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Cabinet minister backs international education charity

Lancashire County Council | 08.10.2008 10:16 | Ecology | Education | Workers' Movements | Liverpool

A trade union-led charity is recylcing school furniture from Lancashire and shipping it to poorer countries.

A top government minister is to attend the national launch of an education charity backed by Unite the Union and Lancashire County Council.
Ed Balls, secretary of state for children, schools, and families will be at the event organised by Furniture for Education Worldwide.
FEW was the brainchild of a Burnley county councillor and a Pendle head teacher who visited schools without tables and chairs on a trip to Pakistan.
Some unwanted furniture from Lancashire schools has already gone to the Gujrat region of Pakistan.
Over the next three years 14 East Lancashire schools will move into new buildings with purpose built equipment as part of Lancashire County Council’s £250 million Building Schools for the Future programme.
Their old furniture would have been sent to landfill sites – but thanks to the new charity it is being shipped to schools in Pakistan, Ghana, and Kenya.
On Wednesday October 8 the charity will hold its London launch event in the Attllee Room, Portcullis House, Westminster between 5pm and 7pm.
County Councillor Terry Burns and Marsden Heights Community College head Mike Tull, who started the project, are still raising money to pay for shipping.
County Councillor Burns, an official of Unite, said: “In schools we saw in Gujrat the children were keen. The teachers were dedicated.
“But a lack of equipment held them back. Youngsters sat on the floor - leaning on their bags to write.
“Because of our Building Schools for the Future programme 14 schools in East Lancashire, including Marsden Heights, will be moving into purpose-built accommodation in the next two years, with made-to-measure fixtures and fittings.
“So we had an idea – send the furniture destined for landfill to Pakistan instead. It’s re-cycling on a global scale.
“Local community groups will have first refusal but if they don’t want the used equipment it will be shipped to Gujrat by container.
“Pendle’s Pakistani community have paid to transport one load that is already being used.
“Now I am appealing for generous organisations and businesses to pay for more containers of furniture.”
The charity was set up jointly by Unite, the county council, and Marsden Heights Community College.
A number of Unite branches have already paid for containers to ship the furniture abroad.
Anyone who would like furniture for a community organisation in Lancashire; who would like to sponsor a container; or who would like to suggest a school in a poorer country that needs help, can contact County Councillor Terry Burns on 07976 611119

Lancashire County Council

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