Nottingham Post

Food bank receiving 100 requests a week for help

ROTARY CLUBS PROVIDE £100K LIFELINE AS SERVICES PREPARE FOR ‘SECOND WAVE’

- By NEWS SURNAMEY

A NOTTINGHAM­SHIRE food bank is receiving 100 requests every week for food parcels – and the number is set to increase further as the economic downturn bites.

Arnold Foodbank manager Helen Lloyd warned the service is seeing more new users than ever before and, as the Government’s coronaviru­s furlough system ends, demand will only rise.

But a new £100,000 scheme by local Rotary Clubs is providing a vital lifeline for Arnold Foodbank and others across the region.

Sherwood Sunrisers Rotary Club’s Val Leivers said: “Organisati­ons like Arnold Foodbank do brilliant work at local level in the community. They rely on the support of supermarke­ts, businesses and the general public making donations. As local Rotarians we wanted to help in a big way too. Delivering 150 cases of food seemed a good way to do that.

“The Rotary4foo­dbanks scheme, run by volunteers, is an initiative which pools funds and bulk-buys staple food supplies at wholesale prices which it distribute­s to food banks across the region.

“By the end of July it will have distribute­d food with a wholesale value of around £100,000 and has plans to extend the scheme as demands on food banks continue to rise.”

Helen Lloyd, who heads a team of volunteers running the Arnold operation from Daybrook Baptist Church in Mansfield Road, said: “As the furlough system ends and more people face redundancy, we are expecting to see demand increase still further.

“We are bracing ourselves for the second wave. We enjoy marvellous support from local supermarke­ts and the general public but the additional help we are now getting from Rotary is proving a real lifeline, providing us with bulk supplies of key staples like tea, coffee, cereal and tinned fruit at a time of real need for so many vulnerable people locally.”

The Arnold team has been operating a delivery service during lockdown, with volunteer drivers ensuring people as far afield as Carlton and Basford who are unable to collect food parcels are still supported.

Since its formation in 1994, Sherwood Sunrisers Rotary Club has helped many thousands of people and raised more than £500,000 for good causes, most of which has been used to support community projects in Sherwood and Nottingham.

Donate online at justgiving.com/ campaign/rotary4foo­dbanks

 ??  ?? Helen Lloyd (right) of Arnold Foodbank checking stock with volunteer Marie Longford
Helen Lloyd (right) of Arnold Foodbank checking stock with volunteer Marie Longford

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