Council awards £150k to 'significantly impactful initiative'

The initiative is a charitable coalition, founded in April 2022 when Kirkcaldy’s Cottage Family Centre signed a deal with Amazon’s Fulfilment Centre in Dunfermline to distribute surplus goods to people in poverty.

Council awards £150k to ‘significantly impactful initiative’ LDRS

The Big Hoose project is quickly heading towards self-sustainability, but it needs a bit more help to get off the ground, which is why last week the Cabinet Committee awarded the initiative £150,000 for the second year in a row.

The initiative is a charitable coalition, founded in April 2022 when Kirkcaldy’s Cottage Family Centre signed a deal with Amazon’s Fulfilment Centre in Dunfermline to distribute surplus goods to people in poverty.

Over the past 18 months, more than one million products have been received by local families in need, and there are now at least 20 companies – including Amazon, Scotmid and PepsiCo – which have signed up to back the project and donate surplus products.

“We don’t expect this to become a recurring grant award,” councillors were told. “The initiative envisages development to become more sustainable going forward. It has been slower to get off the ground than expected, but it is off the ground now and they are starting to build up sales to generate money going forward.”

There are other services and programmes that hold a similar role in the community, but the committee was told that Big Hoose fills a significant gap for local Fife residents.

Nationally, the Scottish Welfare Fund provides Community Care Grants to support people needing household items, but the level of demand means that only essential items are awarded.

“Only some rooms in a home are carpeted and only some windows have curtains awarded for them. Items such as bedside tables, vacuum cleaners and other household items most of us would consider requirements of a home, are not able to be provided for,” a committee report said.

Locally, the housing service has budgets to help tenants who need essential household furniture and fittings if they are on a low income, but it’s done with discretion on a case-by-case basis.

“The Big Hoose creates a significant impact for families, children, parents/carers and practitioners,” a committee report stated. “It clearly fills a gap in addressing child poverty and there is no evidence of it displacing any other services.

There are currently two Big Hoose hubs in the Kingdom – one in North East Fife and one in Glenrothes – where teams are working with Castle Furniture to access items for local families in their areas.

In Levenmouth, teams have developed a network of ‘Big Wee Hooses’ – a series of very localised distribution points across the area which local people themselves can access through a supported scheme. A third “delivery service model” for Dunfermline and South West Fife is still under development.

The Big Hoose is heading quickly towards self-sustainability with a new money making scheme. However, because of the exponential growth of the Big Hoose, it has not yet brought down the need for funding.

Approximately 80% of the products donated to the initiative from retailers are ‘essential items’ and will be redistributed to local families in need.

However, around 20% of goods are considered ‘luxury’ or ‘high value.’ These premium goods are now being marketed for sale to create a self-sufficient revenue stream for the initiative to continue their “impactful” charity work.

The Opportunity Warehouse pilot website went live in July and it has already sold 5,500 items and raised £35,000 for the initiative.

It is hoped that this website will eventually reduce or eliminate the need for external funding for the Big Hoose initiative, but for the second year in a row councillors were happy to offer additional support.

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