The Herald

Shopkeeper­s shun profits to help local community in need

- By Martha Vaughan

SHOPKEEPER­S who made a profit from stockpilin­g spent £30,000 on helping their community during the coronaviru­s pandemic – including giving OAPS hats and gloves for free.

The owners of Daytoday Express in Stenhousem­uir, Falkirk, ploughed any spare cash they had – including from their children’s piggy banks – into helping their neighbours.

Asiyah Javed, 34, and husband Jawad, 35, were awarded a £10,000 government grant and put that into care packages they gave away for free.

They have helped single parents, homeless people, OAPS, and despite working non-stop since the lockdown in March, they have not contemplat­ed taking a holiday.

Mother-of-three Asiyah said: “Since March we’ve spent around £30,000 – it started with £2,000 and went from there. We had £5,000 saved and when we got busier, because of being an essential shop, we put all the profit back into the community. We’ve earned nothing.

On one day last week alone, they distribute­d 200 food parcels worth £15 each, with the help of 50 volunteers.

The parcels contained healthy and nutritious food for people to enjoy, not just tinned goods.

Every day, they are providing homeless people with hot food, for an hour a day.

Asiyah believes the pandemic is a lesson for people to appreciate their families and their community more, and to take better care of one another.

Her children, Rayyan, aged six, Maryam, 12, and Salman, 14, have been happy to make sacrifices to help people around them who are struggling.

Asiyah said: “I think this situation is just a test for us. You realise now what family means to you, the kids realise how important their grandparen­ts are.

“We have never done anything like this before, when Covid happened and we saw everything shutting, we just changed our mindset.

“During the lockdown, a lot of shops have made profit, and we should have been, but we invested it all into our community. We have never wanted anything back.”

The couple spent £1,000 on “elderly care packages”, containing winter hats, gloves, antibacter­ial hand gel and a face mask.

Each one costs a fiver to make, and they are distribute­d for free by volunteers.

Asiyah added: “We’ve been doing lots of food packages, for single mums who can’t afford food. I heard about one mum and her kids living off cereal for a week and knew we had to do something.

“We got £10,000 from the government and we didn’t need it ourselves, so we spent it on helping people. We are not rich, we are just normal people. We are happy we’ve done something good, and the kids are happy.”

Meanwhile, an emergency fund of nearly £500,000 was launched last night to support charitable and community organisati­ons in the Outer Hebrides facing a financial crisis following the failure of a subsea power cable between Skye and Harris.

The cable fault last month has had a severe impact on a number of local organisati­ons that were set to receive funding from local community wind farm generators who exported their electricit­y to the mainland grid.

Western Isles Council said it has worked with SSEN to put in place a package of support funding that will be targeted at community groups and charities who provide support services to the most vulnerable in the community.

SSEN will contribute £300,000 after repurposin­g of £150,000 of its existing community resilience funds,while the council will contribute up to £175,000.

Cllr Roddie Mackay said:“the loss of income to organisati­ons which provide critical support services to some of the most vulnerable and most in need within our community has been of significan­t concern. I am pleased that the council has been able to pull together a package with SSEN to support impacted charitable bodies.”

Mark Rough, Director of Customer Operations, SSEN Distributi­on said:“we welcome the opportunit­y to contribute to this fund which will address the immediate financial need of community groups and charities.”

 ??  ?? Asiyah and Jawad Javed from Day Today Express in Stenhousem­uir with the winter packs
Asiyah and Jawad Javed from Day Today Express in Stenhousem­uir with the winter packs

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