Residents in Park Wood and Senacre can now apply to lead decisions on up to £20 million of government-backed investment over the next decade.
Maidstone Borough Council has launched recruitment for an Independent Chair and Neighbourhood Board members to oversee the spending of up to £20 million in government funding targeted at the Park Wood and Senacre areas over the next 10 years.
The recruitment drive follows the selection of Park Wood and Senacre as one of just 25 UK trailblazer neighbourhoods for the Pride in Place programme, a national initiative funded by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. According to the council, this designation places the Maidstone areas alongside locations including Kingston Upon Hull, Blackpool and Newcastle Upon Tyne in pioneering community-led regeneration.
The Pride in Place programme represents a significant shift towards community-driven decision-making in local regeneration. Rather than top-down council planning, the initiative hands control directly to residents through neighbourhood boards with substantial budgets to address local priorities.
Government Backing and National Context
The funding announcement forms part of the UK Government’s broader commitment through the Spending Review to support up to 350 places nationwide. This includes 75 locations specifically named in the March 2025 Plan for Neighbourhoods, with Park Wood and Senacre securing their position as early trailblazers.
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government views the programme as a model for scaling community control across hundreds of additional areas. The government’s rationale centres on empowering residents to identify and address their own neighbourhood priorities rather than relying on external assessments of local needs.
But the approach also raises questions about how effectively volunteer boards can manage such substantial sums. The £20 million allocation over a decade represents £2 million annually – a budget that would typically require professional project management and financial oversight.
Local Impact and Community Control
For residents in Park Wood and Senacre, the programme offers direct influence over infrastructure improvements, housing initiatives, green space development and community amenities. The council emphasises that local people will shape priorities for their own areas rather than having improvements imposed from outside.
The two wards have been identified as areas with higher levels of deprivation, making them eligible for the targeted government investment. According to the council, this creates opportunities for radical area renewal driven by those who live there.
However, the success of community-led boards often depends on securing residents with the time, skills and commitment needed for effective governance. The recruitment of an Independent Chair suggests recognition that professional leadership may be necessary to guide volunteer board members through complex funding decisions.
Selection Process and Transparency
The council has not yet detailed the selection criteria for board positions or how it will ensure representation across different community groups within Park Wood and Senacre. This lack of transparency around the appointment process could raise concerns about whether all residents have equal opportunity to influence spending decisions.
The recruitment runs alongside the council’s separate search for an external partner to deliver community engagement, with applications closing on 19 March 2026. This dual approach – combining resident board members with professional engagement support – suggests acknowledgment that community participation requires both grassroots leadership and expert facilitation.
The timing also coincides with Maidstone’s ongoing Community Governance Review, which is consulting on creating parish councils in currently unparished areas. This broader restructuring of local governance could affect how the Pride in Place programme integrates with existing democratic structures.
Questions Over Long-Term Sustainability
While the government presents Pride in Place as a model for national expansion, questions remain about long-term sustainability beyond the initial 10-year funding period. Community-led improvements require ongoing maintenance and support that may fall back to the council or residents once central government funding ends.
The programme’s success as a trailblazer will likely influence whether the remaining 275 places in the government’s expansion plans receive similar funding levels or face reduced allocations based on early results.
Key Takeaways
- Park Wood and Senacre residents can apply for board positions controlling £20 million in government regeneration funding over 10 years
- The areas are among just 25 UK trailblazer neighbourhoods testing community-led decision-making for potential national expansion
- Success depends on recruiting effective volunteer board members and an Independent Chair to manage substantial annual budgets
What This Means for Maidstone Residents
Residents in Park Wood and Senacre now have an unprecedented opportunity to directly control major investment in their neighbourhoods, but the effectiveness will depend on community participation in board roles. Those interested in applying should check the Maidstone Borough Council website for application details, selection criteria and deadlines. The programme’s success as a national trailblazer could influence whether similar community-led funding becomes available in other parts of Maidstone in future years.
Test Your Knowledge
5 questions


Arsenal
Manchester City
Manchester United
Liverpool
Aston Villa
Brentford
Brighton
Bournemouth
Chelsea
Fulham
Everton
Sunderland
Newcastle
Crystal Palace
Leeds
Nottingham Forest
West Ham
Tottenham
Burnley
Wolves
Coventry
Ipswich
Millwall
Southampton
Middlesbrough
Hull City
Wrexham
Derby
Norwich
Birmingham
Swansea
Bristol City
Sheffield Utd
Preston
QPR
Watford
Stoke City
Portsmouth
Charlton
Blackburn
West Brom
Oxford United
Leicester
Sheffield Wednesday
Lincoln
Cardiff
Stockport County
Bradford
Bolton
Stevenage
Luton
Plymouth
Huddersfield
Mansfield Town
Wycombe
Reading
Blackpool
Doncaster
Barnsley
Wigan
Burton Albion
Peterborough
AFC Wimbledon
Leyton Orient
Exeter City
Port Vale
Rotherham
Northampton
Bromley
Milton Keynes Dons
Cambridge United
Salford City
Notts County
Chesterfield
Grimsby
Barnet
Swindon Town
Oldham
Crewe
Colchester
Walsall
Bristol Rovers
Fleetwood Town
Accrington ST
Gillingham
Cheltenham
Shrewsbury
Newport County
Tranmere
Crawley Town
Harrogate Town
Barrow
York
Rochdale
Carlisle
Boreham Wood
Scunthorpe
Southend
Forest Green
FC Halifax Town
Hartlepool
Woking
Tamworth
Boston United
Altrincham
Solihull Moors
Wealdstone
Yeovil Town
Eastleigh
Gateshead
Sutton Utd
Aldershot Town
Brackley Town
Morecambe
Braintree
Truro City
AFC Fylde
South Shields
Kidderminster Harriers
Macclesfield
Buxton
Scarborough Athletic
Chester
Merthyr Town
Darlington 1883
Spennymoor Town
AFC Telford United
Marine
Radcliffe
Southport
Chorley
Worksop Town
Oxford City
Bedford Town
King's Lynn Town
Hereford
Curzon Ashton
Alfreton Town
Peterborough Sports
Leamington
Worthing
AFC Hornchurch
Torquay
Dorking Wanderers
Hemel Hempstead Town
Weston-super-Mare
Maidenhead
Maidstone Utd
Ebbsfleet United
Chelmsford City
Chesham United
AFC Totton
Dagenham & Redbridge
Tonbridge Angels
Horsham
Slough Town
Salisbury
Hampton & Richmond
Farnborough
Dover
Bath City
Chippenham Town
Enfield Town
Eastbourne Borough
