Chattanooga Times Free Press

In Britain, ‘warm hubs’ emerge to beat soaring energy costs

- BY JILL LAWLESS

STRATFORD-UPON-AVON, England — On a blustery late-winter day in Shakespear­e’s birthplace, the foyer of the Other Place theater is a cozy refuge. Visitors are having meetings over coffee, checking emails, writing poetry, learning to sew.

It looks and feels like an arty café in the pictureque streets of Stratford-upon-Avon, but it’s a “warm hub” set up by the Royal Shakespear­e Company drama troupe to welcome people struggling to heat their homes because of sky-high energy prices.

Warm hubs have sprouted across Britain by the thousands this winter as soaring food and energy prices drive millions to turn down the thermostat or skimp on hot meals. Research by the opposition Labour Party counted almost 13,000 such hubs, funded by a mix of charities, community groups and the government and nestled in libraries, churches, community centers and even a tearoom at King Charles III’s Highgrove country estate.

Wendy Freeman, an artist, writer and seventhgen­eration Stratfordi­an, heard about the RSC’s warm hub from a friend. She lives in “a tiny house with no central heating” and relies on a coal fire for warmth. Like many, she has cut back in response to the cost-of-living crisis driven by the highest inflation since the 1980s.

“You just adapt,” said Freeman, 69, who was using the center as a warm, quiet place to work on a poem. “Little things, like putting less water in the kettle. I was brought up with ‘save the pennies, and the pounds will look after themselves.’ I always cook from scratch and eat what’s in season.

“But it’s nice to go somewhere warm,” she added.

A perfect storm of Russia’s war in Ukraine, lingering pandemic disruption and economic aftershock­s of Brexit is putting more people in Britain under financial strain. Households and businesses were hit especially hard after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine drove up the cost of natural gas needed for heating and helped push the U.K. to the precipice of a recession.

The U.K.’s annual inflation rate was just above 10% in January, with food prices up almost 17% over the year. Some 62% of adults are using less natural gas or electricit­y to save money, according to the Office for National Statistics. A quarter of households regularly run out of money for essentials, pollster Survation found.

 ?? AP PHOTO/KIN CHEUNG ?? Facilities are seen Feb. 28 at the Other Place theater, in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshi­re, England. One day a week the theater becomes a “warm hub” for people struggling to heat their homes because of sky-high energy prices.
AP PHOTO/KIN CHEUNG Facilities are seen Feb. 28 at the Other Place theater, in Stratford-upon-Avon, Warwickshi­re, England. One day a week the theater becomes a “warm hub” for people struggling to heat their homes because of sky-high energy prices.

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