Ripon PE teacher Helen Mackenzie has received the British Citizen Award for outstanding work tackling food poverty and encouraging sport.
Ms Mackenzie, who works at Ripon Grammar School, overcame breast cancer after being diagnosed 11 years ago.
She is among a select group of 27 adults across the UK to be honoured with the award this year.
The British Citizen Awards are held twice a year to recognise individuals doing extraordinary work in their local community.
In November 2019, Ms Mackenzie and her friend Sarita McDermott, who owns the Realitea Cafe in North Street, Ripon set up the food charity Back to Basics.
Ms Mackenzie told the Stray Ferret:
“The idea is that we provide families who are struggling — usually those with kids on free school meals — with the ingredients for a delicious nutritious meal.”

A typical weekly Back to Basics food donation, which is given to families along with a recipe card.
She added:
“We are not a soup kitchen so we don’t provide the meal for them — we expect them to get ‘back to basics’ and cook with their family.”
Netball for all
Ms Mackenzie and Ms McDermott fundraise for the charity and have secured financial support from local businesses, as well as donations of goods from individuals.
This enables them to provide families with everything they need, from food ingredients to recipe cards, designed to help parents and children to work together in creating the meals.
In addition to her Back to Basics charity, Ms Mackenzie is also well-known in Ripon for encouraging sport.
She vowed to make competitive sport, which is normally the preserve of the ultra-fit and young, accessible to all after overcoming an aggressive form of stage three breast cancer.
In 2015 she started Ripon City Netball Club, which attracts not only girls but also seniors and people with varying levels of mobility, ability and sporting prowess.
Many mums — including Ms Mackenzie — play alongside their daughters. Nearly 100 people now take part.
‘Remarkable and inspirational’
Alec Lutton, who set up the first Ripon food bank, nominated Ms Mackenzie for the British Citizen Award.
He said:
“She is a remarkable and inspirational person with a can-do attitude and a determination to do help others in need of assistance or encouragement.”
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The nomination was supported by Ripon councillor and three-time former city mayor Pauline McHardy, who has known Ms Mackenzie for many years,
She said:
“Helen is the salt of the earth and her contribution to the community in Ripon is absolutely immense.”
Today her bespoke BCA medal with the inscription ‘For the Good of the Country’ was delivered by special courier to her Ripon home.
Ms Mackenzie and her husband, John, have two grown-up daughters, Laura and Amy, and from now on, she can call herself Helen Mackenzie BCA.