Yorkshire Post

Vulnerable hit as charity stops work

Three decades of work come to an end

- LINDSAY PANTRY SOCIAL AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

Support for hundreds of vulnerable families has been thrown into doubt after a charity said it will cease all services due to “financial difficulti­es”.

Liquidatio­n proceeding­s have begun at Home-Start South Yorkshire, which says it remains “committed to doing the utmost” to protect and support the 300 vulnerable families it is helping.

SUPPORT FOR hundreds of vulnerable families across South Yorkshire has been thrown into doubt after a charity announced it will cease all services due to “financial difficulti­es”.

Liquidatio­n proceeding­s have begun at Home-Start South Yorkshire, which says it remains “committed to doing the utmost” to protect and support the 300 vulnerable families it is currently helping.

It will cease all work in just two weeks’ time, on May 31, after providing support for families in the region for more than 35 years.

The chief executive, Cat Ross, who took over in March from former chief executive and Sheffield City Council cabinet member Coun Jack Scott, who was at the helm for four years, told The Yorkshire Post that the charity’s financial issues dated back to 2016 when it amalgamate­d with, and took over the services of, Home-Start Barnsley.

In order to keep providing services that were already in place, it was forced to use a “significan­t amount” of Home-Start South Yorkshire’s reserves.

She added: “This loss of reserves, as well as an additional significan­t reduction in funding, brought about not only a large gap in Home-Start South Yorkshire’s funding but also an immediate cash flow crisis.”

It supported parents who were dealing with issues such as isolation, sickness, disability, mental health, domestic abuse, multiple births or difficult relationsh­ips. It also helped refugee families.

Over the next two weeks it will be focusing its efforts on working with other statutory and voluntary organisati­ons to find continuing support for the vulnerable families it works with. The charity said Sheffield Council has also offered to help.

However, Ms Ross said: “Unfortunat­ely,some of the families we work with will not be able to access support from somewhere else.”

She added: “The loss of HomeStart will bring a about a huge gap in provision for families and bring added pressures for remaining statutory and voluntary provision. Most of all it will leave vulnerable families with little options of where to turn for support at the most difficult times in their lives.”

She said the staff were “deeply sad and sorry” that it had “come to this end”, and while some of the 20 members of staff were being kept on to oversee the closure, some had already been given notice.

Home-Start South Yorkshire is part of Home-Start UK, which also has multiple branches across Yorkshire, including Kirklees, Leeds and Calderdale.

A spokesman for Home-Start UK said the closure did not effect any other Home-Starts.

He said: “This is a terribly sad situation for families, volunteers and staff. This situation shows the very challengin­g environmen­t for local charities and the importance of ensuring they have a diverse range of income and unrestrict­ed support.”

Concerned families and volunteers in South Yorkshire can call 0114 278 8377.

This is a terribly sad situation for families, volunteers and staff. A spokesman for Home-Start UK.

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