The Trust also provided services in
Brighton starting in 2003, but due to funding issues had to withdraw from the city in May 2006. It has traditionally gained funding through individual donations and grants from such bodies as
Association of London Government,
Comic Relief, the Princess Diana Memorial Fund, and
Manchester City Council. The Trust marked its 16th anniversary of formally becoming a Trust in June 2006 with a House of Lords reception by Patron
Lord Alli. The occasion was also marked by an
Early Day Motion in the
House of Commons. On 5 January 2007, Sir
Ian McKellen became a patron of the trust, joining existing patrons
Julie Hesmondhalgh and Lord Alli. In 2013, the Trust merged with Outpost, a pre-existing homeless charity for LGBT youth in Newcastle, extending the reach of the Trust to the North-East of England. In 2014, the Albert Kennedy Trust marked its 25th anniversary with a number of events in honour of Albert Kennedy and the continued work of the Trust. In 2019, the Albert Kennedy Trust marked its 30th anniversary with a rebrand to akt. In June 2019, Prince William said he would be "absolutely fine" if his children came out as gay or lesbian at an event at the London office of the Trust. An online poll of 2109 people by YouGov on behalf of akt asked people how they would feel in a range of scenarios if they had a child who came out to them as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender. When respondents were asked whether they would "feel proud to have an LGBT child", 26 per cent of those polled disagreed. Less than half (46 per cent) of people surveyed agreed with the statement that they would feel proud to have a child who had come out. The poll, undertaken in October 2019, found more than one in 10 (11 per cent) would feel uncomfortable living at home with their lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender child. In 2022, akt opened in Bristol. ==References==