logo
Food waste charity celebrates one-year milestone

Food waste charity celebrates one-year milestone

BBC News04-06-2025

A food waste charity has celebrated one year of operations from its Surrey warehouse. FareShare Sussex & Surrey (FSSS), which collects and distributes surplus food to charities and community groups, marked the first delivery from its Guildford facility in June 2024. It comes amid Volunteers' Week, an annual UK-wide campaign to recognise the contribution of volunteers to the country. FSSS, which started operations 23 years ago, says each year it delivers 2.14 million meals, supporting around 17,000 people a week at risk of food poverty.
It expanded by opening its Guildford depot last year.Carolyn Turner, one of FSSS' 170 volunteers, told the BBC she wanted to join the charity to fight against food waste and poverty. "I had seen quite a lot in the news about people not having a lot to eat and food just rotting and thought - how do you help that," she added.
Ms Turner, who works as an assistant in the Guildford warehouse six hours a week, said her job involves "helping with whatever needs doing on a given day".This could involve allocating food into 10kg trays or sorting through "huge amounts of apples or carrots", she added. But Ms Turner added there was "lots of time for laughing and chatting" with her colleagues. FSSS chief executive Dan Slatter previously said the charity was opening the Surrey facility to "meet growing demand" in the county.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Country diary 1905: The hayfield is the scene of one great massacre
Country diary 1905: The hayfield is the scene of one great massacre

The Guardian

time37 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Country diary 1905: The hayfield is the scene of one great massacre

The air is heavy with the sweet scent of new mown hay, for everywhere the farmers are taking advantage of the weather. Beneath the teeth of the whirring machine the tall grasses already browned and scorched, go down alongside their enemy, the yellow rattle; rich clovers, yellow lotus, budding knapweeds, thistles, and all are swept to useful death together. The insects hum and buzz above the fallen grass, the swallows and martins skim to and fro, snatching right and left with such rapidity that we do not see them snatch. The many hued caterpillars which were feeding on the grass and weeds, the yellow-green, dark-eyed inhabitants of the frothy cuckoo spit, and many tiny creatures fall and will starve. The hayfield is the scene of one great massacre. Sometimes a brood of young partridges fails to dodge the death-dealing machine, sometimes the corncrake crouches too long, sometimes a foolish young rabbit which had ventured out into the field dare not leave the ever-narrowing circle. It is business for the farmer, pleasure for the amateur haymaker, but it is far otherwise for the creatures, great and small, which lived amongst the rich growing grass. The Guardian's Country diary column first appeared as A country lover's diary on 21 March 1904, becoming A country diary a couple of years later. For most of its first decade, Thomas Coward (bylined TAC), a retired textile bleacher from Cheshire, was the sole diarist.

Doctors revolt against ‘failing' regulator
Doctors revolt against ‘failing' regulator

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

Doctors revolt against ‘failing' regulator

Doctors want to overthrow the medical regulator because it is 'failing to protect patients'. The majority of medics say they have lost confidence in the General Medical Council (GMC) and want it replaced. Leaders at the British Medical Association (BMA) are calling for a new independent regulator to be set up to focus solely on doctors after the GMC also controversially began regulating physician associates. Prof Philip Banfield, chairman of the BMA council, will tell the union's annual conference on Monday that the GMC has become an 'abject failure'. The doctors' union has been embroiled in a row with the watchdog over the use of the term 'medical professionals' to describe physician associates and anaesthesia associates, and the increasing 'blurring of the lines' between the professions. Physician associates have no medical degree and just two years of postgraduate training. The role was designed to support the work of doctors, but evidence – including that revealed by The Telegraph – has found physician associates are increasingly taking on doctors' tasks and acting beyond their qualifications, such as by replacing doctors on rotas, prescribing medication, ordering scans and diagnosing patients, sometimes leading to fatalities. Review of physician associates Wes Streeting has ordered a review into the role amid NHS plans to increase the number of physician associates employed from the current 3,500 to 10,000 within a decade. It is understood that one of the recommendations from the review by Prof Gillian Leng, president of the Royal Society of Medicine, will be to change the job title of a physician associate, potentially renaming the profession to physician assistant, as it was originally known, in order to reduce public confusion. Earlier this year, a dossier of more than 600 incidents compiled by the BMA revealed examples of physician associates and anaesthesia associates misdiagnosing cancer, impersonating doctors and illegally prescribing medication and ordering scans. Physician associates have also been implicated in several high-profile patient deaths. Emily Chesterton, a 30-year-old actress, died in 2022 after she was misdiagnosed twice by a physician associate she thought was a GP. She was told she had an ankle sprain when she had a blood clot that later travelled from her leg to her lung and killed her. Her parents recently began a legal challenge against the GMC alongside a group called Anaesthetists United because it had not set out a scope of practice for physician associates. Earlier this year, a coroner said physician associates who diagnosed Pamela Marking with a nosebleed, before she died aged 77 at East Surrey Hospital last year, 'had a lack of understanding of the significance of abdominal pain and vomiting, and had undertaken an incomplete abdominal examination'. In April, the BMA lost its High Court challenge over the medical regulator's approach towards associate professions, after which the GMC said it was pleased the court had recognised its single set of standards for all three professions as 'logical and lawful'. But now the BMA is set to take its action further, and will call for a new medical watchdog that regulates doctors alone, and has a statutory duty to protect the public. In his address, Prof Banfield will tell the union's almost 200,000 members that the GMC's approach to regulating physician associates has led to an 'incessant and unsafe blurring of professional boundaries that threaten the very foundations of practising medicine, what it means to be a doctor'. The BMA said it had surveyed more than 1,400 doctors, of whom 82.2 per cent would support the creation of a new watchdog solely focused on doctors. He will also make clear the Health Secretary must 'pay the cost for the medical expertise [he] needs, because it costs infinitely more not to'. The BMA leader will acknowledge the union last year 'won the highest pay awards for a generation – securing over £1 billion for doctors'. But he will also claim that Mr Streeting's 'promises to restore pay fell at the first hurdle'. He said the strike ballot from resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors, was 'not simply about pay', adding: 'It's essential that we send a clear message to Government that deals must be honoured.' A Department of Health spokesman said: 'This Government is committed to working hand-in-hand with doctors and health-care professionals to deliver the reform our NHS needs. 'We have already announced a programme to modernise the regulation of health-care professionals across the UK, creating a system that better protects patients and supports our medical workforce through our Plan for Change.' A GMC spokesperson said: 'We take our role working with doctors to support good, safe patient care very seriously. Our aim is to deliver effective, relevant and compassionate regulation. A critical part of how we do this is by actively gathering feedback from doctors and patients about their experiences and using this to change and improve our processes. 'This year, we also welcomed the announcement from Government of much-needed reform of the regulatory framework we operate to. Making further changes to the way we work will continue to benefit patient safety and ensure the public has confidence in the doctors we regulate.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store