Community Support
We participated in partnerships led by Longhurst Housing Group and Riverside Group to successfully win tenders for housing related support services:
a. in Fenland for young people
b. in Cambridge and South Cambridgeshire for young people
c. in Cambridge and South Cambridgeshire for adults
In addition, we successfully bid on our own to deliver housing related support services for young people in East Cambridgeshire. These support services are funded by Cambridgeshire County Council.
Young Futures Partnership
CHS is now part of the Young Futures Partnership (YFP), working with four partners, Riverside, Orwell Housing, YMCA Trinity Group and Richmond Fellowship, to provide support and accommodation for young people who are homeless or threatened with homelessness in Cambridge City and South Cambridgeshire. This new partnership will make a difference to the lives of many young people in Cambridge, drawing on our collective experience, expertise and resources to offer a consistent and quality service. The partnership will work together closely to ensure the service develops and evolves. YFP will have a ‘helicopter’ view of current provision, identify emerging gaps and trends and seek out opportunities to innovate in response.
The key service developments that are currently being worked on include:
• A new referral process; with a single point of access for referrals
• A new delivery model, consisting of a ‘Hub and Spoke’ approach;
• Community support;
• A broad range of accommodation based services.
The ‘hub and spoke’ model, has a focus on community-based accommodation and support, where young people will live in
shared housing within the community, rather than in hostel accommodation. The livelihoods of the people we support are of
paramount importance to us and, through this new scheme, we believe they will be given greater opportunities to make lasting
improvements, live independently and feel part of their community.
Cambridge City Council
The Young Parent Project and Corona House have been granted funding through the Cambridge City Council Homelessness
Prevention Fund and Community Fund to support our work with young parents and homeless women. CHS provides housing and support for 8 young parents and their babies at the Young Parent Project and for 6 homeless women at Corona House as well as 30 women in the wider community.
CHS wins Hopkins Homes Cambridgeshire Charity vote
CHS won the Hopkins Homes Cambridgeshire charity vote receiving the top donation of £7,000. Andrew Church, Head of Community Investment and Support at Cambridge Housing Society, said: “We are delighted to have won the public vote and feel very moved to have received so many votes from the people of Cambridgeshire. All the other charities do great work locally too, so to have finished top means so much. At Cambridge Housing Society, we believe it takes a village to raise a child so the £7,000 received through the vote will be spent on building a mentoring programme for young people at risk of homelessness.”
Surviving Winter Appeal
CHS tenants benefited from the Surviving Winter Appeal, coordinated by the Cambridgeshire Community Foundation, thanks to the generous support of individual donors who donate their winter fuel allowance. We helped redistribute the donations to households facing fuel poverty and the cost-of-living crisis.
Cooking course grant
Railway House provides accommodation and support for young people aged 16-25 who would otherwise be homeless. Cambridgeshire Community Foundation awarded our Railway House service a £1588 grant to run a 6-week cooking course for residents.
Fullscope Mental Health support
Railway House is also working in partnership with Romsey Mill, Arts & Minds and the YMCA, with funding from Fullscope, providing creative and sporting activities to support young people with mental health needs. Weekly sessions of football, music, cooking, boxing or art are available as well as a drop- in Creative Café.
Evelyn Trust
Corona House have received funding from the Evelyn Trust to provide support to women in Cambridge with homelessness and
mental health challenges to enable them to get on in life and thrive. Through this funding we have been able to deliver group activities, peer support and one to one sessions including creative sessions, leisure/sport, social activities, and opportunities for women to engage with local facilities and services.
We have also been able to organise and coordinate an allotment project, which has helped women to develop their confidence and skills in growing vegetables, as well as building friendships and supportive relationships.
Social Value
CHS has a strong record of investment in the local community, and we use the HACT Social Value calculator to assess the social value generated by some of the activities and our Community Support Services teams generated a social impact of over £1.5m in 2021-22.
Sunflower Nurseries
In September 2022 our two Sunflower Nurseries in Cambridge and Cambourne were sold to Kindred Education (Cambridgeshire) Ltd. Kindred Nurseries continue to run both nurseries as they are, providing the same excellent level of nursery care with the same staff. We sold the nurseries when they were performing financially well and we were able to choose the best provider to protect the spirit of our nurseries and to look after the children and staff. The decision to sell the nurseries was made to reduce the risk to CHS of having so many business streams. No longer running two nurseries will allow us more time to focus on the needs of our customers in our core business, to improve the services we can offer to them and to tackle wider challenges.
Case study: the Corona Community
B has an enduring struggle with her mental health – she hears voices and has a diagnosis of schizophrenia. She lived at Corona House for 2 years and following that she moved into another supported housing service, where she remained for 3 years before recently moving into her own independent permanent accommodation.
Corona House has provided support to B throughout this journey. Whilst at the house, staff supported her via regular key working sessions, regular liaison and joint working with her Mental Health Team and her mother who was involved with her support. Staff at Corona House worked with her to help her with strategies to manage her voices. She used to see staff daily in the office for reassurance and she would come to the drop-in sessions for short periods of time.
Staff at Corona House supported B for the first year following her move-on in a one-to-one capacity. During that time B’s mother died and this had a significant impact on her. She attempted suicide twice. She also found lockdown extremely hard. However, with support and encouragement, B has recently been able to move into her independent flat.
B continues to access the activities at Corona House, she attends the allotment, creative groups and she loves the swimming, and seaside trips. Through these she has been able to form a friendship with another woman in the Corona Community who has similar mental health experiences to her.
B said “I talk to the staff at Corona House every day and now I am really pleased because I have moved closer to Corona House! When the voices tell me unpleasant things, I call the staff to check that they aren’t real, and they are always very reassuring. I love the activities and seeing the other women. I like food and animal related activities and going to the allotment. I have felt calmer since we started going there because it is very peaceful.”