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Cabinet Office - Office for the Third Sector
case studies  

2003 Award winners

A-H | I-Q | R-Z

Safe Anchor Trust Safe Anchor Trust

The Trust aims to provide special needs groups with access to canals, and supports community groups who have difficulty in taking part in everyday leisure activities.

Established in 1995 to support and continue the canal trips project developed by the Probation Service, by December 2001, over 12,000 passengers associated with 200 community groups had enjoyed outings on the Trust’s boats. To date, some 15,000 people from over 250 community organisations have benefited from the Trust’s work.

There are three boats – the Lady Rhodes, the E Austen Johnson and the Lady Victoria – which cater for those with walking difficulties or using wheelchairs and, more recently, people with learning difficulties. No charge is made for the services provided, the Trust relying solely on voluntary contributions and donations.

In 1997, the Trust entered into partnership with British Waterways (Aire and Calder Navigation) to help maintain tow-paths and improve the environment. The Trust have provided two work boats which are managed by Probation Service staff who direct and supervise people ordered by the local courts to do community service work. This project had made significant improvements to the tow-paths, increased safety and eased public access.

Contact: 01924 408972

Sheltered Work Opportunities Project Sheltered Work Opportunities Project

This registered charity was set up in 1990 to address the need for meaningful occupation in a supportive and pressure-free environment, for adults with severe and enduring mental illness. SWOP aims to use the therapeutic nature of horticulture to restore mental well-being, and believes that by offering volunteers love and respect they can regain their self-esteem and confidence and begin to feel of worth as human beings again.

Cherry Tree Nursery, SWOP’s first project, is a successful wholesale commercial shrub nursery covering 4.5 acres. There are 100 volunteers. The nursery produces over 90,000 finished shrubs, 100,000 liners, 125,000 cuttings and 1,000 specimen-sized shrubs annually. Volunteers work in all aspects of the nursery, from taking cuttings and laying slabs to operating the till, issuing invoices and delivering plants. Cherry Tree offers a wide range of support including literacy and numeracy classes, introduction to computers, a specialist Disability Rights Advice Service, access to a Community Psychiatric Nurse and a wide range of social activities and events. Contact: 01202-593537


Tandem ambulancesTandem

Established in 1981, the Year of Disabled People, Tandem provides wheelchair accessible ambulance transport for elderly and disabled people in the Midhurst and Petworth area. In 2002, nearly 7000 passengers were carried. The group also organise a weekly club for nursing home residents and the housebound.

Contact: 01730 813962


The Standish Friendly Visiting Group

Founded in 1967, this group provides suitable persons to visit elderly and housebound people who are living alone and who are isolated and without much contact with the outside world. These regular one-to-one visits reduce isolation and improve the mental and physical health of those being visited. Over the last 34 years, 174 elderly and housebound people have received regular one-to-one visits.

Two ‘get togethers’ are arranged during the year to visit interesting places, using special coaches able to accommodate wheelchairs.

The group started when its founder – Mrs Clara Wood JP – was upset by the wilful destruction and damage caused by Youth Club members to equipment donated by Wigan Youth Committee. Some of the young people asked her to suggest something useful to do. At her suggestion, they produced a list of 26 elderly, housebound people who lived alone. In pairs, the young people started to visit them, doing their shopping, changing their library books, tidying gardens and providing company.

Once these young visitors had left school and moved on, the role of visiting was taken on by retired people from other groups in Standish. In addition to providing company and doing shopping etc, these visitors are alert to the need for special equipment and to any potential household hazards. Visits continue when people move into retirement homes in order to maintain their link with the local community.

Contact: via the Award Office on 0845 000 2002

Thorncombe First RespondersThorncombe First Responders

Thorncombe, in Somerset, is on the edge of the county border, and it can take an ambulance up to 45 minutes to reach the village and surrounding area. In many cases, especially with incidents such as heart attacks, the time taken getting to the patient can be critical. It was therefore decided to establish a team of local people who, in an emergency, could quickly get to casualties and initiate treatment.

Since its inception in 1998, TFR have attended 156 emergency calls from the community of around 700. Many of these calls have been serious and TFR’s prompt action has, without doubt, saved lives. Volunteers are trained in first aid and the use of the defibrillator, oxygen therapy and bag, and mask resuscitation. TFR and the local community raise all the funding.

As an offshoot of the main scheme, TFR also respond to ‘Care Line’ calls from elderly people in the parish who have panic buttons installed in their homes. Those who call for assistance are in the first instance visited by the duty First Responder. Such calls are usually made because people have fallen over, feel generally unwell or find themselves in difficulty.

Contact: 01460 30189


Trussell Trust Food BankThe Trussell Trust Food Bank

This project provides emergency food for Wiltshire people who are in short-term crisis by immediately providing enough food for 3 days. Over 70 groups now refer people to the Bank for emergency help.

In 2002/3, 13½ tonnes of tinned and dried food were collected. To cope with an ever-increasing demand for emergency food the project now collects food through schools, churches, groups and supermarket collection days.

136 volunteers give their time to the Bank to carry out social community action in a safe and structured environment. They do all the food sorting, food box packing and much of the distribution.

Contact: 01722 411244
Web: www.trusselltrust.org

The WIREThe WIRE

The WIRE started in 1996 and aims to respond to the real day-to-day needs of residents of all cultures, beliefs and abilities in Wick, West Sussex. It does this by starting friendships and introducing support networks, and through empowerment, mutual support and practical activities.

The WIRE works alongside existing community projects and develops new initiatives for the children, young people and families. The many activities provided for the community include:

• playscheme
• a disco for children aged 7 to 13
• a club run in partnership with local schools providing invited children with a nutritional start to the day
• an after-school dance class for girls aged 7 to 11
• after-school activities for small groups of children and young people
• a week-long community festival
• a local radio station running before and during the Wick Festival
• regular youth events, often in the form of a night-club
• ‘virtual parenting’ and parenting courses
• toddler group.

Contact: Tel/Fax 01903 731796
E-mail: info@thewire.screaming.net

The XL ProjectThe XL Project


This Christian based charity was set up in 1996 with the aim of assisting and supporting schools in the ethical, spiritual and relational aspects of the National Education curriculum. The project has grown quickly and volunteers now work in 25 schools in South London. Its work includes leading 14 lunchtime groups a week (involving about 300 young people) and about 150 lessons a year on Religious Education and Personal, Social and Health Education; running 30 school assemblies and four arts showcases a year (the latter with more than 100 performers) and an arts training school.

The Arts Showcase provides a platform for young people in secondary schools to show their talent in the performing arts. There are three borough-wide heats and the top four acts from each heat go forward to the Arts Showcase Final. Four young people from the Academy at Peckham heard about the Arts Showcase at a weekly lunchclub that XLP runs. Before entering and winning Southwark Arts Showcase, they received coaching at the XLP Arts Training School. Since then they have performed at other XLP events and various other community events.

Contact: 020-7277-9726
email: info@xlp.org.uk


York Students in Schools (YSIS)York Students in Schools (YSIS)

YSIS co-ordinates all school-based volunteering at The University of York. It aims to:
• help pupils by introducing volunteers to support the classroom teacher
• help children who are not realising their potential to raise their achievements and aspirations
• introduce children who have little background of higher education in their families to University life, thus supporting the government’s commitment to widening participation
• provide opportunities for students to become involved in their community.

Student Tutoring is YSIS’s largest programme, placing over 390 students in 2002-2003. It supports teachers in the classroom and increases students’ aspirations and motivation. They help in all areas of the curriculum and across all age groups from 3-18 in schools and after-school clubs. Activities include:
• language and literacy support
• support for gifted and talented secondary pupils
• out of hours learning
• music, dance, drama, IT, sport, science
• School Trips – at home and abroad!

Contact: 01904 434397

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