Doncaster St Leger

Doncaster Winners announced for the Great Green Read

Doncaster student wins Great Green Read writing competition

Doncaster winners announced in local environment-themed writing competition as part of the city’s Great Green Read. 

Last autumn, children, families and schools across Doncaster were called on to read, write and take action around important environmental issues during the Great Green Read. 

Over 400 people entered the competition, capturing their ideas on how to improve the world we live in via letters, essays, leaflets and posters. They were judged by Doncaster Stories, the local campaign from the National Literacy Trust, and members of the Rotary Club.

The overall winner was 10 year old Selena Simelevic, from Saltersgate Junior School. She has won £750 towards developing her school’s outdoor Eco Zone, along with a large bundle of books for her to keep. 

Selena wrote a persuasive essay about the balance between humans and nature, and the importance of living in harmony with the world around us. Her entry asked important questions such as: How can we protect the environment in our daily life? What happens if we don’t protect the environment?

Running from September to December, the Great Green Read, explored eco-projects, creative writing challenges and author events including with award-winning sisters Amy and Ella Meek who founded the charity Kids Against Plastic and authored the book Be Climate Clever. Participants learned how to write persuasively about the environment and how to use their literacy skills to become change-makers in the local community.

Phil Sheppard, Doncaster Stories Hub Manager, said, “We hope that by taking part in the Great Green Read our local young people have learned how they can use their reading, writing, speaking and listening skills to persuade others and change the world around them. There were so many inspiring entries and it’s clear to see that Doncaster is full of young people who want to make a difference.”

Phillip Wilbourn, Rotary District Environmental Lead, said, “This inspirational project has yielded a valuable insight into how young people at an early age are already worried about the world in which we live. Society would do well to listen to their concerns. Selena’s entry had a message for all of us: In the next few decades, we need to do something unprecedented to achieve a sustainable existence on earth. But how do we do it?”

The Great Green Read runners up were: 

  • Daisy Parkin, from St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School, who designed an A3 newsletter featuring important facts about the population, plastics, and how we pollute the planet
  • Ethan Jackson, from Bentley High Street Primary School, who wrote a letter to Ed Miliband, MP for Doncaster North and Shadow Secretary of State for Climate Change and Net Zero.
  • Sofia Barker, from Tickhill Estfeld Primary School, who asked in a letter to all major supermarkets, to reduce the amount of items in plastic packaging they sell
  • Jacob Hughes, from St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School wrote a persuasive letter from “Bluey” in the style of “The Day the Crayons Quit”

On Monday 20 March, Doncaster Stories and the Rotary Club of Doncaster St Leger will be presenting Selena and the rest of the runners up for the Great Green Read with their certificates at a special ceremony hosted at the Mansion House.

Doncaster Stories is a local campaign led by the National Literacy Trust, to help improve literacy levels across Doncaster. The campaign works with community organisations to promote reading for enjoyment amongst local children and young adults. 

If you would like to find out more about the campaign, please visit www.doncasterstories.org, or to get involved and volunteer, email doncasterstories@literacytrust.org.uk.

Read about this story also on the National Literacy Trust’s website.

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St Leger Club races in to help Doncaster Foodbank as demand soars

Two local Rotary clubs have joined forces as part of a £100,000 charity support campaign to supply foodbanks across the region.  And, says Sandra Edwards, Project Manager at Doncaster Foodbank based at Christ Church on Thorne Road, the support couldn’t have come at a better time as she and her team of volunteers strive to meet the soaring demand for its emergency food parcel service.

A recent Rotary delivery to the Doncaster Foodbank’s warehouse at Kirk Sandall included vital bulk supplies of tea, coffee, porridge and tinned fruit to restock shelves depleted as a result of a 40% increase in demand for food from individuals and families in Doncaster in the past month alone.

“In the past twelve months prior to the lockdown we have provided food for over 5500 people.  Almost 2000 of those were children who, without our input, would have gone hungry,” says Sandra Edwards. “We expect those numbers to increase significantly as the impact of Covid-19 and the downturn in the economy bite still further, impacting hardest on people already struggling to cope.

Sandra Edwards at Doncaster Foodbank

“We get fantastic support from local supermarkets and the general public but having a major charity organisation like Rotary stepping in to help too, provides us with another precious lifeline.”

The Rotary4Foodbanks scheme, run entirely by volunteers, is an East Midlands and South Yorkshire initiative which pools funds and bulk buys staple food supplies at wholesale prices which it distributes to foodbanks across the region.  By the end of July it will have distributed food with a wholesale value of around £100000 and has plans to extend the scheme as demands on foodbanks continue to rise.

Doncaster St Leger Rotary Club has partnered with its sister club, Doncaster Rotary, to support the scheme.  Says Lis Rodgers, of St Leger: “We could see that the Covid-19 pandemic was having a devastating effect on some of the most vulnerable people in our community.  We knew of the excellent work that Doncaster Foodbank was doing and so pledged to help. As part of the bigger Rotary4foodbanks initiative to bulk buy, the money we donate works harder, goes further, to help ensure no-one in the borough goes hungry.”

The club is well known in the borough for its charity work.  Amongst many other initiatives the St Leger Rotary Club also supports the local Firefly Cancer Awareness and Support charity.  The club recently made a £700 donation to help keep Firefly’s services running during lockdown.

Support the scheme by sharing this article and donating on our Just Giving page

Rotary4foodbanks is a Rotary response to the growing demands on foodbanks in the UK.  Initially operating in the East Midlands and South Yorkshire, it is attracting interest from Rotary across the UK.  Whilst it was launched in response to the Covid-19 crisis, it is actually a long-term initiative to deliver a sustainable, cost-effective food sourcing programme for foodbanks.

You can support Rotary4Foodbanks via our JustGiving page

Doncaster foodbank

Part of the Trussell Trust, Doncaster Foodbank operates out of Christ Church, Thorne Road, Doncaster, DN1 2HG

It distributes food – primarily three day parcels of balanced nutritious food for individuals and families – between 10am and 12 noon on Wednesdays and Fridays.

It is run primarily by volunteers and depends on donations and support from supermarkets, businesses, individuals and other charities to complete its vital community work.

In the past year it has served over 5500 people of whom almost 2000 were children.

To volunteer, donate, or find out more about its services, visit https://www.doncaster.foodbank.org.uk/

Doncaster St Leger Rotary Club

One of three Rotary Clubs in Doncaster, St Leger has 35 members from all walks of life who are committed to charity work locally and internationally.

Contact: Dr Lis Rodgers lis.rodgers@gmail.com

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