set up a group.
    Firstly, you need to decide what type of activity it is you wish to run and whether you need to set up a group to help you achieve this. If you do decide to set up a group, you need to decide where you want to run it, how often you will need to meet and who else might be involved. It’s worth doing some research into other similar groups or organisations in your area. Could you join an existing group or work together to develop something new, or improve an existing service? Could you share resources, premises and expertise?
  2. Do you need to get others on board?
    Once you have established what type of activity it is you want to run, consider whether you want or need others to help make it happen. If you have the time, expertise, energy and commitment to do everything yourself you can get going. Alternatively, if you need organisers and volunteers you could spread the word through social networking sites, advertise in local newspapers or notice boards in community buildings, local shops, post offices, libraries or surgeries. If you are setting up a group, you might need a committee with someone to chair the
    meetings, someone to write down what happens (a secretary) and someone who looks after any money (a treasurer).
  3. Do you need to create a plan of action?
    It helps to be clear about all the jobs that you need to do and who is responsible for what activity, so it may be useful to create a plan of action. Ideally, your plan should explain what you or your group intends to do (otherwise referred to as Aims or Objectives), who you aim to help or serve and how you plan to do that. It may also help you to prioritise what you are doing. Make sure you include:

    – what you hope to achieve or change as a result of the activity
    – how often your activity will be run
    – when and where the activity will be run
    – who is involved, their position and what they are responsible for
    – what resources you have available (individuals’ time, specialist skills or equipment etc)
    – the value of funds you need to find through donations or fundraising to offer your activity
    – a timetable showing when you expect to get things done

  4. Write a constitution.
    A constitution is a document that sets out the rules for you or your group to help make it clear to everyone involved what you intend to do. As long as you are not a registered charity or a limited company, there are no legal rules about what your constitution should say. Once you have written and agreed it, it then becomes the ‘governing document’ of your group, and it should set out clearly how you intend to run it. A good constitution can help to resolve disputes and enable new members to fully participate in group activities. If you are going to apply for grant funding, this document will also show potential funders that you are well organised. For groups, it may also be worth documenting the following information in your constitution:

    • The person in charge
    • A first aider
    • A designated person in charge of health and safety, and safeguarding
    • Agree how the committee will work with processes for decision making and resolving disputes
    • A note of who the Treasurer and Secretary is
  5. Agree a name.
    Naming your group or activity will be useful, mainly for legal requirements. It will also make it easier to promote and give a more professional approach. You can use internet search engines to find out if anyone else is using the name. If they are operating in a different sector and their name is not a registered trademark, you may still be able to use it, but it’s best to avoid duplication wherever possible.
  6. Consider opening a bank account.
    You may need to agree and record a way of handling money for the group or activity. As well as protecting the person responsible for holding the money, this will also protect the group money itself. Consider opening a separate bank account. Banks have many products and services on offer. It is worth shopping around to find the deal that best suits your needs.

  7. Get started!

This is not an exhaustive list of things you need to do, but it will help to get you started. If you do need any further information not provided here, contact Sheffield and Rotherham Wildlife Trust at takeaction@wildsheffield.com.

Nature Recovery Community Toolkit

In This Section

  • Businesses
  • Case studies – what other local people are doing for nature
  • Community Action for Nature Map
  • Expert advice
  • How to work with your local councillors
  • Lobbying your MP
  • Looking after your local green space
    • Case studies – what other local people are doing for nature
    • Funding
    • Local groups in Sheffield and Rotherham
    • Starting a new community group
    • Taking over a green space in your area
  • More Nature in your Neighbourhood
  • More nature in your neighbourhood
  • Nature friendly gardening
  • Nature Recovery Toolkit Feedback Form
  • Places of worship
  • Schools
  • Wilder Green Spaces and Verges

Contact Us

Call us: 0114 263 4335

Find us: Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust, 37 Stafford Road, Sheffield S2 2SF

Follow Us

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
    • Nature Reserves
      • Nature Recovery Sheffield
      • Nature Recovery Rotherham
      • Nature Recovery Community Toolkit
    • Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife
      • Local Wildlife Rescue Centres
      • Reporting Wildlife Crime
    • About us
      • Who We Are
      • What We Do
      • Contact Us
      • Events & Activities
      • News
      • Work For Us
      • Wildscapes
      • The BNG Hub
    • Support Us
      • Become a Member
      • Corporate Support
      • Make a Donation
      • A Gift in Your Will
      • Kingfisher Magazine
    • Get Involved
      • Volunteer with us
      • Campaigning For Wildlife
      • Nature Recovery Sheffield
    • Online Shop
      • Online Shop Size Guides
      • Online Shop Delivery Information
      • Online Shop Terms, Delivery & Returns
  • © 2025 Sheffield & Rotherham Wildlife Trust
  • Registered in England Number 2287928. Registered Charity Number 700638.
  • Privacy Notice
  • Design By Ink & Water
Manage Consent
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behaviour or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
Manage options Manage services Manage {vendor_count} vendors Read more about these purposes
View preferences
{title} {title} {title}