User:Paul Carpenter/Sandbox

The Green Flag Award is an accreditation given to publicly accessible parks and open spaces, primarily in the United Kingdom, in order to promote standards of good management and best-practice amongst the green space sector. It is described by its issuers, Keep Britain Tidy as an "internationally recognised award that is a benchmark for well-managed green space". Over 1,900 parks and open spaces currently hold a Green Flag Award.

Whilst public parks make up most of the awardees, the Green Flag Award is also issued to sites with different uses including Loughborough University, and Bluewater Shopping Centre for the management of their grounds.

Accreditation
The owners of spaces that wish to hold the accreditation, pay a fee to be assessed by volunteer judges on an annual basis with a process involving secret shoppers and inspection of both the park and the owner's management plans. The aspects that spaces are judged on are: • #A Welcoming Place

• #Healthy, Safe and Secure

• #Well Maintained and Clean

• #Environmental Management

• #Biodiversity, Landscape and Heritage

• #Community Involvement

• #Marketing and Communication

• #Management A failure to meet the judges' standards can result in the accreditation being withdrawn, one example of this is North London's Finsbury Park which lost its Green Flag in 2018.

History
Introduced in 1996 and first awarded in 1997, by the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) with the intention of establishing agreed standards of good management, to help to justify and evaluate funding and to raise park attendance.

The scheme has been managed by Keep Britain Tidy, on MHCLG's behalf since 2012. Sister organisations Keep Scotland Beautiful, Keep Wales Tidy and TIDY Northern Ireland deliver the scheme across the UK. And various other bodies deliver the scheme worldwide.