Thanks to the Newcastle Building Society’s funding and the continuous efforts of a long-standing city charity, numerous families in Newcastle’s West End are receiving additional assistance and support.

The Fenham Association of Residents launched a community outreach initiative during the pandemic to address various pressing requirements among at-risk individuals in Fenham and Wingrove.

Having expected to see demand tailing off as the pandemic eased, the charity instead found that the cost of the living crisis meant it was being sustained into 2023 and that extra help was needed by growing numbers of people facing financial difficulties and food poverty.

It is now using a £3,000 grant from the Newcastle Building Society Community Fund at the Community Foundation to help cover the increasing cost of delivering its core services, as well as providing financial and welfare advice from its Acanthus Avenue headquarters in Fenham.

Around 40 families and 100 people in total are receiving support from this ongoing project.

And it has also used some of the money to team up with traders at the Grainger Market to ensure that doorstep deliveries of fresh fruit and vegetables can be made to local residents who aren’t able to get out for them themselves.

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

Originally set up in 1987, the Fenham Association of Residents works to provide support, direction, hope and encouragement to people living in Newcastle’s west end and to and providing opportunities for members of the community to enhance their lives.

It works in partnership with organisations including food redistribution service FareShare, business giving platform Neighbourly and Newcastle City Council’s public health scheme to target help where its needed most in its community.

“The cost of living crisis is having a real impact on every part of our community, with many people facing extremely difficult choices on a daily basis, and the need that we expected to drop off as the pandemic subsided is now stronger than ever.

“The local knowledge that we’ve built up and the links we’ve established with other organisations across the community means we’re able to identify where the greatest needs lie and how they might best be addressed.

“Working with the fantastic traders at the Grainger Market and organising doorstep deliveries of fresh fruit and vegetables to people with physical or mobility problems means they’re getting a much healthier diet than they otherwise would and gaining clear benefits to their well-being as a result.

“It’s terrific to see the impact that our work is having across the community and we’re getting lots of very positive feedback from local people and families about how it boosts their physical and mental health, especially when people are making meals together and sharing time with each other.

“This work wouldn’t be happening without the funding we’ve received from Newcastle Building Society, and at a time of great need in our community, it’s been an absolute lifeline.”

Mark Gowland, project manager at Fenham Association of Residents

“This is a true grass roots organisation that is dedicated to improving the lives of people living across its community.

“The positive local impact it makes is clear to see and we’re very pleased to be helping this amazing charity extend its work within our home city.”

Kelly Johnson, manager at Newcastle Building Society’s West Denton branch

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.

For more information on Sunderland Women’s Centre’s new computer skills course, please call 0191 567 7495. The grants are so far estimated to have had a positive impact on more than 151,000 people.


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