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    04

    Nov 2020

    Last Updated: 04/11/2020

    Harrogate district charity shops count the cost of lockdown

    by Tim Flanagan

    | 04 Nov, 2020
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    Charities in Harrogate, Ripon, Knaresborough, Boroughbridge, Pateley Bridge and Masham have lost millions of pounds already this year and now a second lockdown, closing shops, will provide another blow.

    ripon-4th-november-2020-martin-house-charity-shop-resized
    Martin House Charity Shop.

    Many charities will be left counting the cost of another lockdown when their shops are forced to close tomorrow.

    It took many stores a long time to re-open after the first lockdown and now their attempts to raise funds for charitable causes are to be hindered again.

    Charity shops are a big part of the retail scene in Harrogate, Ripon, Knaresborough, Boroughbridge, Pateley Bridge and Masham.

    Ripon's 10th charity shop was all set to open, but Martin House will now have to wait at least a month before serving its first customers.

    When the first lockdown of non-essential retailers ended in June, the charity, which provides family-led care for young people with life-limiting conditions, took over large premises on Fishergate.

    Martin House's £2.2m loss


    At the time, the charity projected a £2.2 million loss of planned income stretching into summer 2021.

    Stephanie Rimmington, the head of retail, said:

    “The income we get from our shops is vital to helping Martin House raise the money we need to care for families in this area.”


    Further down Fishergate, The Oxfam shop remains closed, having never reopened since the first covid lockdown in March.




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    Saint Michael's, which has shops in Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough, spends £6 million per year on hospice care from its base in Crimple Valley.



    With one in three people in the Harrogate district requiring hospice care or support at some point in their lives, the demand for its services is unrelenting.

    A Saint Michael's spokesperson pointed out:

    "We can only care for as many people as we have the funds to help."


    The money required is £15,000 a day and there is reliance on the income from retail shops, alongside bequests, personal donations and fundraising events, which pay for 80 percent of the charity's work.

    British Heart Foundation shop closure


    Today marks the last day of trading for the British Heart Foundation books and music shop in Beulah Street, Harrogate.

    Like the clothing and bric-a-brac shop it once had further down the street, it will not be reopening.

    While shops close, either temporarily or for good, all of the organisations involved - both local and national - continue their work despite the difficult times that they face.

    In an appeal for financial donations, the British Heart Foundation, said:

    "Covid has put people with heart and circulatory conditions at greater risk than ever. But the effects of the virus have also cut our lifesaving research in half. Slowing down now would put even more lives at stake.
    "At a time when hearts need help now more than ever, we urgently need your support."


    Though the shops are closed, there are other ways of supporting the work of all charities and details can be found on their respective websites.