Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

I cry every day.. I’ve never seen things this bad

Plumber James helps Britain’s most vulnerable

- BY CLAIRE DONNELLY JAMES ANDERSON BELOW, WITH BARBARA

The day my son William died I promised I’d make him proud

James Anderson is a tough, old-fashioned kind of man. But he cries every day when he sees people driven to suicide and despair by the cost of living crisis.

He is the founder of the Disabled and Elderly Heating Emergency Repairs, a charity that helps people keep their heating running.

Now, in the face of soaring fuel and food costs, they do much more: filling empty fridges and cupboards, paying bills, bailiffs and even buying nappies for those who just can’t afford it.

James and his team are at the sharp end of this crisis – and they say it’s only getting worse.

“I cry every day,” he says, “I’ve never seen things this bad. One old lady needed a new boiler, we were trying

BURNLEY

to get one for her. There was a dish of what I thought were sweets on the table. When I looked closely they were tablets. She told me she’d been going to take them all, said she couldn’t take anymore and wanted to disappear.

“I arrived at another house to find an 84-year-old lady with a noose around her neck. You think, ‘this can’t be happening’ but it is.

“I just went to see a family – the mum rang crying her eyes out because she couldn’t feed her kids, literally.

“This is affecting everyone. But if you’re in poverty we’ll help you.”

Fighting tears, he adds: “No one from the Government or any public body are coming to help. These people get elected promising to do this and that for their communitie­s and they don’t care. The Government has seen this coming for the last two or three years and done nothing.

“People will be dying this winter.” As James, 54, explains, things have been getting steadily worse since he set up the charity in 2017.

He was moved to act after meeting an elderly man who was scammed by an unscrupulo­us plumbing firm – and to do something good in memory of his baby son, William.

William was born with a back-tofront heart and had surgery in 2013. He and wife, Barbara, 47, had to turn off his life support at 16 weeks.

Helping others became a way for James to channel his grief and honour William. “In 2017 I went to see a gentleman who was disabled and bed-bound,” he explains. “He’d had a firm round and they’d tried to scam him for £5,500. I thought about William. The day he died I made a promise to him that I would be the man he would have grown up to be, that I’d make him proud.

“I got the firm to come back and make good what they’d done – I made sure he got a new boiler for free – but I couldn’t sleep. I was thinking about all the other people in his position.

“Heating is such an important part of feeling safe and warm but when it goes wrong people just don’t have the funds to put it right. They’re vulnerable to being exploited. A UN report said 17,000 people in the UK had died because of the “If cold. Our Government we didn’t even A acknowledg­e that. sin I thought, ‘if the live Government won’t acc do anything, I will’.” the

In 2017 he set boi up a Community A Interest Company, also offering free help ord for people who em needed it. J Since then James, who won a Pride tou of Manchester Award last month, has kid provided £1.2million of support to to f people in his hometown Burnley, “Lancs, and the wider UK. sta

He puts profits from his own heating nee firm into the charity, topped up by fundraisin­g and a community shop.

Our leaders need to understand how people are living.. it’s scary JAMES ON STRUGGLE FACED BY MANY BRITS

someone pays £2,000 for a boiler, can put £700 of that back,” he says. Among those helped by James was gle mum Katie from Burnley, who es with her two children in rented commodatio­n. Her friend called e charity as they were worried her iler wasn’t working.

As well as her heating, the charity o sorted out her broken front door, dered her carpets and filled her mpty cupboards with £300 of food. ames has seen things getting even ugher of late. “What does it do to a d when they see their mum not able feed them?” he says. “It’s very scary. “The Government needs to underand what’s happening, what’s eded, how people are living.” features@mirror.co.uk @Dailymirro­r

 ?? ?? All this week the Daily Mirror is travelling the UK reporting on the cost of living crisis and its consequenc­es.
Today, we see the suffering in Burnley, Stoke, Dewsbury and Belfast…
All this week the Daily Mirror is travelling the UK reporting on the cost of living crisis and its consequenc­es. Today, we see the suffering in Burnley, Stoke, Dewsbury and Belfast…
 ?? ?? INSPIRATIO­N Son William died as baby
INSPIRATIO­N Son William died as baby
 ?? ?? HELPED Mum of two Katie, from Burnley
HELPED Mum of two Katie, from Burnley

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom