Glasgow Times

Cycling charity raises £ 10k in fight to ‘ survive winter’

- BY NICOLE MITCHELL

ACHARITY has raised more than £ 10,000 as it fights to “survive winter”. Bike for Good, which was founded in 2010, launched a fundraiser earlier this month to raise £ 15,000 by February

2 as it is under “critical threat”.

So far, it has raised more than two- thirds of its target.

The charity and social enterprise, whose mission is to enable people to ride a bike, has a team of 40 staff and more than 80 volunteers helping cyclists across Glasgow at its three thriving community hubs.

However, Gregory KinsmanCha­uvet, founder and cycling enthusiast officer ( CEO), says the costoflivi­ng crisis has heavily affected the charity in several ways over the last few months, causing its cash flow to ‘ plummet’. As well as the costs of utilities skyrocketi­ng, it has also been affected by Brexit, high inflation and lower sales in 2022 as the cycling market returned to pre- pandemic levels. He explained: “Utilities have increased by 44% this year and for us, because we have training rooms, training facilities, shops, we need to have two huge warehouses and it takes a lot of gas and electricit­y to heat and to light.” He continued: “We’ve been really, really impacted [ by the cost- of- living crisis]. “We try to make cycling affordable, our beneficiar­ies are often on a low income or our target market is people who can’t really afford to ride a bike, so how do we keep them cycling if cycling is becoming more expensive? All charities have to take the heat but it’s impacting lots of our services.”

As well as selling refurbishe­d bikes, the charity also offers cycling lessons, servicing and repairs and a Fix Your Own Bike workshop where people can learn to repair their bike using refurbishe­d parts, and have access to tools and mechanics who can help.

And while the charity supports those who want to cycle, its vision is that it can continue to do its work so everyone in Glasgow benefits from cycling, whether they ride a bike or not. Gregory said: “For us, when we say for everyone in the community, it doesn’t mean only the people who ride a bike.

“Because if you have more cyclists, you have less cars, less pollution.

“It’s even better for the driver in cities where there are more cycling lanes, they get less stuck in traffic.

“So the more bikes, it benefits everyone in the community, not only the cyclists.

“If you don’t ride a bike because you can’t ride a bike for any reason, you’d be happier to walk in the street where cyclists are passing by rather than just cars.”

As well as refurbishe­d bikes, Bike for Good also sells brand- new helmets, locks, tyres and other accessorie­s.

All donations to Bike for Good are being matched by the Glasgow Community Climate Action Fund. The charity’s Glasgow West Community Hub is located at 65 Haugh Road, while Bike for Good Glasgow South is located at 539 Victoria Road.

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