Paediatric First Aid Course

This is a two day course. One day online (approx 6 hours can be done over a couple of weeks) and one day in the classroom. The online part of the course HAS TO BE COMPLETED BEFORE THE CLASSROOM PART.

The course is designed for anyone who works with children in a paid or voluntary capacity. It is a Level 3 course qualification awarded by Highfield and meets the Ofsted requirements for Childminders and all other childcare workers.

There is just one rate for this course, it costs £35. It is essential to bring photo ID on the day – your passport, driving licence etc. Book in advance. (There is a short multiple choice test at the end).

This takes place on Saturday 02 March. Sign up here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/paediatric-first-aid-level-3-ofsted-recognised-tickets-748394507117?aff=ebdsoporgprofile

Local Food Banks

Honor Oak Community Centre
50 Turnham Road, SE4 2JD.
This service opens fortnightly on Wednesday evenings from 7–8.30pm
To make a request text 07783441973.

LewCAS Food Bank
LewCAS food bank is for refugees and asylum seekers.
Food distributions are on Tuesday mornings at St John’s Church SE8 4EA, 11am–1pm.
Contact Peter on or 07786160993 to refer an individual.

Whitefoot & Downham Community Food Project
Hope Church Downham (formerly Christian Centre), Downham BR1 5SF.
Contact or call 020 8698 7945.
Anyone in hardship living in the Whitefoot or Downham area can access these food parcels.
Food distribution is on Thursdays from 7–8.30pm. No delivery, pre-packed bags only.

Eliot Bank and Kelvin Grove Children’s Centre Food Bank
Grove Children’s Centre, Kirkdale, Sydenham SE26 6BB.
Wednesdays, 12am to 2pm.
Contact: 02086130172.

Salvation Army
(Deptford Church and Community Centre)
144 Deptford High Street, SE8 3DP.
The Salvation Army provides food for anyone
experiencing financial hardship in the SE8 area. Food parcels are prepared Monday morning for collection by appointment.
They accept referrals from agencies or self-referral. Contact or call 02086925263.

St Peter’s Church Brockley Food Bank
43 Wickham Road, Brockley, SE4 1LT.
A social supermarket for people in the SE4 area on Wednesdays. Pay a £3 membership weekly fee to choose groceries to last a week.
The Helping Hands Food Bank
The helping hands food bank is run by Action for Refugees and Good Shephers St Peter’s Church Lee. This food bank supports refugees, asylum-seekers and vulnerable migrant families.
To make a referral or request support email: or call 07872 161 271.

We Care Food Bank and Pantry
50 Friendly Street, Deptford, SE8 4DR.
Open Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 10am–4pm and offers a social pantry where members pay £5 for shopping as well as a foodbank (referral only) call 07871187162 for more information.

Catford Salvation Army
23 – 25 Brownhill Road SE6 2HE.
Open Fridays 10am–1pm for emergency food parcels.

Chinbrook action residents team food bank
Available to Chinbrook residents only. Weekly parcels on a Wednesday. Contact 07455 213291

Feed the hill
Feed the hill delivers free food boxes to local housebound people in SE4 and SE14 for those self-isolating or experiencing food poverty. Call or text 07748713212

Pie and Mash – the Field Mutual Aid
Provides food parcels for anyone in the Deptford area. To request help email or call 07857024435.

Rastafari Movement UK Food & Wellbeing First
Offering African Caribbean cultural food for vulnerable people. Get in contact with Sis Marcia with referrals by emailing rmukwellbeing@gmail.com or calling 07947 681 875. Deliveries once a week on Tuesday evenings.

Seventh Adventist Church
430 Lewisham High Street, SE13 6LJ.
Open Thursdays 5–6.30pm. Provides a 2 day supply of groceries.

Community Stores
Members pay a weekly fee to shop at the stores.
Evelyn Community Store
Kingfisher Square SE8 5TW.
Open Tuesdays 2–5pm for store members who pay £3.50 a week to use the store. Free surplus food given out on Fridays. To become a member visit the Evelyn Community Store website. There is currently a waiting list.
Pepys Community Store
2000 Community Action Centre, 190-201 Grove Street, Deptford SE8 3PG.
Open Fridays 12–3pm for store members from the area of Pepys, Evelyn and Deptford who pay £3.50 a week to shop at the store.
Become a member by collecting an application form from the store.
Downham Gleaning Pantry
Brook Lane Community Church, 27-29 Brook Lane, Bromley BR1 4PX.
Open Wednesday 5–7pm, Thursday 9am–2pm and Friday 9am–2pm to people on low income or who are affected financially by the impact of COVID-19 in Downham. The membership fee is £3.50 a week.
To book an appointment contact downhammutualaid@hotmail.com

Lewisham Multilingual Advice Service (LMLAS)

LMLAS is a well-established community organisation that provides free and confidential advice, advocacy support to appeal levels in mother tongues to all BAMER groups who speak little or no English. The main areas of work are welfare benefits, to appeals and representation level and includes Consumer, debt, education, employment, family issues, health, housing, and utilities. We have 15 community languages available. If a language is not available we endeavour to accommodate service users with help from our bank of current and past volunteers. We are a member of the Advice Lewisham Partnership.

Services available:
Monday to Wednesday at scheduled times between 10am and 4pm in various languages:
Freephone Advice Line; 
Advice appointments 
Thursday: All languages (serviced by volunteers):
Digital hub 

New style service
Due to COVID-19, we developed a new model for delivering advice appointments and digital hub enquiries. This involved establishing a new post of Telephone Advice Line Coordinator whose role includes fielding calls from service users to the relevant advisor. Appointments and enquiries are dealt with by phone and using social media. Freephone Advice Line on 0800 231 5453, option 1.

If your organisation has a client who needs immediate support whose understanding of English is limited and if you have all the questions/details ready, we can arrange a time to interpret with you and the client over the phone for up to 20 minutes.

Contact: Liz, Service Manager, mail@lmlas.co.uk

HELP NEEDED:
LMLAS are currently seeking advice volunteers and a website volunteer. Please contact Liz for further details of these volunteering opportunities..

Support in our community

It’s never too late to get connected, talk to a neighbour, join a new group, and there are many organisations operating locally that can help us through difficult times such as this. Some key local organisations are listed below. Don’t be scared, just pick up the phone and give them a call.

170 Community project: Free and independent welfare advice – 0207 732 9716.
Adviceline Lewisham: 07845 683313
Lewisham and Bromley Credit Union: a not for profit financial co-operative run for and by our members, offering ethical loans and savings for those living or working in the boroughs of Lewisham or Bromley, email admin@pluscu.co.uk.
Somerville Adventure Playground: Youth activities, play and support https://somerville-online.org.uk
Lewisham Refugee and Migrant Network: Advice and support services www.lrmn.org.uk, 0208694 0323
Alcoholics Anonymous: there are five different weekly group meetings to choose from. more information at: https://rehabclinicsgroup.com/aa-meeting-locations/london-south-east-east/
Bromley and Lewisham Mind: Mental health and well-being https://blgmind.org.uk/
Link Age Southwark: if you are or you know someone who is an elderly resident of Southwark, this organisation offers a wide variety of services for older people. Call them on 0208 299 2623.
Just Older Youth (JOY): A local charity based around New Cross and neighbouring areas, providing a wide variety of activities and mutual support for the over 50s. Call Maureen on 0208 692 9186.
Community Connections: a social prescribing project aimed at improving health and well-being, and tackling isolation. call 0208 314 3244 or email communityconnections@ageuklands.org.uk.
Financial support with self isolation: https://lewisham.gov.uk/myservices/benefits/financial-support-with-self-isolation
Deptford Reach – supporting homeless people, email: info@deptfordreach.org.uk http://www.deptfordreach.org.uk
Carers Lewisham – run by and for carers. Ensuring carers in Lewisham receive the correct support. 0208 699 8686.
Benefits advice 0800 231 5453
Employment support 07532787466
Domestic violence support 0808 2000247
Lewisham food bank 08082082138
Social supermarket – st Peter’s Church, Wickham Road, SE4 1LT. Pay £3 and choose your own food. https://www.stpetersbrockley.org.uk/feedback-food-request

Harriet Tubman: an inspiration to all!

Harriet Tubman was born Araminta Ross, to enslaved African-American parents in the state of Maryland, probably in 1822. The only grandparent we know about, her maternal grandmother, Modesty, had arrived on a slave ship from Africa. Maryland was one of a middle-tier of Staes where slavery existed, but less prevalently than further south. Tubman’s home was – very relatively speaking – a short journey to Pennsylvania , the closest of the free states of the North. It was conceivable, and at very great risk, possible for slaves to flee over the state border to win freedom. The famous black activist, Frederick Douglas, who Tubman went on to work with, escaped from Maryland in 1838, a little more than a decade before Harriet.

The sheer amazingness of Harriet Tubman’s life starts simply with the fact that she was one of the tiny minority of slaves before the civil war, rebellious and confident enough to flee her owners. It continues with the fact that , very unusually, she made the journey to Philadelphia alone. She did this despite the severe headaches, seizures and bouts of unconsciousness that plagued her continually through her life after a skull fracture inflicted by an overseer when she was 13.

Tubman escaped alone in 1849, but developed to her full stature as a leading figure among a growing activist movement to overthrow slavery and transform US society through the 1850s. After decades of beleaguered organising and slow growth, abolitionism and those influenced by it became decisive in the revolutionary crisis of the 1850s and 60s. In 1863, after the North’s war took a more radical turn towards destroying slavery, Tubman became a spy and guide for the US army. She led black soldiers in a raid on the Combahee River in South Carolina, rescuing many hundreds of slaves on one expedition. She was the only woman to lead troops during the civil war. Tubman lived to 1913, campaigning for women’s rights and women’s suffrage as well as black rights.

Volunteers needed at 170

More so than ever, many people are needing help with welfare benefits. We are looking for volunteers who can train to be Adviceline telephone assessors and be the first point of call for local people in need. Is this something you could do?
The training takes place over one month, for about 20 hours in total, and once you are trained you can help your local independent community advice centre, 170 Community project to support local residents.
Call Jonny on 0207 732 9716 or email him at jonwicken170cp@gmail.com.

Upcoming courses

We have the following subsidised courses scheduled before the end of the year. These will all be delivered from New Cross Learning to ensure full social distancing.

Food safety – Friday 6 November Book here
Safeguarding of children – Friday 4 December Book here
Emergency First Aid – Friday 13 November Book here

The cost of the courses is £10 if you are currently unwaged, or £50 if you are waged.

ESOL classes are also ongoing. There is no charge for our ESOL programme. simply turn up Tuesday 4.00-5.00pm or Wednesday 5.00-6.00pm for an assessment and we will fit you in to a class according to your ability. We are currently running a combination of online and COVID secure in-class lessons (small groups).

A message from the Woodland Trust

Trees are our strongest warriors in the battle against climate change. they lock up carbon, fight flooding and cool our cities. But there are simply not enough of them to tackle the climate emergency. To hit the government’s 2050 carbon net zero target, the UK desperately needs more trees. together we can make that happen. Join our climate change army and help us reach our target to get 50 million trees in the ground over the next five years.
– Plant a tree
– Speak up
– Support the Woodland Trust


https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/protecting-trees-and-woods/campaign-with-us/big-climate-fightback/ `

Have your say

Welcome to our regular column where a local resident has their say about something on their mind. This month Donna starts a discussion
about taking personal responsibility for helping manage the Covid crisis.

Whose Responsibility Is It Anyway?
A restaurant was recently closed down for a deep clean, food was thrown away, staff were put on hold and income was lost. Why? Because someone who had just been tested for Coronavirus decided to go out for dinner and a few drinks rather than wait for her test results.
It is likely that other people were infected by her as she sat eating dinner and as she travelled to and from the restaurant. This is how the virus spreads, people mixing with each other and not taking seriously the guidelines about washing hands, wearing masks, going into quarantine etc.
To force the virus back to a manageable level we all have to take personal responsibility for our actions. There’s more than plenty we can blame the government for over the whole coronavirus episode but we do all have a personal responsibility too if we are to ensure the virus stays at a manageable level until we have a vaccine.
Another discussion would be around the anti-vaxers, the flat earth society. They really do need to read some real science instead of conspiracy theories. It is science that will come to the aid of humanity regarding this virus not giant Lizards or drinking bleach. Who would drive a car without wearing a seat belt? Only fools, nowadays! So why would you not follow the guidelines on handwashing, staying home if waiting for test results and so on?
Well, of course, some people – far too many people – will have to choose between taking the awful risk of going to work knowing they might be infected and/or infect others and paying the rent and food bills. That’s not a real choice, not a fair choice.
We need the government to guarantee full pay for all workers if they have to isolate, regardless of their contract or status. Else, the poorest paid, least protected will remain in the frontline of fire with this virus. If we are to avoid a second spike this winter we do all have to believe that it’s all our personal responsibility to help keep the Covid virus under
control.
There are things we can do individually and there are things we must do collectively. Supporting campaigns to make sure the workplace is safe, that schools are safe, that care workers and other frontline and key workers have full employment rights with decent pay and benefits etc is an essential way to put pressure on the government to deliver what we need.

A note from the Chair

NXG Trust is overseen by a board of Trustees, mainly local people all giving their time voluntarily. The board recently elected a new Chair, Helen Mathie, Helen works for a national homeless charity.

I was down at Besson Street a few weeks ago – the sun was shining, the garden was in full colour and it was easy to forget for a moment that we were still living in the pandemic. It reminded me how lucky we are to have such a wonderful, restorative and welcoming space on our doorstep. I’ve been reflecting on this as a relatively new Chair of the NXGT Board. When I took on the role back in February, I had little idea how things would pan out. Within four weeks we’d gone into lockdown, we had to take the difficult decision to suspend many of our services, and plans were quickly being put in place to deal with the many unknowns we faced as a charity. We know how hard this period has been so many in our community and the pressures will still be felt for some time to come.

It has however been an incredible privilege to see the dedication and creativity of the staff and volunteers at Besson Street who have made change happen quickly and kept as many activities going as possible. I was lucky enough to be on the Board for 3 years before becoming Chair, but my new role has given me an even stronger sense of pride about everything we do and the community who make this area of New Cross so special.

We definitely have challenges ahead but 6 months down the line, I’m really excited about working more closely with the team here to achieve the ambitions we have. If you want to find out more about the Board and the other trustees, please check out the governance section of the website (more info will be added soon about who we all are!). I hope there’ll be an opportunity to meet more of you – residents, partners, and volunteers – over the coming months.

The New Normal at Besson Street Community Garden

Keeping our community safe is our number one priority right now. We want to be able to deliver the best possible services to the community and that means doing things slightly differently. Many of our courses, classes and clubs will be starting back from September but all will be smaller to respect social distancing, and hand sanitiser and face coverings will be essential.

Stay and Play Sessions will be every Monday 9.30am to 11.30 am, every Tuesday 9.30am to 11.30am and every Wednesday 1.30pm to 3.30pm, starting 7 September. There will be 2 one-hour slots. You will need to book your space via our Eventbrite site. Sessions will be released for booking one week in advance.

ESOL Classes (English for speakers of other languages) will continue as blended courses with some face-to-face and some online classrooms. Call on 0207 639 7605 or email Helen for details – helen.keenan@nxgtrust.org.uk. You can also just call in for an assessment on Tuesdays, 3.30-4.30pm or Wednesdays 5.00-6.00pm. During registration week (1-4 September) you can turn up any day between 10am and 3pm.

Adult Learning Courses will be running throughout the next term though they will all be delivered from New Cross Learning, 283 – 285 New Cross Road, SE14 6AS to allow for greater space and social distancing – click here for further details of the courses on offer.

Gardening Club will continue to meet every Monday 1pm to 3pm and every Wednesday 12 noon to 2pm and we are pleased to say we are adding two new gardening clubs on Fridays and Saturdays (times to be confirmed). As always all volunteers are welcome.

Ukulele and Drumming for 7-13 year olds will be running every Tuesday from 3.45pm to 5.15pm, there will be two groups and the classes start back on Tuesday 15 September at Besson Street Community Garden – still only £1 per session.

Employment Support and Advice continues to be a priority service. We offer support with job searching, applications and interview skills by phone and Zoom. Please email elisha.mcqueen@nxgtrust.org.uk to book an appointment.

IT skills training can sadly not be provided face-to-face at present, due to the difficulties in social distancing in our IT suite. However, we are able to provide virtual IT teaching. Our tutor will support you to set up Zoom, and will then provide ongoing support to address your IT skill needs. Call Jenny on 0207 639 7605 or email jenny.couper@nxgtrust.org.uk for further information.

Introduction to Bee Keeping will take place on three Monday evenings starting Monday 14 September at 6pm until 8pm and then on Monday 21 and 28. We have four thriving bee hives on site at Besson Street Community Garden. We want to help increase the urban bee population and encourage as many local residents as we can to understand bees, and the plants and flowers that bees need and enjoy. We are also keen to support any local residents who want to establish their own honey bee hives. The course is taught by Camilla Goddard from Capital Bee. Book your place here. Please note that numbers are restricted to ensure social distancing. The classes will also take place outside only, so please dress appropriately for the weather.

Mental Health First Aid Training is an internationally recognised qualification at level 3. It will take place over two Mondays, 5 and 12 October, starting at 9.15am to 4.15pm. You can book here or call 0207 639 7605

Mindfulness will be starting again in October. We will be offering an 8-week course. Further details will be put on our website shortly. Alternatively, please ring 0207 639 7605 for further details.

Sewing classes will be starting back, although we will have very restricted numbers, and you will need to book your place in advance. They will run Monday 10.30 to 11.30 or 11.40 to 12.40. Please call 0207 639 7605 to register or for further details.