Frome Toy Library gifts ... they aim to reach a thousand families and they need your help

By Guest

18th May 2020 | Local News

Purple Elephant, organisers of the Frome Children's Festival, Frome Toy Library, Holiday Activities, Sports Festival and Frome Christmas Party have provided almost 700 activity packs and play items free to local children since the start of lockdown.

As one of the organisations quick to turn around from their usually heavily-peopled events to find new, safe ways to meet the needs of some of Somerset's most vulnerable families, Purple Elephant is a vital part of Frome's support for families under pressure. As the most recent government advice is to continue with social distancing this means the majority of families will still be home-schooling and looking for interesting things to do in lieu of meeting up with friends or going to group activities, especially those who need to self-isolate. Can you help them?

The hand-made, specially compiled creative activity packs are delivered as a complete set with all the items a child needs, including glue and instructions, to make, for themselves, such delights as flower-fairy wands, multi-sensory blocks, rainsticks, puffer fish pictures and seedsboxes with bells. Resources also include craft activity packs, sports equipment, colouring books, family board and card games, story books, gardening and nature kits and activities for children with additional needs.

Grants to assist this remarkable feat have come from Frome Town Council, Somerset County Disabilities team, Live West Housing Association and Somerset Community Foundation. Many items were also bought with £815 donated by the public through a Local Giving fund, including toys gifted via the company's online 'Wish-List' which allows people to selected more traditional toys.

Frome people and businesses have kindly donated, including Kevin Corcoran Carpets who gave six rugs for a family who have no carpets (just concrete floor), special needs and are having to self-isolate; the recipients of the free, creative, non-screen toys have all been contacted through Children's Social Care and Intervention workers, school family support workers and housing associations as well as via schools and Fair Frome who have been safely distributing the resources while they hand out free school meals and family food-bank parcels.

As newly-appointed director, Tracey Ashford, explained: "It is sad that the Toy Library can't be the universal service it normally is and that our activities can't happen but to find ways to help within our community was all we really wanted. Everyone has been pulling together; our response to the pressure-cooker effect in homes without enough money, limited access to tablets and laptops, cramped living-space and the behavioural challenges simply had to be to do whatever we could.

"We are not claiming to work miracles but, as a team, we couldn't read about such things as the rise in domestic violence without working out what we could offer to make life a bit easier and calmer. Play is so important; play for children but also with children. Our main concern was how to distribute the resources but, as is so often the way in this town, wonderful Fair Frome have been instrumental in the success of the project, so far."

As the current restrictions remain in place Purple Elephant are reaching out again to ask the people of the South West to offer donations to the fund, whilst looking towards how things may start to ease in the summer.

The company usually offer a number of either free or very low cost activities during all school holidays but as the ruling for interaction is still limited it cannot offer any firm commitments about what play will be available this summer, yet. The organisers are keen to stress that the main priority has to be to keep families safe while supporting them but that as the government makes its updated announcements each week they will respond accordingly.

Before the arrival of Covid 19, non-profit organisation Purple Elephant volunteers were lending up to 50 different Toy Library play-sacks to local families, running stay-and-play sessions each week and planning for up to 2,000 people to join Gen-Z, the town's annual totally free Frome Children's festival, which was due to happen in June. Sadly, safety rules have put a stop to the play sessions and holiday activities and of course to the festival which was scheduled to run, for free, all day from the Cheese and Grain, all the way along the river and into Welshmill Park.

Tracey Ashford said: "Once lockdown is over some families will need space away from their children, others will need 'healing time' to play together. We, along with other providers in the town, are hoping to be able to offer some summer fun but it is too early to say what. Sadly, The Children's Festival/Gen-Z can't happen this year but we will be back better than ever in 2021. In the meantime, we want to ask anyone, who is able, to donate a small amount of money or a toy so that we can continue with the work for the next few weeks."

If you can offer a donation or are a company looking to sponsor the ongoing, vital work of The Toy Library and its associated organisations please get touch via the website where links are shown to donation options and email www.fromechildrensfestival.org

or donate directly via this link the local giving appeal

     

New frome Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: frome jobs

Share:

Related Articles

Local News

Appeal for witnesses following robbery near Frome

Somerset Council's Headquarters At County Hall On The Crescent In Taunton (image by Daniel Mumby)
Local News

Somerset Council could see huge cut in councillors under boundary review

Sign-Up for our FREE Newsletter

We want to provide frome with more and more clickbait-free local news.
To do that, we need a loyal newsletter following.
Help us survive and sign up to our FREE weekly newsletter.

Already subscribed? Thank you. Just press X or click here.
We won't pass your details on to anyone else.
By clicking the Subscribe button you agree to our Privacy Policy.