Grant of £227,827 to help needy people with essentials

By Barrie Hudson - 6 October 2020

CommunityCharity

Swindon people struggling to afford food and essential supplies amid the pandemic will be able to benefit from Government funding.

  • Preparing food parcels at the Harbour Project

    Preparing food parcels at the Harbour Project

The Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has given Swindon Borough Council a grant of £227,827 in order to help vulnerable residents in its communities.

During the crisis, the council and a number of local organisations have been providing food to people shielding and to those unable to afford to pay for food. 

Over the last six months, the council’s Emergency Assistance Fund has helped 291 people, while the Live Well Hub has distributed 625 free food parcels to residents who could not afford to pay for their food and had no-one to look after them.

The council says the DEFRA funding has been provided to allow the council and the local groups to continue to provide this help to those who need it.

Coun Russell Holland, Deputy Leader of Swindon Borough Council and Cabinet Member for Commercialisation and Education and Skills, said: “I'm really proud of everyone across Swindon who has stepped up to go the extra mile to help others in need during these difficult times.

“They have provided a lifeline to so many people and I would like to thank them for everything they have done and continue to do for our vulnerable residents. 

“I’m really pleased the Government has recognised the work of these organisations and this grant funding will go a long way to ensuring they continue to provide the support to those that need it.”

The council’s Hardship and Social Enterprise Groups have been working to identify the local groups providing assistance and the numbers of residents they have been helping.

As a result, funds have been awarded to:

- Swindon Borough Council Emergency Assistance Fund, which provides food, electricity, heating and essential furniture to low-income households with urgent domestic circumstances

- Swindon Borough Council Live Well Hub, which provides food to residents who were/are shielding or in isolation and assessed as being unable to afford to pay

- The Infection Control Food Fund, which will provide food for individuals or households where someone has tested positive, as confirmed and referred by Public Health. The fund helps people who have to stay away from work and who are facing short-term financial hardship due to having no income. This fund will work together with the council team awarding the recently announced Test and Trace payments, which will be paid to those on low incomes who have to isolate and who cannot go to work.

- Swindon Food Collective, which provides food for 600 people a month and bulk food donations to several organisations including the Harbour Project, Booth House and other hostels and local homeless charities

- Swindon Scrapstore, which provides an average of 20 food parcels per week to vulnerable households who are referred by council staff and advice agency staff
 

- Swindon Night Shelter, which provides 30 to 50 food boxes per week to people presenting to the shelter as homeless

- Harbour Project – funding will enable the charity to provide dozens of food parcels a week to those without recourse to public funds and to those who have lost their jobs and have no benefits in payment

- Bags/Boxes of Hope at Gorse Hill Baptist Church, which has provided about 40 to 45 boxes per week to individuals or families in need with reduced income or loss of employment. Referrals are made from schools, the council’s housing and social care teams and other churches

- Swindon Carers Centre, which has provided one-off food parcels to individuals and families supported by Swindon Carers - two to three per week on average

Susanna Jones, Chief Executive of Swindon Carers Centre, said: “We are seeing an increase in calls to our Welfare Benefits team at Swindon Carers Centre as the financial impact of covid-19 hits our communities.

“We will be using this DEFRA funding for food vouchers for some of our most vulnerable carers to support at what is an incredibly difficult time for many people with unpaid caring responsibilities.”

Claire Garrett, Chief Executive Officer of The Harbour Project, which supports refugees and asylum seekers, said the charity and its volunteers had so far distributed almost 600 food parcels.

“As we head into colder months and waves of localised lockdowns across the country, with the help of the grant from DEFRA, we will be able to re-start food parcel deliveries,” she added.

“Around 70 to 80 parcels will go out each week – some to families and some to people living on their own. Each person receives a parcel every two weeks. The parcels contain basic items such as rice, pasta, tinned vegetables, sugar and tea, along with some cleaning products and toiletries.

“Food is about sustenance. But it is also about connection with the most vulnerable, lonely and isolated within our community.”

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