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Nurseries flock to food share scheme

A growing number of nurseries are signing up to receive free surplus food under a scheme to fight hunger and waste in the UK.

A total of 200 nurseries are currently using the FareShare FoodCloud scheme, through which charities and community groups that use food to support people can collect surplus good-quality food from participating Tesco or Waitrose stores for free. Charities using the scheme estimate they save around £500 a year.

According to the organisation that runs FareShare FoodCloud, the number of nurseries signing up is growing by the day.

It comes as nurseries and pre-schools, particularly those operating as charities, struggle to survive financially due to stagnant or falling funding rates and rising costs, including the introduction of auto-enrolment pensions, the living wage and an increase to food prices.

Charities and community groups can also pay to become a FareShare member and receive regular orders of food from 20 regional centres across the country. According to the organisation that runs it, on average this membership scheme saves charities £7,900 a year.

Posting on the Champagne Nurseries, Lemonade Funding Facebook group, Sharon Everett, manager of Merryfields Playschool in Norfolk, said the setting uses FareShare FoodCloud and it receives donations of mainly bread.

Another poster, Dawn Sharpe, said her setting mainly uses the food it receives through the programme for children’s snacks. Any leftover food is offered to parents to take home, which she said is really appreciated.

Also commenting on the page, Sarah Hawkins said, ‘Using the scheme stops food waste, enables us to purchase snacks for a fraction of the cost and to supply food to our families. I feel proud that we are providing a service that supports our community.’

Lindsay Boswell, chief executive of FareShare, said, ‘The way FareShare FoodCloud works is very simple. We match charities and community groups up to a local supermarket and arrange a regular day for them to collect surplus food from the store to supplement their existing food supplies. On their collection day, the charity will get a text from the supermarket, saying what food is available. The food is all good quality, in date and perfectly safe to eat, and we make sure that the charity never feels pressured into taking more food than they need.

‘So far the scheme has been a huge success, with almost 5,000 charities across the UK signed up. Our charities are telling us that they save around £500 a year, with many of them picking up food more than once a week. This can amount to a significant cost saving, particularly for smaller charities where margins are tight.’

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