Clothing bank charity run by Bedhampton mum to help many children in Portsmouth facing poverty
A Bedhamton mum set up a
children’s clothing charity in lockdown and says the demand
for her ‘wardrobes in a bag’ are likely to ‘increase’ given
the expected rate of inflation.
Sally Codling runs
KidsClothesLine, a charity which collects unwanted clothes
and distributes them to struggling families. Sally has
been running the charity since August 2020 at an upstairs
space in the premises of CTS Europe at Hilsea where she
packs ‘wardrobes in a bag’ to suit the required child’s age
– often with enough hand-me-downs to pack them out for a
whole season.
Many donations come through
people clearing out their unwanted ‘stuff’ through Sally’s
Facebook group, Donations only KidsClothes Line Hampshire,
that she created two years ago. She then sorts out
packages with the help of her volunteers to be discreetly
delivered to health care providers in touch with someone in
need, family hubs such as Somerstown and Buckland, Roberts
Centre Day Nursery, schools and charity Baby Basics at North
End.
In November, the charity provided
90 clothing packages to families across Portsmouth and a
further 60 in December, and even though the surge in demand
has flattened now Christmas is over, Sally is prepared for
an increase in people seeking help who wouldn’t usually be
in this position.
Sally said: ‘We have over 800
people who donate to us ensuring that as well as helping
lots of families who are struggling, we are also recycling
tonnes of clothes that may well have ended up in landfill.
‘[Kids Clothing Line] is a hand up not a hand down. It's
supposed to be just from one family to another. These are
clothes that our children have grown out of, it's good if
somebody else's family can use them.’
‘Charity shops were closed during
the pandemic and then you had to pay for them, whereas this
is a completely free service.’
Sally emphasises that nobody
should be made to feel as if they are a charity case.
Kid’s Clothing Line can kindly
offer their support without the recipients being delivered
the clothing face-to-face through Sally or the volunteers;
Sally started up the charity when
on dropping her own children’s cut offs to a charity shop or
to a clothes bank, she discovered piles of ‘stuff’ lined up
in plastic bags.
‘A lot of this stuff was going to end up
being ragged,’ she said.
‘I knew there were a lot of
families that were really struggling and I thought it would
be a good way to just keep the cycle going because nothing's
ever worn out with children usually.
Although Sally says she’s
‘pleased’ to be busy because she knows her and her group of
volunteers are helping a lot of people, she echoes that the
flipside is there is still an obvious need there for
services like hers.
She said: ‘A lot of the people
who come to us are working their socks off. They can't make
ends meet. Some are the same people that have never used
food banks before.
‘Through no fault of their own they're
working really hard.
‘It could happen to anybody. You
never know what's round the corner.’
The News 18th February