Coleg Llandrillo’s Heath & Social Care students have been taking time out from their studies to organise and collect donations for several local charities at this festive time. Donations from Health and Social Care groups at the college’s Rhos-on-Sea campus, were dropped off at local food banks, and homeless charities Hope Restored, and Sanctuary Trust Cymru. The student groups collected food, toiletries, sanitary products, and crisp packets for the Ironman Charity, which use them to make waterproof sleeping bag liners for homeless people. Brenda Fogg, founder of Hope Restored, thanked the students saying: “It is a wonderful gesture and much appreciated; thank you for thinking of us.
Llandudno Rotarians disguised as snowmen collect for charity northwalespioneer.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from northwalespioneer.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SASKATOON A front-line worker in Saskatoon who helps women exiting the sex trade says she hopes the province’s proposed human trafficking legislation will encourage more people to come forward. “It is scary when you have gone through what they have gone through and lived through what they have lived through and you’ve experienced and seen the horrific things that they have,” said Joeline Magill, executive director of Hope Restored Canada. That’s why she said it’s important for the Saskatchewan government to also connect victims and survivors of human trafficking to supports in the community. “The greater concern for us is really back to the person themselves and how are they being supported, not only through the legal system but also outside of that with the wraparound services that will be necessary as they walk through that process,” Magill said.