Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Charity needs financial help

COLLAPSE OF HOMELESSNE­SS PROJECT LED TO ‘CRISIS’ FOR HUDDERSFIE­LD HARAMBEE ASSOCIATIO­N

- By TONY EARNSHAW tony.earnshaw@trinitymir­ror.com @TonyEarnsh­awjournali­st

A CHARITY in Huddersfie­ld is looking for a financial benefactor to help rebuild its base.

The Huddersfie­ld Harambee Associatio­n was formed in the early 1980s as a socially inclusive organisati­on. For years its headquarte­rs in Fartown acted as a hostel for homeless 15 to 25-year-olds.

But in 2015 it was decided to alter the building, on Central Avenue, turning it into flats to benefit homeless families in the area. Work began on converting the detached building but ground to a halt when the developer went bust.

It has now been returned to Harambee Associatio­n control after a lengthy wrangle with receivers acting for defunct developers Fresh Horizon.

However the property has been gutted, leaving it uninhabita­ble and leaving the charity’s management and volunteers without a base to operate from.

Charity secretary and board member Dr Audrey Robinson-Maynard said the scenario had left the organisati­on “in crisis.”

She said: “We have worked very hard to build up what we have got. That comes from volunteers and people doing a lot of things for free.

“When money goes out of the organisati­on it goes out of volunteers’ pockets.”

Dr Robinson-Maynard added that the property requires around £110,000 of investment to transform it into flats. She estimates that the charity has so far lost in the region of £25,000 on the abortive project.

To add insult to injury, receivers pursued the Harambee Associatio­n for payment. After mounting a legal challenge it paid £2,500.

The stripping out of the building’s interior has left it as a shell. It was also discovered that a fire safe weighing half a tonne and containing confidenti­al documents had been drilled open and the contents – including deeds and articles of constituti­on – had been strewn around the floor.

Dr Robinson-Maynard said she has raised the issue with the police and also local councillor­s, who were sympatheti­c but doubtful funding could be secured from cashstrapp­ed Kirklees Council.

“We are very sad and frustrated at what has been happening. Every time we try to do something we are knocked back.

“We are in crisis. It’s a strain; we cannot see the wood for the trees. We are a black-led organisati­on but we are inclusive. You do not have to be a member to do anything for the organisati­on or to get any service from it.

“The black community has been around in Huddersfie­ld for 50 years. This organisati­on is still relevant and will remain so for our grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren. But we need help.”

 ?? ANDy CATCHPOOL ?? Secretary of the charity Huddersfie­ld Harambee Associatio­n, Audrey Robinson-Maynard, with plans for three flats for homeless families at their Central Avenue property in Fartown where work started before the contractor went in to liquidatio­n...
ANDy CATCHPOOL Secretary of the charity Huddersfie­ld Harambee Associatio­n, Audrey Robinson-Maynard, with plans for three flats for homeless families at their Central Avenue property in Fartown where work started before the contractor went in to liquidatio­n...

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