YouTube About GHT for Pride
posted: 24/05/2011
Manchester Pride has launched a new video which showcases George House Trust’s work. George House Trust is one of Manchester Pride’s fundraising partners.
The video was shot by FruitTV, a global online platform for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender communities.
Pride supports HIV Welfare Fund
In 2010 £27,500 from Manchester Pride went to support George House Trust’s Welfare Fund to help people living with HIV through financial hardship.
Rosie Robinson, chief executive of George House Trust, commented: “George House Trust has a long-standing relationship with Manchester Pride. It's really great that money raised from people partying at Pride goes to support people living with HIV, experiencing hardship. I think that's a wonderful connection to make.”
To view the George House Trust showcase video visit YouTube
August Bank Holiday Pride Tickets on sale – cheaper before 30 June
Tickets for Manchester Pride’s Big Weekend (Friday 26 – Monday 29 August 2011) are now on sale and can be purchased at ManchesterPride or at various venues around the city.
Early Bird tickets cost £15 plus booking fee and are available until 30 June.
From 1 July tickets will cost £20 plus booking fee.
For up-to- date information, follow the Pride festival on Twitter: @ManchesterPride
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Join HIV and Benefits Survey
posted: 16/02/2011
Lots of changes (including cuts) will be happening to the welfare benefits used by many people with HIV in the coming months and years. We need evidence now about how the changing nature of HIV affects people’s ability to do a paid job.
Would you please help our friends at NAT (National AIDS Trust) by answering their short (10 question) online survey about HIV-related symptoms of people living with HIV.
Please Take part in the quick survey, here
NAT are part of a national benefits working party trying to improve the Work Capability Assessment (which is used to help decide claims for Employment Support Allowance - the new benefit for sickness and disability).
The Work Capability Assessment fails many people with HIV – it doesn’t cope well where symptoms can come and go, like with HIV. Your answers will help us and NAT make it work better for people with HIV.
Be a big help for many
Your answers will help make a major difference to many people – everyone now receiving Incapacity Benefit will have to have their own Work Capability Assessment within the next 2-3 years. Many people are having to appeal bad decisions about this and 40% of the people who appeal refusals of these claims win.
The findings of this research will help NAT speak for the needs of people living with HIV who apply for illness and disability-related benefits. In particular, it will lead to recommendations to the second annual independent review of the Work Capability Assessment.
NAT will be on the working group which will recommend changes to the Work Capability Assessment (WCA) to more accurately and fairly assess people with fluctuating conditions, such as HIV.
Anything you can add?
NAT welcome other evidence about the impact of fluctuating symptoms on the lives of people living with HIV, and particularly want to hear the experiences of people who have HIV-related symptoms who have gone through the Work Capability Assessment.
For more information about the survey or the working group, or to send case studies and other evidence, please contact Sarah Radcliffe
Please Take part in the quick survey, here
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£3 Fills your Bag with Food
posted: 23/12/2010
On two days between Christmas and New Year, at a church in Collyhurst, Manchester, for £3 you can fill your bag with food. Everyone is welcome and they offer fresh fruit and vegetables, meat, tinned meat and vegetables, and dried goods.
Where and When?
The £3 a bag food market is at the Church of The Saviour, Eggington Street, Collyhurst, M40 7RN (off Rochdale Road)
Map here
17 bus from Shude Hill bus station, Manchester city centre (and other buses) serve Rochdale Road.
- Wednesday 29th December 11am - 2.30pm
- Thursday 30th December 10am - 2pm
For more information please call Rita at the Lalley Centre on 07530 943 804
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Manchester Pride Raises £115,000
posted: 26/10/2010
Manchester Pride 2010 raised £115,000 for charity, bringing the total since 2003 to £895,000. This year’s total is rather less than the most Pride ever raised, which was last year: £135,000.
The £115,000 will be used to support the Lesbian and Gay Foundation’s ‘Free Condom and Lube’ scheme, the George House Trust HIV Welfare Fund, and in grants over the coming months to various lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) groups and projects across Greater Manchester.
HIV Welfare Fund
The £115,000 will be split like this:
25% to the LGF Condom & Lube Scheme (£28,750), providing free condoms across Greater Manchester
25% to the George House Trust Welfare Fund (£28,750), supporting those living with or affected by HIV suffering financial hardship - apply here
50% to these three funds (£57,500 in total)
- Community Fast Track Fund
- Community Events Fund
- Development Fund
Jackie Crozier, festival director of Manchester Pride, said: “This is a fantastic achievement and we’re absolutely delighted with the figure. It’s a wonderful feeling to know that everyone who supported Manchester Pride 2010 has made a positive contribution to the future of the LGBT community in Greater Manchester.”
“Manchester Pride is a team effort and it wouldn’t be possible for us to stage the event we do without the help and support of so many organisations and individuals from across the city. I would like to take this opportunity to express my sincere gratitude to each and every person who helped us along the way.”
Applying for Community and Development Fund grants
For more information on how to apply for any of the community grants available, visit Pride
Image George House Trust volunteers collecting in St Anns Square: Graeme Vaughan www.photogas.com graeme@photogas.com
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Rise in Extreme HIV Poverty
posted: 19/10/2010
A new UK report shows one in six people with HIV are living in poverty. The new report on Poverty and HIV by NAT (National AIDS Trust) and Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) reveals at least one in six people diagnosed with HIV in the UK experienced severe poverty between 2006 and 2009. Furthermore, the level of poverty experienced by people living with HIV has dramatically increased over recent years. In the current climate – and without determined Government action – the poverty crisis for many people living with HIV will get even worse.
The HIV welfare charity Crusaid ran a welfare fund until it merged with THT earlier this year. This report looks back at the recent evidence of HIV poverty from all the applications for help made to Crusaid in the last three years.
Income falls two thirds in 10 years to £42 a week
People paid grants from the Crusaid Hardship Fund, now run by THT, had an average weekly income of just £42 per week – two thirds less income than the average person who claimed 10 years ago (£93). In addition, many have no income at all. Most applicants are now living in extreme poverty, living on only 20 per cent of the average income for a single person.
Nick Partridge, Chief Executive of THT commented:
“The level of poverty people with HIV are experiencing across the UK has dramatically increased over recent years. Where the Hardship Fund used to buy people a fridge, or pay for respite care, now it mainly goes on basic survival – food, clothes, a bed.”
Causes of HIV poverty
The report analyses the underlying reasons why people with HIV face poverty. Over a quarter (29 per cent) of applications to the Hardship Fund gave the immigration system as the main reason for poverty. In October 2009, the Government support for single asylum seekers was reduced from £64.30 to £35.13 a week - just £5 a day. A further 17 per cent of people said that problems relating to the benefits system were the main cause of hardship. These problems included awaiting a benefit decision, changes to the benefit system, or delays in receiving benefits they were entitled to.
Deborah Jack, Chief Executive of NAT (National AIDS Trust), commented:
“Charities are picking up the pieces of a poverty crisis in the UK, but there is only so much the sector’s limited funds can do. The Government needs to address the underlying causes of this hardship, some of which it has been responsible for creating. Granting asylum seekers the right to work after six months and ensuring people are not left in poverty while waiting for their benefits to be processed are two crucial steps that would release many people with HIV out of the poverty trap.
20 ideas for change
The report makes twenty recommendations that would address the root causes of poverty amongst people living with HIV.
Benefit delays make homeless
James, 35 years old and HIV positive, is homeless and sometimes sleeps on floors at friend’s houses and occasionally in shop doorways. He came to the UK as an asylum seeker and was granted leave to remain here. He was then no longer eligible for housing with his asylum support, so he applied for housing benefit but he did not receive any payments. An investigation revealed that backlogs in dealing with benefits claims meant that by the time James’ claim was processed he was homeless and therefore did not qualify for the benefit. James was one of 7,900 people with HIV in the UK who relied on a grant from the Crusaid Hardship Fund in the last three years to pay for basic needs.
George House Trust
In 2009-10 George House Trust assisted 712 people with 3160 grants through both Crusaid and our own HIV welfare fund. George House Trust paid out £112,000 in grants to people with HIV in NW England in that year.
Poverty and HIV - download here
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