In Newcastle, the youth are enhancing their physical health, mental well-being, and future opportunities by actively engaging with The Children’s Foundation, getting hands-on and involved.

The charity has received a £3,000 grant from the Newcastle Building Society Community Fund at the Community Foundation Tyne & Wear and Northumberland to help cover the cost of its Roots to Health project and taking on a second Coxlodge allotment, which will help meet the growing demand for places on the course from local schools.

The Children’s Foundation’s Roots to Health project at the Coxlodge Allotments in Fawdon allows groups of young people aged 14 and over to gain new skills and greater self-confidence while working towards obtaining a City & Guilds Level One Award in Practical Horticulture.

Led by 25-year-old ‘green mentor’ Robson Steele, the project is designed to help young people who have disengaged from traditional education for a range of reasons, with groups of six to eight people working together in each cohort.

A growing number of girls are taking part in the project, with ongoing support available after the completion of each cohort’s course should participants feel they would benefit from it.

Founded in 1990 to help to address what were the worst levels of child health in the country at the time, the Children’s Foundation works to improve the health and well-being of the most vulnerable and marginalised children and young people across the North East.

Its ‘Yellow Brick Road Appeal’ raised £12m to build The Sir James Spence Institute of Child Health, which sits within the Great North Children’s Hospital and is one of the UK’s leading NHS centres for research into childhood ill–health.

The Children’s Foundation is an independent charity and receives no statutory funding at all.

“Everyone knows how beneficial it is for your physical and mental well-being to spend time outside, and we’ve used this as the basis for helping young people who might need a different kind of environment to help them progress.

“Our young people regularly start showing skills and talents that they never knew they had and find they’re able to start realising this potential in ways that might have been beyond them if they’d not got involved with this project.

“The certificates they’re earning may well be the first achievement of this type that they’ve ever had, and we’ve already seen several examples of young people then going on to take up further studying and employment opportunities that they’d never have believed they could manage before they came to us.

“Being on the allotment also allows participants to come into contact with people from different generations, which helps their personal development, especially when they’re sharing their mutual enthusiasm for being out working on their plots in the open air.

“Newcastle Building Society shares our commitment to improving our communities and we’re really grateful for their support for this highly effective project.”

Sean Soulsby, CEO of The Children’s Foundation

The Newcastle Building Society Community Fund at the Community Foundation Tyne & Wear and Northumberland offers grants to charities and community groups located in or around the communities served by the Society’s branch network.

“The dedication of the Children’s Foundation team to doing everything they can to support young people across our home area is absolutely inspiring, and the positive impact of the Roots To Health project is plain to see in the achievements of its young participants.”

Sue Scott, head of mortgage service centre at Newcastle Building Society, who recently visited the charity

Since its launch in 2016, Newcastle Building Society’s Community Fund at the Community Foundation has also contributed over £2.3m in grants and partnerships to a wide variety of charities and projects across the region, including the Sir Bobby Robson Foundation and the Prince’s Trust.

The grants are so far estimated to have had a positive impact on more than 151,000 people.


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