COMMUNITY groups across Glasgow are to share in a generous funding pot.

From Barlanark out of School Care Service to Calums Cabin, FARE and DeafBlind Scotland, groups are receiving up to £10,000 each.

Some 19 Glasgow charities and groups are among around 150 across Scotland are sharing £1.1million of lottery funding.

They were named as National Lottery Awards for All Scotland announced the latest round of organisations to receive grants of up to £10,000.

They include £8200 for The Not Forgotten Association, which will deliver ten concerts for veterans living in care homes across Scotland.

The The GalGael Trust will receive £9359 for people across Govan to build a 14ft skiff boat.

Calums Cabin, which provides accommodation for children with cancer to stay during holidays and during hospital treatment, is to be awarded £10,000.

Tollcross Bowling Club is also in the money after being given £9950 in cash to carry out refurbishments to their toilet facilities.

FARE, a charity based in Easterhouse, is to be given £10,000 for outdoor and camping equipment to help young people taking part in their Duke of Edinburgh Award.

Ice and Fire Theatre Company is to receive £7000.

The group develops original theatre productions taken from human rights testimony and documentary evidence.

This project will let the group to develop and perform a production based around the experiences of refugees in Glasgow.

Maslows Community Shop has also been given money to help refugees.

Lottery cash of £9500 will help the organisation, based in Govan, increase access to employment and volunteering in its community shop.

The project will benefit refugees, asylum seekers, and others experiencing hardship.

In total 154 groups are receiving National Lottery cash funding totalling £1,116,821.

Other groups across Scotland receiving funding include £9,100 for Action on Elder Abuse in Fife, which works with older people who have been affected by abuse, and £10,000 for The Factory Skatepark in Dundee which operates an indoor wheel sports centre as a social enterprise.

They will use the funding to develop a sensory room in the centre for use by children who have sensory deprivation.

A National Lottery Awards for All spokesman said: "This is National Lottery money in action, reaching into communities across Scotland making a real difference to the people who live there.

"The 154 groups receiving funding today showcases the range of projects that can be funded through this programme and the difference that the smallest amounts of money can make."