Hope Kolkata Foundation

Works for the homeless children on streets working as labourers or young people without access to education

  • Bronze Certified 2023
  • FCRA
  • 80G
  • 12A
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About

  • Headquarters

    Kolkata, West Bengal

  • Since

    1999

Hope Kolkata Foundation (HKF) works with children on streets, slums, children who work as labourers or are into begging, children who are destitute/ho Read moremeless, children suffering from different health conditions and also young people who do not have access to schools/colleges. All these children belong to disadvantaged communities and therefore, the Organisation works with their families and communities to empower these children through education, health, protection, livelihood programmes. HKF believes in sustainable and holistic development of all children and people it works with, bringing about sustainable and lasting changes in their lives. HKF over the years has also been advocating for better services for the poor and seeks ways to increase their access to social entitlements from Government programmes. It partners with other local Indian non-governmental organisations to build their capacities in the areas of education, healthcare, child protection, nutrition, drug rehabilitation and vocational training, so that they can reach out to a larger number of children and communities affected by poverty and inequality. Our Vision: A World where it should never hurt to be a child. HKF is the implementation arm of The Hope Foundation (HOPE), an Irish Charity headquartered in Cork with offices in UK, Germany and the USA. The organization is accredited under Credibility Alliance, New Delhi, for Good Governance and has won many awards and citations for its exemplary work over the years. Since 1999, HKF has been working with underprivileged and vulnerable children - street & slum dwellers; working children, children of sex workers, child beggars, orphan and abandoned children, trafficked and missing children – reaching out to over 55,000 children and 1 million population (numbers are based on services rendered per financial year). Success stories have proven that our care has helped countless boys and girls out of poverty; they are now working and leading independent and satisfying lives.

Demographies Served

Programs

  • Protection - Residential Child Care Centre

    Children who receive insufficient or no parental care are especially vulnerable; this occurs when a child's family either fails to provide for them or abandons them. By providing residential care and aftercare support, HOPE safeguards their rights to participation, survival, development, and protection. Children in need of care and protection are given age-appropriate nutrition, healthcare and treatment, elementary and special education, counselling, skill-building training, co-curricular classes, sports, vocational skills, and career counselling in seven Residential Child Care Centres (registered under Section41 (1) of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act 2015). These services are provided to ensure the holistic growth and development of the children.

  • Education on Wheels

    An inventive enterprise called Education on Wheels runs on a bus. Children aged 6 to 14 from the Chitpur slum and the adjacent regions of North Kolkata who are enrolled in school or who will soon do so receive educational help from this project. Children who have learning gaps are given access to remedial coaching programmes. This promotes their healthy growth and allows children to fulfil their educational potential, which will help them land decent employment, give back to the community, and eventually live poverty-free lives.

    Motivated children who have never attended school or who have left school early are enrolled in formal education. To make sure the kids stay in school and finish their education, many tactics are used.

Impact Metrics

  • Impacted Street Children (0-18 Years of Age) With Education, Protection and Health

    Program Name

    Child Watch Project

    Year-wise Metrics
    • 2017-18 87
    • 2018-19 106
    • 2019-20 460
    • 2020-21 596
    • 2021-22 1058
  • Children Benefited With Education Programme

    Program Name

    Education on Wheel Programme

    Year-wise Metrics
    • 2020-21 60
    • 2021-22 77

Leadership Team

  • Ranji Singh

  • Geeta Venkadakrishnan

M&E

  • Internal, External Assessors

    No

Policies

  • Ethics and Transparency Policies

    No

  • Formal CEO Oversight & Compensation Policy

    No

Political & Religious Declarations

  • On Affiliation if any

    No

  • On Deployment Bias if any

    No

Registration Details

  • PAN Card

    AAAAH1789A

  • Registration ID

    SO096057/2003-2004 ], West Bengal) (registered earlier on 4th October, 1999)

  • VO ID / Darpan ID

    WB/2017/0176254

  • 12A

    AAAAH1789AE20214

  • 80G

    AAAAH1789AF20214

  • FCRA

    147120622

  • CSR Registration Number

    Not Available

Location

  • Headquarters

    39, Panditiya Place, Kolkata Beside Citi Mall, 700029

    Directions

Other Details

  • Type & Sub Type

    Non-profit
    Society

Financial Details

 Income / Expenses
  • 2021-22

    Income
    Rs.208,977,157
    Expenses
    Rs.198,841,534
    Admin Expenses
    Rs.17,243,270
    Program Expenses
    Rs.181,598,264
    Tip: Click on any value above to exclude it.
  • 2022-23

    Income
    Rs.158,562,708
    Expenses
    Rs.169,204,714
    Admin Expenses
    Rs.18,806,055
    Program Expenses
    Rs.150,398,659
    Tip: Click on any value above to exclude it.