This Wednesday’s Excellence in Housewares Awards will be supporting industry charity The Rainy Day Trust (RDT) as one of the raffle beneficiaries. Funds raised will be hugely appreciated as the RDT is helping increasing numbers of employees and ex-employees of the housewares and home improvement industries. This year, the charity set a target to increase the numbers of people it helped by 30% and broke that target by the end of August.
Bryan Clover, ceo of the Rainy Day Trust answers the question, ‘Where does my donation go?’:
“How do you spend my money? Who benefits or is it just gathering dust somewhere in a bank account? I get asked those questions all the time and they deserve an honest answer.
There was a time when the Rainy Day Trust focussed solely on grant-making, either one off grants to meet an immediate need, or ongoing grants to help people over the longer term. When your washing machine breaks and you can’t afford a new one, we can replace it, but if your kids need school uniforms a few months later you still won’t be able to afford them because the underlying problem hasn’t changed; you still can’t afford them because you don’t have sufficient cash. What we do now is deliver a series of programmes of support that aim to tackle that underlying problem and help you to help yourself.
How much money you have is a double-sided coin – you either need to earn more or reduce what you routinely spend. We help people do both of those things. We can help you earn more by upskilling or re-training you. We can pay for courses or help you with CV writing, to make your application that bit better than the other guy’s. We help apprentices during their training and improve pass rates, giving them a skill for life.
To reduce your outgoings we can offer you free debt advice, which will help you re-schedule your debt making it more affordable; importantly it can help prevent bankruptcy which can have a massive impact on your future potential – try getting a mobile phone contract when you’ve been made bankrupt or have a CCJ against you. Our winter fuel package not only pays £250 direct to your energy supplier so that you can go into the winter knowing that you can turn the heating on, but it also pays for a boiler and heating system service and installs a corrosion inhibitor. This can reduce your heating bills by 10-15%.
The housing advice, free counselling and free legal advice can reduce the stress and anxiety that you may be feeling and so reduce the risk of pressures at work, so making you more ‘employable’ because you are in a better place mentally.
So what does your donation buy? £35 pays for 5 telephone counselling sessions, £50 pays for an hour’s legal advice, £80 buys the school uniform for a child, £120 a new fridge, £300 a new washing machine, £460 a new laptop and MS Office for an apprentice. £1,200 pays for the annual license of our welfare benefits checker that helps hundreds of people every year.
But that just talks about what we can offer, not what we actually spend the money on. Each and every year we help hundreds of housewares and home improvement employees, past and present, through all of our programmes. For example, last year we helped one man who had lost his wife at a very young age. We were able to help with new white goods and school uniforms, debt advice, bereavement counselling and much more. Another applicant asked us for help with rent arrears which had built up because of long-term illness. By intervening with the landlord we literally got the keys back as he was being evicted. We kept the roof over his head.”
Visit www.rainydaytrust.org.uk or info@rainydaytrust.org.uk
Top: The Rainy Day Trust is helping more people this year.