Loughborough Echo

Joining forces to support the ‘Giving for Gold’ initiative...

Bid to donate tens of thousands of items to those in need

- DAVID GODSALL david.godsall@reachplc.com

LOUGHBOROU­GH University, Loughborou­gh Students’ Union and several local and national good causes have joined forces this month in a bid to gather and donate tens of thousands of items to those in need.

The charity drive, titled ‘Giving for Gold’, will also cut the number of useable items going to landfill and encourage staff, students and members of the wider community to do their bit to reduce household waste.

Donations stations have been installed at locations across the Loughborou­gh campus for people to drop off their contributi­ons.

Giving for Gold is looking for four types of donations: non-perishable food, clothing and bedding, books, plus cosmetics, toiletries and sanitary products.

The initiative will conclude with a closed-door sorting and packing event in the Students’ Union on March 18 and the number of items donated will be counted.

The campaign features gold, silver and bronze medal targets for the number of donations received.

It is hoped the campus and wider Loughborou­gh community can donate a total of 26,500 items.

Specialist housing support charity The Bridge (East Midlands), which supports homeless and vulnerably housed people, will receive food donations from Giving for Gold.

It will distribute items across the Charnwood Food Poverty Group – a group of 32 community organisati­ons, including the Shepshed Food Bank, which aims to tackle food poverty.

The Bridge’s food poverty developmen­t officer, Sweta Gill, said: “It is a sad reality that the number of people accessing food parcels is at an all-time high. For many individual­s and families, our food provision is a real lifeline, whether it be parcels or hot food.

“The donations from Giving for Gold will be an incredible help, which we will appreciate massively, as we continuall­y struggle to meet the demand for food provision locally.”

Rainbows Hospice for Children and Young People will also receive donations of food, toiletries, clothing and bedding.

Community fund-raiser Gary Farnfield said: “We would like to thank everyone at the university for their support.

“At Rainbows, only 15 per cent of our funding comes from the Government and other statutory sources, so we rely on all kinds of donations to be able to support our children, young people and their families.”

Another good cause Giving for Gold is supporting is Better World Books – a for-profit socially conscious business and a global online bookseller that collects and sells new and used books online matching each purchase with a book donation. Each sale generates funds for literacy and education initiative­s in the UK, US, and around the world.

Matt Bourne, strategic sales executive at Better World Books, said: “Since its launch in 2003, Better World Books has raised close to $29m for libraries and literacy, donated almost 27m books and reused or recycled more than 326m books.

“We are delighted to be a partner on the Giving for Gold project.”

The charity drive will also donate items to the following:

charity that provides specialist supported accommodat­ion and training for young forced migrants aged 16 and over

Loughborou­gh-based charity providing supported accommodat­ion to those that are homeless and a day centre for those that are rough sleeping or vulnerable in the community

– a group that works with a range of local good causes. They have a partnershi­p with John Storer House, which runs a multi-use community centre providing food, drink and activities for those in need

national charity, which runs charity shops across the UK and whose vision is a world free from the fear of heart and circulator­y disease.

As well as helping people in need, Giving for Gold will also see items donated to College Garth Kennels, a rescue in Hathern that works with local councils to reunite and rehome stray dogs.

The university’s director of finance, Andy Stephens, is supporting the event. He volunteers as a Community First Responder and, in this role, has witnessed first-hand the social and economic hardships faced by many.

He said: “On some shifts, I am as likely to make a safeguardi­ng referral for somebody struggling to cope at home as I am to open a kit bag to make a medical interventi­on.

“Many of us are in a position to make a difference to lives in ways we often underestim­ate – small acts of kindness or generosity that mean exponentia­lly more to the recipient.”

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