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Standing up for Teesside Summer 2015


All systems go! It’s incredible to think that we’re closing in on £1 million raised for Teesside good causes in just four years. And as quick as our patrons and fundraisers bring in the money, we’re sending it into the areas of Teesside where it’s needed most. We have a number of exciting projects ongoing – some of which must, at this stage, remain top secret! All will be revealed in the near future. What I can reveal now is that we’ll soon be launching our latest exciting project, Middlesbrough and Teesside Sports Academy. This scheme derives from our football initiative for those who had suffered homelessness or were in recovery from addiction. Having made such a positive impact on people’s lives through the football project, the Sports Academy is our next steps to do more of the same – only bigger and better. Working closely with existing services, the Sports Academy will utilise a wide range of sports and activities to help vulnerable Teessiders to turn their lives around and build a better future. Meanwhile, I’d like to welcome four new names to the Foundation’s board of Trustees. Paul Davison of Erimus Insurance Brokers, David Henderson of px Group, Karl Pemberton of Active Chartered Financial Planners and Emma Simkins of Henderson Insurance Brokers were already committed to our charity as their businesses are loyal patrons of the Foundation. Although we already enjoyed the professional expertise of John McCullagh, Nigel Williams, Ian Tracey and Alistair Waite, it’s great to know that we now have the input of an even broader range of local business people. Best of all each of them are people I know and trust to always put the interests of Teesside first. Andy Preston Chairman & Founder

It’s now just four years since the formation of our amazing Foundation. But we’ve already topped the quite staggering total of...

£950,000

The vast amount of those funds have already been donated to many of Teesside’s amazing range of charities, community groups and good causes. Amongst lots of great work, we’re especially proud to have improved the lives of underprivileged local kids. With your hep, over the last 12 months we’ve donated around £12,000 to local primary schools so that they can support the most needy children and families in their care. We worked with a school in the borough of Stockton, giving them enough money to buy bunk beds for one of their poorest families – allowing their kids of very different ages to sleep on their own for the first time. Another local school used our help to pay for a daytrip to Saltburn. Despite the school being just a few miles from the coast, many of the pupils had never seen the sea! We’re proud to have helped enrich those kids’ lives in that small but meaningful way. We’re planning on doing a lot more work with Teesside schools. Please continue to support us in this and all of our great work.

Magazine editor: Dave Allan, DNA PR & Publicity Design: Tania Henzell, Redcoreweb Photography: Doug Moody Photography, Mantis Media, Peak Image, Sharone Robinson Photography Print: printing.com, Middlesbrough Website: www.teessidecharity.org.uk Facebook: www.facebook.com/teessidecharity Email: info@teessidecharity.org.uk


News

Damon delight for motor fans £3,000 boost for domestic abuse charity A TEESSIDE organisation that offers shelter and support to women fleeing domestic abuse and sexual violence has received a £3,000 boost. Eva Women’s Aid, which provides support to 400 vulnerable females across the Redcar and Cleveland area, received £3,000 boost from the Foundation to help furnish its new safe house for women aged over 45. Chief executive Richinda Taylor said: “It’s a safe house – but it’s also a lovely house.” She added: “Domestic abuse doesn’t discriminate against age, culture, religion, financial circumstances or demographic. It can affect anybody at any time in their lives.

Teesside good causes are in for a speedy boost when Formula 1 legend Damon Hill visits the region for a sporting dinner at Hardwick Hall Hotel. The 1996 world champion is guest speaker at the latest dinner organised by Teesside events business Sporteous UK. Funds raised from the event are being donated to the Philanthropic Foundation. Taking place on November 20, the event features a threecourse dinner before Hill speaks and takes part in a Q&A with guests. Tickets start from £80 or £750 for a table of 10. Contact Sarah on 07908 848020 or email info@sporteousuk.co.uk

Young guns having some fun

“Not only do we provide accommodation for women who are fleeing an abusive relationship, but we also empower them to move their lives forward in a positive way.”

THANKS to Karl Pemberton of our patrons Active Chartered Financial Planners and his colleagues at the Young Guns business networking group, who organised the recent Prawn Festival. The event gave the charity a £3,000 boost.

Image: Richinda Taylor at Eva Women’s Aid with Robert Bennett of new Foundation patrons RMB Auto.

Keep on running

In the running

HAVING already completed the Lyke Wake Walk and a Lyke Wake Run, fundraising and fitness fanatic Michael Burke is set to top £1,000 when he takes on a non-stop coast-to-coast run!

WE’RE looking for runners of all abilities to sign up for this year’s Tees Pride 10k around the streets of Middlesbrough. The Foundation will pay the entry fee of any runner who promises to raise at least £100 for the charity. The run takes place on Sunday, September 6. To express an interest in taking part, please contact Mandy on mandy.s@ teessidecharity.org.uk A team of nearly 30 fundraisers will represent the Foundation in the Great North Run on September 13, including Gary Dawson, managing director of charity patrons AV Dawson. All places are now taken.

Shop with us THERE’S a chance for some early Christmas shopping when the Philanthropic Foundation hosts a day trip to Sheffield’s Meadowhall Centre on Saturday November 7. A coach will leave the Blue Bell in Acklam, Middlesbrough, at 8.30am, returning from Meadowhall at 5.30pm Tickets, priced £18 each, are available via Mandy Shields on mandy.s@teessidecharity.org.uk or call 07948 191046.

Back to the seventies MORE than 200 Seventies retro fans dug our their flares and pulled on their afros when Boogie Wonderland came to Teesside for a fun night that raised £3,000 for the Foundation. Taking place at Marton Hotel and Country Club, the night of musical nostalgia saw disco divas entertained by Love Train DJs Bernie Inns and Bri Nylon along with dancers including Disco Dick, Angel Delight and Polly Ester. Boogie Wonderland is already booked to return on January 30 2016 so put the date in your diaries and get ready to boogie on down again. Our thanks to Paine’s Decorating Services for sponsoring the event.


News

Party Time! One of the best nights on Teesside’s annual calendar of events will soon be with us again, when the Foundation hosts its Annual Dinner. Moving to a new venue in the Grand Marquee at Wynyard Hotel, this year’s fundraiser takes place on the night of Saturday, October 17. Hosted by Middlesbrough FC PA announcer Mark Page, the dinner will feature fantastic food, outstanding musical entertainment and a reminder about some of the amazing work the Foundation is carrying out.

Our images show guests at last year’s dinner enjoying a night celebrating all that’s great about Teesside. Reserve your seats now by emailing diane.w@teessidecharity.org.uk. Prices are £75 per seat or £750 for a table of 10.

Cash boost for fantastic four Hospices from across Teesside united in a call for continued fundraising support after each received a cash boost from local businesses. Representatives of Zoe’s Place, Teesside Hospice, Butterwick Hospice and Hartlepool Hospice gathered to receive £1,500 cheques from Foundation patrons. But all had one voice as they asked generous locals to continue to donate to and fundraise for the hospices at a time when resources are being stretched due to government cutbacks. Zoe’s Place CEO Mark Guidery said: “We can promise them every penny Zoe’s Place gets will be used prudently because we haven’t got money to waste. “Raising the money we need is proving harder than ever but we are absolutely committed to continuing to provide the best possible end-of-life care for those who need it. “We can only say a heart-felt thank you to the Philanthropic Foundation and all those individuals and businesses who support it.”

Image: Representatives of Zoe’s Place, Butterwick, Teesside and Hartlepool hospices with Foundation patrons Nigel Willis of First Choice Labels, Karen Eve of Castlegate Shopping Centre, Paul Davison of Erimus Insurance Brokers and Cathal Doocey of CPD Bodies.


News

More than a game Bill Shankly was wrong. Football really is a matter of life and death. It certainly can be among one group of players who will take part in this season’s Redcar and District Sunday League. Formerly known as Middlesbrough Homeless Football Club, they will now play under the banner of the newly formed Middlesbrough and Teesside Sports Academy. Manager Alan Harrison, himself a recovering alcoholic, explains: “Our team is made up of recovering alcoholics and drug addicts, gamblers and those affected by substance misuse and homelessness, while others are on probation.” Alan knows better than most the impact football can have on the lives of his team’s players. For members of this unique group, football is about far more than a kick-about. When Alan says winning isn’t the be all and end all, he can make such statements with more sincerity that most football managers.

Proud sponsor: Lucy Miller of Ecco Finishing Supplies with homeless football manager Alan Harrison.

“We have one lad, an ex-serviceman, who came to us two years ago. He was in a mess - he was taking amphetamines and tablets, he was self-harming and he hadn’t been allowed to see his kids for three years. “Now, thanks to the power of football, he’s getting his life back in order. He’s off the tablets and drugs, he’s in supported housing and is seeing his kids again. You can’t overstate the turnaround.” It’s such stories that inspired managing director Keith Miller to make his company, Foundation patrons Ecco Finishing Supplies, sponsors of this very special football team. “I don’t think people have any idea just how big the problem of homelessness and drug addiction is,” reflects Keith. “It’s shocking. That’s why it’s brilliant to see them coming together to mix in such a healthy, positive way through football. It is so uplifting.”

“Taking part really is the most important thing for these lads because it can be a life-saver,” he insists.

We could be heroes For one very special day 200 Teesside kids became their very own super heroes - and met their real life heroes too! Youtube sensations with an incredible 50 million views, the Make My Day events team attended Middlesbrough Town Hall for a Super Heroes day that saw dozens of kids dressing up too. The event raised £2,000 for Teesside’s most needy local kids. After learning some amazing dance moves from stars including Batman, Spider Man, Captain America and the Transformers’ Bumblebee, youngsters also had the chance to meet and have their photographs taken with their heroes. Following the success of our Forever Frozen event earlier in the year, look out for another fundraiser with the Make My Day team in the near future.


Ladies who lunch (and our chairman too!) There was a country house setting as the Philanthropic Foundation’s female friends raised almost £3,000 through our inaugural Ladies’ Lunch. Rudby Hall, a former royal residence close to Hutton Rudby, played host to 70 female business leaders in what the Foundation aims to make an annual summer event. The ladies enjoyed an informative talk by Sarah McCartney, the Saltburn-born owner of London-based microperfumery, 4160 Tuesdays.

Foundation patrons represented at the Ladies’ Lunch included Stockton firms Henderson Insurance Brokers, BHP Law, The Endeavour Partnership and Active Chartered Financial Planners, together with Wynyard’s Nortech and Evolution Business and Tax Advisors, and Barclays Middlesbrough. The Foundation is holding another Ladies’ Lunch at The Thistle Hotel, Middlesbrough on Thursday, December 3. Tickets including a two-course lunch are £30 each. To reserve your seats, please call Mandy on 07948 191046 or email mandy.s@teessidecharity.org.uk

From left: Claire Preston, Andrea Outon, Michelle Hicks and Katy Parkinson.

From left: Diane Williamson, Emma Simkins, Chey Garland and Liza Pontone.

From left: Jenene Greaves, Julie Bradley, Louise Hall, Jayne Stephenson, Wendy Moreland, Karen Arena and Kerry Coupland.

From left: Angela Torrance, Helen Brown and Joanne Regan.


Who’s in for sleep-out? Love your sleep? Like the comfort and warmth of your own bed? Then you’re an ideal candidate to take part in the next Big Tees Sleepout! You can play the sympathy card with potential sponsors – and they’re sure to recognise the level of your sacrifice when you agree to sleep rough for the night. All funds from the sixth Big Tees Sleepout will go towards a range of local charities for the homeless and those in poverty, whilst helping to raise the profile of these issues that continue to blight our communities.

As our photographs show, already hundreds of amazing Teessiders have given up the comforts of their own beds to spend the night in the cold for this very special cause. Our images were taken at our last sleepout that took place at a new venue of Durham University’s Queen’s Campus in Stockton, raising £8,000. The Big Tees Sleepout returns to Middlesbrough College on the night of Friday, November 13. For full details, visit www.bigteessleepout.co.uk and start fundraising via the justgiving link. Participants must be 16+ and must register online.


Holding out for heroes! Every month, the Foundation makes an unsung community champion a Teesside Hero, presenting them with a trophy, a voucher for Mohujo’s Mexican restaurant in Billingham and £1,000 for a local good cause of their choice. Let us introduce you to six more worthy winners.

GEORGE Blake has been giving up his own time to coach youngsters at Cleveland Juniors FC for 30 years.

AN unsung community champion who has raised more than £50,000 for local charities has been made a Teesside Hero.

The Coulby Newham dad-of-two, whose brother Robbie played Premier League football, has helped nurture professional football talent such as Jonathan Woodgate and Phil Stamp but he is proudest of his influence at a grassroots level.

Graham Wood of Billingham has arranged dozens of events for charities including Butterwick Hospice, Beverley School for the Deaf, Make a Child Smile, The Wish Foundation, British Heart Foundation, Teenage Cancer Trust and the leukaemia and chemotherapy wards at North Tees General Hospital.

George donated his charity cheque to his beloved Cleveland Juniors. Image: Super coach George Blake receives his award from Chistine Nolan of Foundation patrons Erimus Insurance Brokers.

He split his £1,000 cheque between Stockton’s Butterwick Hospice and teenage cancer charity Butterfly Giving. Image: Teesside Hero Graham ‘Woody’ Wood receives his award from Foundation patrons Elaine Bunn (far right) of Nortech and Emma Simkins (far left) of Henderson Insurance Brokers.


SIX years ago Rosanne Lightfoot was a size 20, hadn’t exercised since her school days and was on antidepressants. Now she wears a size 10, gets a natural high from exercise and runs Swift Tees, a community running club that attracts up to 100 people a session. The Acklam housewife and husband Craig, who also runs the club, asked Teesside Hospice to receive the £1,000 cash boost. Image: Rosanne and Craig Lightfoot with Lisa Preston (right) of Foundation patrons, Hunters Estate Agents.

HARTLEPOOL couple Kath and Tony Evans run Hartlepool Badminton Club, assist with coaching at Eldon Grove Tennis Club and help people with learning difficulties get to grips with tennis by coaching at their local sportability club. It was in recognition of their efforts to help the community that they won £1,000 from the Philanthropic Foundation for a local good cause of their choice – sharing the cash between the tennis and badminton clubs that are close to their hearts. Image: Kath and Tony Evans received their award from Foundation patrons Keith Miller of Ecco Finishing Supplies and Claire Davison of Active Chartered Financial Planners.

MARTIAL arts expert Alan Cawthorne was taken by surprise when he realised his impact on local sport down the years had won him a Teesside Hero award. Alan, who now manages the Redcar Multi-Sport Club featuring table tennis and archery, established the award-winning Redcar Judo Club 30 years ago. He asked for his charity cheque to be donated to Boro’s MFC Foundation, where he also works. Image: Foundation patron Karl Pemberton (right) of Active Chartered Financial Planners presents a Teesside Hero award to Alan Cawthorne.

A LIFETIME dedicated to helping others has been recognised with a Teesside Heroes Award for “inspirational” Stephen Mulholland. The retired Cleveland fire-fighter has given up much of his spare-time over the past 40 years helping those with disabilities. As chairman of the Middlesbrough Catholic Fellowship - who benefited from his £1,000 - Stephen leads a team of volunteers who run twice-weekly youth clubs and meetings for local people with additional needs. Image: Gary Dawson (left) of patrons AV Dawson presents Stephen Mulholland with his Teesside Hero Award.

Nominate a Hero To nominate an unsung community champion as a Teesside Hero, visit www.teessidecharity.org.uk, providing up to 300 words on why they’d deserve suchan accolade.


X-Factor: representatives of px Group took on the challenge

aite finished : Alistair W n io it d n Peak co k time. double-quic challenge in

the

Climb every mountain Dozens of big-hearted Teessiders stepped forward to tackle the Yorkshire Three Peaks challenge for the Philanthropic Foundation. A determined group of 25 climbed the peaks of Pen-y-ghent, Whernside and Ingleborough in less than 12 hours, raising more than £6,000 between them.

We shall be climbing: tr ekkers from E Insurance Bro rimus kers.

Those who took part included Foundation patron Alistair Waite and representatives of business patrons Erimus Insurance Brokers, px Group and Evolution Business and Tax Advisors. We’ll be holding another Yorkshire Three Peaks challenge next May.

On their bikes A Teesside team of financial advisors lived up to their company name when they got active on a gruelling coast-to-coast charity bike ride – raising £5,700 for the Foundation’s charity work. Staff and friends of Active Chartered Financial Planners took on a 170-mile cross-country bike ride from St Bees in Cumbria to Saltburn. The 12-strong group who completed the journey were Karl Pemberton, Karl Nendick, Paul Gibson, Mark Dobing, Andy Mitchell, Paul Lofts, Michael McCulloch, Phil Luke, Brett Clark, James Robertson, Mark Rockliffe and Miles Gibson.

End of the journey: the Active team on Saltburn beach.

They made the challenge with the support of Active and Handelsbanken, with RMB Auto and Coatham Coaches providing support vehicles, while investment specialists Heartwood provided the riders with special jerseys for the ride. Active managing director Karl Pemberton said: “Seeing a welcome party, including friends and family, waiting for us at the bottom of Saltburn bank at the journey’s end was a real lump-in-the-throat moment.”


All set: participants in the first Foundation Golf Day.

Tee time! Golf enthusiasts got in the swing with the Foundation’s inaugural Golf Day – and achieved a fundraising feat that was rather better than par for the course. Thanks to match funding from Santander, the event and evening dinner raised £6,000 for Teesside good causes. Played in beautiful weather at the prestigious Rockliffe Hall Golf Club, 17 teams played a hard-fought four ball. Team winners, with 93 points, were Foundation patrons, Active Chartered Financial Planners, ahead of representatives from Office Team and a Wilton Engineering line-up led by patron Bill Scott.

Top individual scorer was Scott Berre, beating Active’s Paul Gibson on a back 6. Patron and trustee Nigel Williams of Bond Dickinson also took part along with representatives of patrons Middlesbrough FC, Henderson Insurance Brokers, AV Dawson, Evolution, Nortech, Barclays, px, Devereux and Unasys.

For your diary: next year’s Golf Day is June 9. The winning team: Active Chartered Financial Planners.

Fore! Patron Bill Scott in the swing.


Meet Our Patrons Castlegate Shopping Centre As recent winners of the Teesside Community gong in the North East Business Awards, it is no surprise that championing charities is second nature to Castlegate Shopping Centre. A shopping centre located in the heart of Stockton with a unique mix of independent stores and high street names, Castlegate also live by their motto, ‘The heart of the community’. “We’re not just a shopping centre – we’re a community hub,” explains centre manager Karen Eve. “We have a value demographic and every pound in the pocket counts.” Castlegate has supported projects including soup kitchens, food bank appeals and summer carnivals. But Karen took little persuading to channel a significant part of their charity work into the Foundation when she met chairman and founder Andy Preston.

“We absolutely bought into Andy. You can’t help but get behind his enthusiasm and passion. We were doing plenty for charity but Andy was doing it cleverer, harder and more effectively than we ever could. It was clear that we’d be better off becoming a patron through the Foundation.” Karen is pictured carrying out one of her first roles as a Foundation patron, presenting a £1,500 cheque to Butterwick Hospice.

Barclays Middlesbrough They don’t do things by halves at Barclays. In this, their first year as patrons, the amazing staff of Barclays Middlesbrough are set to raise an incredible £15,000 for the Foundation – that’s treble the generous annual rate to be a corporate patron! So far £12,000 has been committed to the Foundation’s Teesside work, thanks to Barclays’ much-heralded match-funding scheme that allows each member of staff to match fund up to £1,000 per year for a charity of their choice. Middlesbrough branch manager Sue Theobald says many of her 33 staff agreed “without hesitation” to support the Foundation after hearing of the charity’s ethos and aspirations from events officer Mandy Shields. “Many of us share the charity’s values,” she explained. “The Foundation supports such a wide variety of different people from all walks of life across Teesside.

“Some staff are working with other great local charities such as Daisy Chain that are close to their hearts, but many quickly bought into what the Foundation stands for and have been busy supporting the various events for several months now.” Barclays staff have been involved in the charity’s first Ladies’ Lunch and supported the Super Heroes event at Middlesbrough Town Hall, while they’re also committed to helping out at the Foundation’s Annual Dinner and another dinner starring Formula One legend Damon Hill.


Meet Our Patrons Charles Clinkard When Teesside icons Charles Clinkard put their best foot forward to become patrons of the Philanthropic Foundation, managing director Charles Clinkard (pictured) said it was one of the easiest steps the footwear retailer had ever taken. Currently building its new £3 million head office and warehouse at Cannon Park in Middlesbrough, the company employs more than 90 people on Teesside, and is keen to support local communities. Guisborough-born Charles said: “We like what this charity is doing – but the catalyst for me was that every penny the Foundation raises gets spent here on Teesside. “I was born and bred here, and I believe it’s important that we look after people who are less fortunate than ourselves.”

Having supported the local hospices as well as Barnardo’s and Macmillan Cancer Care, Clinkard’s were also keen to continue sharing the money around. “As a team, we like the great variety of causes the Foundation supports, whether that’s at the sporting end through projects such as Wish Sport, or the one I read about when someone didn’t have a bed to sleep in. It sends a shiver down my spine that people are in that sort of situation in modern day Teesside.”

The Mandale Group There can be few companies prouder of its Teesside roots than the Mandale Group. Based on Teesside for the last 30 years, Mandale is an established property development company that has built prestigious accommodation from residential to offices, shops, leisure facilities and warehouses across the north of England. While it has been behind impressive developments across the north of England, closer to home it was also responsible for regenerating Hartlepool Marina and many of the buildings on Teesdale business park.

And Mandale believe they share with the Foundation a similar philanthropic philosophy. “We like the fact that the Foundation doesn’t cherry pick charities, that everyone’s got a fair chance.

“We’ve always been and always will be a Teesside company,” says business development manager Harriet Spalding (pictured right at our Ladies’ Lunch). “We’re proud of where we’re from, so it’s great to help plough money back in where it’s needed locally.”

“It’s a fact that as soon as you pick one charity to support, you automatically discriminate against others – but we believe in giving everyone an equal chance. And we’re happy to place our faith in the Foundation’s trustees to make the right choices.”


30,000 wishes! We’re champions of grass roots sport on Teesside! For a fourth successive year, the Foundation is funding the Teesside Gazette’s annual Wish Sport campaign, giving away thousands of pounds to not-for-profit sports groups across the area. Thanks to the fantastic generosity of our patrons and all those who’ve helped us raise funds, we’ve again made a £30,000 pot available to share between dozens of groups e.g sports groups. That’s £120,000 over the past four years! Whether their game is football or swimming, basketball or bowls, dozens of sports groups are now busy collecting tokens from the Gazette each day through to September – with those collecting the most tokens winning the biggest share of cash. Steve Gibson, whose Teesside-based firm Bulkhaul are patrons of the Philanthropic Foundation along with Middlesbrough FC, said: “Middlesbrough FC exists not simply for what can be achieved on the pitch on a Saturday afternoon but to make Teesside a better place to live. “We’re a force for good in the local community. Both the football club and Bulkhaul are proud to be working with so many like-minded businesses and individuals in supporting the Philanthropic Foundation’s outstanding local work. Wish Sport is another excellent example of it, helping grass root sport thrive.” Proud patron: Middlesbrough FC chairman Steve Gibson (main picture). Also pictured are three of the groups taking part in Wish Sport (from top) IDance4Me, Swerve Table Tennis Club and Grangetown Youth Club.


You’re our lifeline An award-winning Teesside estate agent celebrated its support for the Foundation by presenting a £5,000 cheque that saved a Middlesbrough community hub from certain closure.

The group’s co-leader Mel King said: “I actually cried when I heard the fantastic news that the Foundation was giving us the money we needed to stay open for another year.

Hunters Teesside have agreed to donate 5% of their annual profits – and a minimum of £5,000 per year - to the Foundation.

“We were devastated at the thought of having to close because the group means so much to the people who utilise it. It is a lifeline.

And they marked their generous gesture by presenting the Foundation’s £5,000 donation to the Tickle the Tastebuds group in Thorntree that acts as a lifeline for those in crisis.

“We’ve had women break down in tears because we’ve been able to give them a hamper for their family, while the group definitely saved the life of Lee, a local drug-user, who came to us when he was bleeding to death.”

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