Charity | Posted on November 12th, 2024 | return to news
Dorset charity launches 14th annual winter appeal
Dorset Community Foundation’s Surviving Winter appeal aims to save lives by helping the elderly and vulnerable stay warm.
A Dorset charity has launched its annual appeal to help save lives by keeping the elderly and vulnerable warm through the colder months.
This year marks the Dorset Community Foundation’s 14th annual Surviving Winter appeal. Last year, the charity raised more than £50,000. The appeal distributes £200 grants to pensioners and vulnerable people aged 60 and over living in fuel poverty.
Lynda Todd had to give up work after being diagnosed with COPD and an eye condition that has left her partially sighted. She said she struggles to heat her two-bedroom home. “I just have one radiator on downstairs and one in the bathroom for a little while and I don’t use my oven,” she said. “But I still got into debt. It’s horrible and the stress makes me feel worse.”
Last year, she was helped with a £200 fuel grant and food vouchers. “It made me feel like I’d had a weight lifted off my shoulders,” she said. “It gave me breathing space and I was able to pay off my arrears and not worry so much.”
With the Winter Fuel Payment being restricted to only those on means-tested benefits by the Labour Government this year, the appeal is needed more than ever. Chief Executive Grant Robson said: “Each year, an average of 590 people in Dorset die of cold-related illness because they can’t afford to heat their homes properly,”
“Living in a cold house makes chronic illness like COPD and other respiratory conditions much worse and we know that many older people skip meals or don’t cook hot food to save money on their bills. That just makes them weaker and ever more prone to the cold, that just isn’t right in 2024.”
Robson is appealing for people to donate to the appeal to help it support some of the 20,000 people living in fuel poverty in the county. “Last year, because of the wonderful support we received we were able to help more than 400 people. This year, with many fewer people receiving the government’s Winter Fuel Payment, we are worried the need will be even greater.”
The appeal is run in partnership with Citizens Advice in Dorset and the funding also helps the Citizens Advice energy team identify people at risk so they can offer additional support.
Citizens Advice Business Development Manager Katrina Ford said: “Our advisors identify who might need further help, which could be benefits advice or debt advice to help maximise their income. Often if you are struggling with energy, you are also struggling with food costs and maybe debt issues, so we offer other crisis support as well.
“We want to address the root of the problem and try to make people more financially stable and more confident that they know they can come back to us if they need further support.”
Her colleague, Project Manager Ros Dignan, said one of the main avenues of help aside from the grants is helping people discover if they are entitled to pension credit, which would mean they are also eligible for the government’s Winter Fuel Payment.
She said: “There is a high demographic of people that don’t receive pension credit because they either think they’re not entitled to it or they don’t want to ask. We are trying to get the message out there to people who are worried about missing out on the winter fuel payment to come and talk to us so that we can have a look and see what’s going on for them.
“We are trying to reach areas of high deprivation across the county, which is why we have our energy advice bus going out into communities to talk to people.”
Donate to the appeal at dorsetcommunityfoundation.org.uk or send a cheque or bankers draft, made payable to Dorset Community Foundation, to The Surviving Winter Appeal, Dorset Community Foundation, The Spire, High Street, Poole, BH15 1DF.
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