Partner Article
Eggs-cellent! Kingdom donates 352 Easter eggs to children’s charity
Kingdom, who provide national security, cleaning, recruitment, healthcare, environmental enforcement, and training services, will bring some Easter joy to children who live within the vicinity of their National Support and Command Centre at Newton-le-Willows after donating more than 350 chocolate eggs to a local charity.
The giveaway from the company has helped Business for Youth meet its aim of raising 2,500 chocolate eggs so they can supply every primary school child in the local area with one.
Mark Wallace, Group Director at Kingdom, says: “We are thrilled to be supporting Business for Youth this Easter by donating chocolate eggs to help them support young people who may go without this Easter.
“Business for Youth are a fantastic charity and I am grateful to our colleagues at Kingdom who have been working hard behind the scenes to collect and sort the chocolate eggs and to get them across to Business for Youth for the local children to enjoy.”
Business for Youth, who create free-of-charge opportunities for young people in Newton-le-Willows and Earlestown, praised the company for their contribution.
Terry Maguire, Chair and Trustee of Business for Youth, said: “We would like to thank Kingdom Services Group for their huge donation of Easter eggs.
“This has helped our goal in reaching 2,500 eggs, enabling our charity, Business for Youth, to deliver an egg to every primary school child in our town, dressed as Easter bunnies. You have helped us spread a little needed cheer.”
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Tom Harrop .
The scale-ups rocketing through our fast world
Care about the experience, not just the outcome
The rise of an alternative investor model
Bots don't beat personal business coaching
From COVID-19 to the Middle East crisis
How to build credibility in B2B marketing
Is your business ready for the trade union change?
Government 'must take its foot off businesses' throats'
Upskilling key to civil engineering's future
Why apprenticeships are becoming a strategic asset
Business growth requires the right environment
OpenAI decision a wake-up call for our tech plans