Tool Library in Aberfeldy and Pitlochry
2023-12-15 • 1 comment • • Highland
Our project: Tool library We would like to create two tool libraries for our communities in Aberfeldy and Pitlochry. Tool library is a resource where our community members can borrow tools or equipment that they need for their projects at a low cost of yearly membership. Whether it will be a power drill, tinsel, slow cooker, paper-making kit, electric saw – things that are needed for a short period of time, every so often, or to try out before they decide to make the purchase. The average power drill is used for only 12 minutes over its lifetime. We want to change that and we strongly believe in providing people the tools they need to create the change they want. Buying tools costs money – hardware stores in the UK made over £12 million in 2018. There are some tools that people need to own and use regularly, but for everything else you could save the retail cost, and sign up for an annual tool library membership.
Borrowing from a tool library means there’s no need to store, maintain or buy your own tools in the first place, which saves money, reduces waste, and lowers barriers to access. We plan to start with a simple selection of tools that are mainly donated, repaired and saved from going to landfill. We already spoke widely about the idea of opening a tool library and it was always welcomed with enthusiasm.
      Crieff Community Garden Food Share
2023-12-15 • No comments • • Strathearn & Strathallan
Crieff Community Gardeners are a constituted community group based in Crieff Community Garden. We have an active community food larder within the community garden which offers free surplus vegetables harvested from the garden together with surplus dry goods from Crieff Coop. The has been a great service for locals suffering from the effects of the cost of living crisis. They can discreetly take anything food they require on a daily basis.
Unfortunately we have suffered severe vandalism which means that our current shed hosting the food larder has been severely damaged and is no longer lockable. Vandals have kicked in the door and kicked the walls from the inside out.
This is an essential service which we need to continue, but being unable to lock the shed, our volunteers can no longer do evening deliveries as we cannot leave the food unattended overnight for health and safety reasons. They are therefore having to do early morning deliveries on a daily basis which is causing a strain on our volunteers.
We require a new sturdy shed, together with mini polytunnels to asisst our veg growing and some new bulbs.
      Broke Not Broken: Reducing Food Poverty and Food Miles across Kinross-shire
2023-12-22 • No comments • • Kinross-shire
Broke Not Broken support those living in poverty across Kinross-shire.
Part of this work is support through food parcels, but supporting people with food parcels we find they are often in receipt of food that may not be suitable to them for a number of reasons. This food can then be discarded, or returned to the food bank, meaning there is a waste of resources, food miles and energy spent. It means people don’t get what they need: suitable food. By supplying digital vouchers we will eliminate that waste of food, energy, fuel and time for both clients and volunteers. As we deliver food parcels by car to people’s home, moving to digital vouchers (if that is their preference) means less time spent in cars on the road delivering parcels. Food vouchers give dignity and choice to those who are living in poverty.
We would like to trial using vex an online shopping voucher distribution system to reduce food miles, as well as reducing our plastic waste through our current system of vouchers.
We work closely with referral agents across health and social care as well as a number of community organisations to ensure people access the correct advice and maximise their income where possible.
Foodbank running costs have increased by 37% over the past year. This is partly increase in demand with a 20% increase food supports required than the previous year, and partly rising cost of food.
Whilst we continue to work hard to meet the needs within the community we also look to combat the affects of climate change and work in line with PKC cash first approach this new pilot project for a six week period would significantly reduce our food miles and plastic usage while enabling us to meet our goal of providing dignity and choice; and give us the opportunity to assess the feasibility of this as a model moving forward. As a charity we have already taken a number of steps to work within an environmentally friendly manner, we grow our own produce in our garden, and source locally grown vegetables (where we cannot meet demand) and dairy; we run a school uniform project which encourages re-use and recycling of uniform across Kinross-shire; use local butchers and bakery for our winter warmer parcels all working within an eco-friendly manner.
So If you think that…
-You would like to reduce poverty across Kinross-shire
-We should protect our environment and that small changes can add up to make a big difference by reducing our food miles across Kinross-shire.
-People should have dignity and choice about the food that they eat.
Then please support us by voting for our Reducing Food Poverty and Food Miles across Kinross-shire Project.
Thank you
Broke Not Broken
Open Gate Festival
2023-12-14 • No comments • • Highland
The Healthist Town project aims to promote positive health in our community and envirnonment. The Open Gate Festival is part of our work to encourage people to eat local, real food, to connect people to food sources, to encouage more growing of food and to reduce food waste. We aim to encourage as mnay local growers and food producers, both commercial famrs and amateur producers, to open their gaes to the pubilc. The Fesival will run over a week in August. Ther will also be a number of workshops and talks on throughout the week on topics such as composintg, growing food in a window box, oudoor coooking and cooking with left-overs. We will also have a community feast using simple, local produce. Schools, and community groups will be invited to get involved either by visiing gardens or hosting an event or activity. The Open Gate Festival encrouages and enables people to eat better and more cost effecitvely, undersatnd food and growing and to reduce food waste We are working with Perth and Kinross Council who are working on a wider good food plan. The Healthiest Town project is helping HIghland Perthsrhie be at the fore-front of the good food and food waste rvolution! The Open Gate Festival is good for our community, good for local business, good for our health, and good for the planet.
      On the Mend
2023-12-13 • No comments • • Perth City
On the Mend is a learning and skills based upcycling project where the positive impacts of making and mending, on building self-esteem, good mental health, and a connected community are promoted. The project has no barriers to participation and encourages creativity, trying a new skill, repairing, reusing or repurposing rather than buying new. On the Mend works in partnership with the CATH Shop on the High Street. The CATH Shop is Revolve certified (a Zero Waste Scotland quality standard for reuse) and last year customers prevented 48,000 items from going to landfill. Between our existing shop on the High St and our new premises we want to highlight the journey donated goods take to being upcycled and all the environmental and personal benefits that can bring. This project will pave the way for a changing city centre and developing a resilient stronger greener economy that is accessible to all.
The On the Mend project has operated from various locations across Perth but our most recent, along the Ladeside had no heating and was damp. We were lucky, alongside other CATH projects, to be offered a vacant shop on the High St at a greatly reduced rent. On the Mend moved to our new home at the end of November. We have with little to no budget created a warm and welcoming upcycling space and true to the spirit of the project have completely furnished the space with reuse furniture.
Funding from the Community Investment Fund has meant we are able to offer upcycling groups on Wednesday 1-3 and Friday 1-3. These have been well attended and have generated interest with individuals wanting to volunteer to share skills in upholstery, sewing skills, upcycled clothing, knitting and crochet. We have also been approached as a venue for repair cafes and other community groups booking workshops to support wellbeing.
The On the Mend project proposal for the Green living fund would support us to
1. Continue to rent a property on Perth High Street with a focus on reuse, waste reduction and recycling, putting reuse and engagement with recycling at the centre of the community. Help to breathe some new life into a depleted city centre environment and make reuse the norm on the High Street.
2. Engage the community in recycling by offering open to all and free/low cost upcycling/crafting and making and mending opportunities. Many shoppers in Perth see the benefit of buying donated items during the cost of living crisis and this project would promote creative uses for items that would go to landfill.
3. Allow us to open this resource for longer hours to engage with more people.
4. Share skills across the community with increased volunteer involvement.
      Wisecraft Blooms: Renewal & Wellbeing
2023-12-05 • No comments • • Eastern Perthshire
In November 2023 Wisecraft sadly lost access to a neighbouring green space; an area which had been utilised by our clients and volunteers since 2013 (see former green space photos document). Plans will soon commence to develop this area into an outdoor eatery and bar by a local landowner, having a detrimental impact on Wisecraft’s surrounding environment and the clients who worked tremendously hard to maintain this beautiful space, entitled ‘Wellbeing Blooms’. To maintain our green approach and establish new client led opportunities, we aim to reduce the size of our car park and create a green space for growing fruit, vegetables and wildflowers (see existing car park photos document). To help insects thrive we will establish seasonal flowering plants and plant wildlife-friendly shrubs, and take a fully organic approach. We will reuse and upcycle materials within our joinery department to build new planters. These planters will hold fruit and vegetable crops for clients’ use during our Community Cookit sessions, or for them to enjoy at home with supporting Community Cookit recipe cards. Our Healthy Lifestyle Engagement Worker will deliver workshops on ‘reduce, reuse, recycle’; supporting sustainable living skills which can be transferred into clients’ day to day lives. We will provide/support waste education and awareness as a driving change towards waste and litter. Other sustainable practices will include collecting rainwater. Lack of space and gardening expertise is consistently shared as one of the biggest barriers for clients engaging in horticulture activity. Creating this supportive space will help remove this barrier and hopefully motivate client towards considering their green approaches at home; demonstrating how much can be achieved in a restricted area. To account for condensing the car parking area we will encourage employee car-sharing, and with help from Cycling Scotland, we will embrace our new cycling initiative ‘The Pedal Revolution’.
‘Wisecraft Blooms: Renewal & Wellbeing’ fits three criteria within the Green Living Fund; that being Waste, Resilience and Engagement. By helping our client and volunteer community to grow produce on site, engage in accessible cooking groups and enhance skills to grow/cook at home, we are also supporting with the cost of living crisis.
Glenfarg Connectivity
2023-11-22 • No comments • • Kinross-shire
Glenfarg Community Transport Group is a registered charity regulated by OSCR. We registered as a charity just over twelve months ago and in that time have increased bus travel from Glenfarg to Kinross from 150 to 400 passengers per week.
We would like to expand our offering in the form of an houlry servcie to Perth which will offer the residence of Glenfarg and surrounding areas a means to travel without the need of a car.
Our service is aimed at the passanger and provides a complete service including social interaction and connectivity. We have funding in place to oppperate a service but could enhance the delivery of this project with additional funding which would assist us in obtaining licences for a passenger app, additional insurance premiums and other oncosts.
      Social Flock - School Uniform Bank
2023-12-15 • No comments • • Perth City
What is Social Flock?
Social Flock is a community clothing charity. We aim to mitigate the impact of poverty and reduce our community’s reliance on fast fashion by providing FREE clothing packs of pre-loved and new clothing.
What is in a Back to School Pack?
Our packs include 3 shirts, 2 bottoms, 2 jumpers/cardis, 2 PE t shirts, 2 PE bottoms, a PE jumper and a school bag. We also aim to include school shoes and/or trainers plus stationary and other back to school essentials like pack lunch boxes. Everything a child needs for taking part in their school journey.
Why do many days’ worth of clothing? Well, Child Poverty Action Group research found that some children were reporting that they were missing school because they only had one uniform, and it was in the wash. If we give more, we empower young people to engage more. Especially with the rising energy costs, families will not be able to wash uniform as frequently. We want to keep children dressed in clean, high quality pre-loved clothes, for as much of the week as possible.
Packs are personalised to each schools colours and the child’s style preferences (so you can tell us if they won’t wear shorts, or will only wear cardigans!) and their sensory needs to make sure the packs are made to suit the individual. We also ask for bag colours and characters and try our hardest to match up to their personal style. One child asked for a Frozen bag and we managed to get one for her, she put it on as soon as she got her pack and didn't want to take it off!
Who can apply?
We believe in making our projects as accessible as possible so if you live in Perth, attend a local Primary or High School, and wear clothing you can apply, and all applications are successful. This means anyone impacted by the Cost of Living Crisis, or interested in being more climate aware, can apply no matter their income.
Everyone is feeling the pinch right now and a pack of uniform really helps with 40% of carers saying their 2022 pack improved their mental health and over 50% stating it made their children excited to return to school.
Families can self-refer meaning no one else has to be involved in your application process. We share our links with local schools and nurseries to circulate and we're building more partnerships and direct links with schools all the time. We also have a list of great referral partners, like Perth and Kinross Foodbank and HomeStart.
Why is this important to our local community?
Environment and Fast Fashion - Approximately only 20% of all worldwide textiles used are recycled and the UK sends 350,000 tonnes of clothing to landfill each year. By passing on high quality pre-loved clothing and redistributing it to families who will continue to utilise it, we ensure clothes are being used to the end of their life. We know children grow quickly, and their clothes are often grown out of before the clothing is unwearable (although some uniform won’t survive the first term back!).
Poverty - We know that 1 in 3 households in Perth and Kinross are classed as struggling financially. As the Cost of Living crisis continues, this is unfortunately only expected to continue. 2600 children in Perth and Kinross are classed as living in very deep poverty. The Perth City locality has the highest number of children living in relative poverty. feedback from our service users highlights that our service allows them to redirect their household budget to urgent bills and other unavoidable expenses, with 67% of feedback participants stating receiving our free clothing allowed them to re-prioritise their financial needs and 78% saying it reduced their stress. What more could we ask for?
By redistributing School Uniform, we can ensure all children can return to school feeling positive and matching their peers. How children feel in their clothes will have a dramatic impact on their school experience, their ability to learn and improve their future prospects. We know there is enough pre-loved clothing to support our local children to engage and build a bright and successful future!
How do we know this is something our community wants and needs?
2024 will be our third year running our Back to School Pack. In 2021 we provided 152 packs, in 2022 - 340 and in 2023 we reached our 400 application limit before the school holidays had ended.
We know we will continue to watch our application numbers skyrocket as poverty in our local population continues to increase, and as awareness of the impact on our environment that clothing purchases continues to be focussed on in schools and by us.
In 2024 in order to continue to meet the needs of our community we need staff who can work alongside our tireless, amazing, volunteers to organise donations, make up packs and deliver them to our local children in time for them to go back to school in August.
SO IF YOU THINK THAT...
- All children should have access to high quality school uniform?
- We should protect our environment and make positive pre-loved clothing choices?
- By making little changes to our own lifestyle to support others we can make big changes for the future of our children?
Then please support us by voting for our Back to School Pack project. Thank you.
Team Social Flock
Community, Clothing, Climate
      Empowering folks to envisage tangible action through film screenings discussions
2023-12-06 • No comments • • Highland
We would like to raise awareness and promote discussion about climate change through thought provoking film, lived experience and information sharing by delivering a monthly programme over the next year. This programme would include topics which relate to the criteria identified by the Green Living Fund.
In order to be able to do this in the current climate, with no barriers, we would like to make this programme available at little or no cost to participants.
To facilitate this we propose joining an organisation called Take One Action –
“Take One Action nurtures communal exploration of the stories, ideas and questions at the heart of positive social change. Through film screenings, conversation and enquiry, we bring people together to inspire a fairer, more sustainable and more fulfilling world, in Scotland and beyond our borders”
This enables us to access a film catalogue and screen 6 films in a year without a license.
After each screening we propose to have a discussion on the topic, have information available and refer participants to other organisation locally that they can contact to take action locally – or nationally if relevant.
We have piloted this idea with a film called Riverwoods - at the end we asked if any of those attending were interested in volunteering for a local rewilding project to leave their contact details. We checked with the project organiser recently and they were delighted by the number of folks who volunteered to help them.
      Kinross-shire Repair Cafe
2023-12-08 • No comments • • Kinross-shire
Kinross-shire Climate Cafe is proposing to set up a Repair Cafe, video link - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UvIvvJl09dg.
This initiative would be the first of its kind in Kinross-shire, based on the experience of the Repair Cafes in Crieff, Pitlochry and Aberfeldy.
Our aims:
- encourage local people to reduce waste through repair of their broken items with a positive outcome of waste reduction and mitigation of climate change,
- reduce living costs as it is usually more cost effective to repair a good quality old item than to buy a new one,
- develop community links and exchange of expertise in the practical setting of Repair Café,
- strengthen our community in climate change adaptation with a supportive popup climate café,
- provide a swap shop facility to further reduce living costs and promote sustainable fashion.
Kinross-shire Repair Cafe would be a community-led project run by Kinross-shire Climate Café volunteers. The events would take place on four different weekend days in 2024 from 11 – 3pm in the local town halls. The format of the Café would be informal: a walk-in café where people come and bring their broken items to be repaired. Clients would not pay for the repairs but would pay for parts and materials used. There are two possible locations that we envisage for the location to widen the area of provision: Kinross and Milnathort. But the Repair Café would also be providing repairs and working with a wider Kinross-shire community with the total population in excess of 11,000.
The events would be advertised through the local press, leaflet distribution at Kinross Farmers Markets, social media and Loch Leven Community Library. The project will support the local economy by involving small local businesses with repair expertise, links with the future Repairers have been made. It will create opportunities for people with skills currently out of employment or retired who are experts and craftsmen. The repair Café would involve 10 volunteers for each event, which amounts to 200 volunteer hours.
One of the aims of the project is to reduce the living costs as through repair you lower your spendings in the long term especially if items that are broken are of better quality. This helps to reduce the effect of inflation on your household budget.
Finally, as part of Repair Café we would also hold a swap shop to reduce textile waste and a pop-up climate café to have friendly chats on different aspects of climate change adaptation and how to cope with the climate change crisis.