Featherstone mayor and councillor shave heads to help under-pressure food bank
Featherstone member Graham Isherwood, and the town's mayor, Steve Vickers, had their locks cut off earlier this month.
Between £300 and £400 was generated, and that has already helped pay for supplies for Featherstone's Faith Net foodbank, which is run by a coalition of local churches.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdCoun Isherwood explained his new look during a discussion about food bank provision across the Wakefield district at a scrutiny meeting on Monday.
He said: "We've all been involved in our local food banks, and that's why I've had my head shaved.
"We raised something like £300, and so we went out and bought £300 worth of food and handed it over to them. They really needed it."
Coun Vickers joked that he "didn't have much to lose" from taking part.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdHe said: "Normally we'd wait until the end of the year to hand out the mayor's charity money, but the reality is the food bank needs core items now.
"It's particularly important this time of year, because people are going away on holiday and the donations dry up.
"It is shocking in this day and age that we have food banks. It's like something from the Charles Dickens era. But we want to help however we can."
A working group has been set up by Wakefield Council to look at any links between the government's recent changes to Universal Credit and the rise in food bank use.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdCouncillor David Jones told the scrutiny meeting that food bank organisers were "doing a great job" under difficult circumstances because they were unable to predict demand.
He said: "They do not have a clue, whenever the open, who's going to walk through the door, what needs they will have and what pressures they'll be under.
"They just don't know from one day to the next how many people will come.
"In Pontefract last week, on Tuesday it was heaving, and on Thursday it was dead."
Local Democracy Reporting Service