The Harrogate district community is set to come together this weekend to help hungry families struggling with the cost of living crisis.
People are being encouraged to fill a parking space with food at Morrisons, Boroughbridge, which will then be donated to food banks in the area.
The event, which will take place from 10am – 4pm on Saturday, is being led by the supermarket’s community champions, Sue Robson and Karen Cooper.
Ms Cooper said:
“As you are aware, the current financial climate is beginning to affect many local families and further putting already vulnerable households at risk of going hungry. Now, more than ever, people are needing to utilise the services of food banks.
We are joining forces with local food banks to create an event which hopefully should create awareness, and ultimately, provide more food for families in need.
“We hope this event will help to inspire our community to begin, or continue, to donate to local food banks, should they be in the position to do so.”
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Customers, staff, and the wider community are encouraged to come and donate non-perishable food and place it in an empty parking space, which will be cordoned off on the day.
The idea is that the parking space, or spaces, will be filled and then distributed to food banks in the area. These include Resurrected Bites, in Harrogate and Knaresborough, Boroughbridge Community Care and other local causes.
Customers can purchase food from pre-made pick-up packs at the supermarket, or can bring their own from home. They can also buy items off the shelves.
Boroughbridge volunteers needed to man initiative to reduce surplus foodVolunteers are being urged to come forward to help run Boroughbridge Community Larder — a new initiative in which surplus food is given away for free.
The community initiative, set up by Boroughbridge Lions and Boroughbridge Community Care, will stock surplus food from local shops, households and allotments which is then available for people to take home for free, regardless of means.
The main aim of the set-up is to reduce food waste.
The larder will be open on a Wednesday afternoon but organisers say more volunteers are needed to offer their time before it can open.
After an appeal on the Stray Ferret last October, Boroughbridge Methodist Church offered one of its church rooms for use. The room will have shelving for vegetables and dried goods, a fridge and two freezers.
Lions member Sue Johnson said:
“People can drop off any surplus food they have as long as it is within the best before and use by dates. For example, allotment owners might have a glut of courgettes in the summer, likewise people who have fruit trees might have lots left over which we would be more than happy to accept.
“The whole idea behind it is to stop and reduce food wastage because sending food to landfill creates methane which is bad for the climate.”
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Any food that isn’t taken on a Wednesday afternoon will either be frozen, given to farmers for animal feed or, once organised, given to schools for breakfast clubs.
The community larder project is being run in partnership with Hubbub which runs 200 similar schemes across the UK. It has also received £1,000 from North Yorkshire County Council.
Ms Johnson added most of the food will be coming from Morrisons at first but she hopes local coffee shops and bakers in Boroughbridge get involved.
Ms Johnson has asked anyone who can help to email bbrlions@hotmail.com.
Meet the showground heroes boosting Harrogate’s vaccine programmeAbout 20,000 people are expected to receive booster jabs at Harrogate’s Great Yorkshire Showground between December 6 and 22. Another 35,000 are set to follow in the New Year.
Most people who go agree it’s a slick, well-run operation. That it works so well is down to the efforts of 50 staff and 60 volunteers behind the life-saving operation.
The Stray Ferret spoke to some of those on site this week. The 60 volunteers are divided into four teams of 15 volunteers a day supplied on alternate days by community groups Boroughbridge Community Care, Harrogate and District Community Action, Nidderdale Plus and Knaresborough Connectors.
The Boroughbridge team, led by volunteer coordinator Jan Seymour, was on duty when we visited.
Ms Seymour was holding a box of chocolates, donated by a patient. All such gifts get shared between the helpers. She jokes:
“The people we like most are the ones that bring us chocolate and cake!

Jan Seymour
The set-up at the Yorkshire Event Centre is the same as it was from February to August this year when some 120,000 first and second dose vaccines were administered.
The volunteers remain relentlessly cheerful and helpful but there is a wearier feel to the place than there was in spring. Ms Seymour says:
“When we opened in February everyone was absolutely desperate to get it. Now the attitude is ‘I’m a bit busy today, can I come tomorrow?'”.
Volunteers typically do half a day each, either from 8am to 1pm or 1pm to 6pm. They meet and greet people, direct traffic and take people to one of the 16 vaccination pods, which can cater for up to eight vaccinators. Ms Seymour says:
“During lockdown it was easy to get volunteers but recently it’s become harder. Some people are back at work and many volunteers are older people who have childcare duties.
“The majority of patients are absolutely wonderful. They could not be more thankful. We get the odd one who isn’t. One guy had a go at me on Monday when he said ‘why can’t I go to my doctor for this? But that’s unusual. Most people are great.”
Staffing fatigue
Yorkshire Health Network, which is a federation of the 17 GP practices in the Harrogate district, manages the vaccination sites at Harrogate and Ripon racecourse.
Tim Yarrow, operations manager for the network, says the Harrogate site can handle greater numbers of walk-in patients because of its size and abundant parking.

Tim Yarrow
The quietest time, he says, is early to mid afternoon, then numbers soar towards the end of the day as many people try to get in at the end of their working days. The decision to allow walk-ins this week sparked a surge of visitors with queues of up to an hour at peak times.
Mr Yarrow says:
“We set this up in one-and-a-half days. It was easier second time round. We knew the snagging points from last time.
“The main challenge is staffing fatigue. During lockdown we had a lot of people with not a lot else to do. As people have gone back to their day jobs their availability has become more sparse.”
Yorkshire Agricultural Society, which owns the site, has “bent over backwards to enable it to happen”, says Mr Yarrow. When the site re-opens in January, jabs will take place in another building at the showground so the society can resume holding events in the Yorkshire Event Centre.
Moderna provided
Barnaby Roe, general manager of Yorkshire Health Network, oversees the operation at the showground.
In a makeshift office on site, he explains that the 50 staff are comprised of GP practice staff, who are helping for free on their days off, members of Yorkshire Health Network, pharmacists, pharmacist technicians and nurses. Half work the morning shift and half work in the afternoon.
“This programme will be for 20,000 to December 22 then going forward we think it will be another 35,000.”

Barnaby Roe
The site is giving doses of the Moderna booster but also administers some Pfizer jabs to children from immunosuppressed families.
“The people who work here have done it for some time and it’s down to a fine art.”
Booster appointments can be booked at the showground here. The site provided some walk-in appointments this week for over-18s who were eligible for jabs and has yet to decide whether they will be available next week.
Boroughbridge Lions looking for space to open community fridgeBoroughbridge Lions are on the hunt for a space in the centre of the town to open a community fridge, which would provide food to anyone in the local area.
The community group will work alongside Boroughbridge Community Care, a charity that offers help to those in need, to set up the space which would allow everyone to share surplus food, including donations from local food businesses, producers, households and gardens.
The organisations will be working with Hubbub which already helps to run 200 community fridges across the UK.
Food, such as dairy products, bread, tinned food and dry food destined for landfill would be donated by local shops or businesses and given to anyone in the community.
Lions member Sue Johnson said the space didn’t need to be huge, just big enough for a fridge and some shelving and somewhere central for people to access.
Ms Johnson said:
“We are still waiting for someone to come forward and offer us a space.
“Boroughbridge Community Care already hand out food parcels to six families locally. But we thought for people that aren’t aware of Boroughbridge Community Care, or who are struggling one week, then we would be there.”
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The plan is to start by opening the fridge one day a week and then, depending on how much food is donated and how large the demand is, open more days.
The space would be run by Lions and Boroughbridge Community Care staff.
Ms Johnson has asked anyone who may be able to offer a space or get involved in the project to email bbrlions@hotmail.com.
Boroughbridge Community Care calls for more volunteers and fundingBoroughbridge Community Care has been providing essential support during the pandemic and is now in need of further funding and volunteers to cover demand.
The charity has adapted its needs to those in the community, offering food parcels, gardening services and advice for those experiencing financial struggles as a result of covid.
It has missed out on vital fundraising opportunities and, as volunteers return to work, the need for more is growing.
Manager of the charity, Karen Parker, said:
“We would be really keen to have new volunteers come forward to help in any way they want. It’s difficult to get hold of funds currently, of course we can’t fundraise during these times. But any ideas are welcome! Organisations that have stepped up and come forward the help the community accounts for additional funds but there is only limited funding coming in whilst our expenses are increasing.”
The charity has always provided transport to appointments and social sessions such as coffee mornings and lunch clubs. Recently, it has seen the needs change within the community to cover younger families as well as the elderly and vulnerable.
Karen added:
“There’s nothing that beats that face to face chatting, that contact is invaluable. It’s just about finding alternative ways to continue support whilst keeping everyone safe. I think there is still the need but a different need, we’ve always supported older and more vulnerable people but since covid we now cover younger families too.
“I think there’s a gap in some people’s finances after being furloughed or out of work for months, so it’s about fulfilling the need to offer those essential services and making sure they know we’re here to help if they need it. Particularly those people that find themselves in a new situation, we can help.”
The charity, found above the library in Boroughbridge, is hopeful to resume its usual social events and fundraising once government restrictions ease.
It is determined to offer support to those in need with the help of additional volunteers.