Member Article

Rugby counselling charity welcomes £2,000 grant to expand support services

A Warwickshire organisation supporting families across Rugby is celebrating after receiving a £2,000 grant from a housebuilder, which will allow the voluntary group to expand its provision of free and confidential counselling.

The Parenting Project - which delivers tailored support for parents, young people and their carers - said the pandemic created unprecedented demand on its services, and with limited funding available, is struggling to keep up with increased demand.

The additional funding has come from CALA Homes Midlands’ Community Bursary scheme, which has enabled the project to increase and extend the provision of free, tailored counselling sessions for the town’s parents.

The Parenting Project estimates the bursary grant will enable the group to support an additional eight parents/carers, with an average of four individuals to a family group, it estimates up to three-dozen adults and children will tangibly benefit from the increased service capacity across the region.

Emma Smith, the Parenting Project’s Development Manager, said the funds from CALA Homes Midlands will go a long way to help them meet the increased demands brought about as a result of the pandemic.

Emma commented: “Across the country, families have been struggling to not only make ends meet over the past 18 months – through job losses or furlough – but also to keep family relationships healthy, despite a rise in mental health issues.

“Even prior to the pandemic, MIND’s data showed a quarter of parents experienced problems with their mental health, but additional pressures caused by the pandemic have undoubtedly compounded this issue.

“We help families to manage and overcome these problems with individual support at a time when it’s needed most. In Rugby we deliver support through the children and family centres, providing free 18-week counselling to parents.

“Whether due to anxieties from the pandemic, pressures of home-schooling over lockdown, or family finances becoming over-stretched due to furlough, redundancy, and precarious job prospects, Warwickshire’s families have been in dire need of this additional support.

“Through our tailored counselling, parents are able to explore their own mental health and the resulting impact it can have on their children, before we develop coping and resilience strategies to help them, and their children, better adapt and cope.

“I’d like to say a big thank-you for the vital support from CALA Homes, which will be put towards new and increased services to support some of the region’s most vulnerable.”

The Community Bursary initiative invites charities, voluntary organisations and community groups to apply for a share of funding from CALA, with more than 300 worthy causes now having received over £300,000 since CALA launched the initiative in 2016.

The scheme was paused in 2020 as a result of the March lockdown but was re-launched earlier this year to support groups and charities in need, particularly those which have been impacted by the pandemic.

Andrew Dicker, Regional Managing Director, commented: “The last 12 months have been particularly hard for the charity and volunteering sectors, with many seeing reduced funding at a time when local communities need their services most.

“CALA aims to make a positive and lasting contribution to the communities in which we build and that’s more important now than ever. We know that this Bursary funding will mean a great deal to the Parenting Project, and we can’t wait to follow their progress and see how the donations will make a real difference to local people.”

This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by CALA Homes .

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