
Fears for future of Nottingham charity told to move to garage
It also said Chayah had occupied the unit on the Chase since 2016 on a peppercorn basis and that this was a temporary arrangement.
'We feel betrayed'
Some of the charity's projects in the city - spanning for more than a decade - include partnering up with Nottinghamshire Police to tackle crime and running mentoring sessions with young men, as well as delivering hundreds of meals to residents in the city.Mrs Francis-Watson, 63, says they do "everything but surgery".She fears the service - which includes delivering a minimum of 600 meals per week to families, the elderly and homeless - will cease to exist if the charity is forced to relocate.Mrs Francis-Watson said the council visited the premises back in February to speak to the charity about the move before being issues a notice to leave in May.The Chayah Project was then given 28 days to vacate the space, however the charity remained at the site because there was "nowhere else to go", said Mrs Francis-Watson.In emails seen by the BBC, the council has suggested to move her operation to a garage and "pitch up a stall" to provide meals to the community."We have fed, clothed and looked after some of the city's most vulnerable, and now they've turned their back on us," said Mrs Francis-Watson."Honestly, we feel betrayed," she added.
Mrs Francis-Watson said relocating to a garage would be "completely unsuitable"."Right now, we have eight fridges and two deep freezers packed full of food," she added."There is no electric or water supply in the garage, so how would we cook and store our meals? It wouldn't be hygienic."In the back we have boxes upon boxes of tinned food, toiletries and clothes. We'd have to rent out a fair few garages to store all of this."People will go hungry if we have to move, and that is what worries me."One of the people accessing the charity's meal service is 55-year-old Colin Davis, who was diagnosed with muscular dystrophy in 2011 - a genetic condition that causes the muscles to worsen over time.Mr Davis said: "Because of my condition, cooking and shopping for a nutritious meal is impossible. I don't have the physical strength to do so."Ordering takeaway all of the time would become unaffordable and be so unhealthy, making me feel worse."I rely on these meals. Sometimes, the team at Chayah might be the only people I'll see for the week and it means the world to me."
Mrs Francis-Watson added she has spent thousands of pounds from her own pocket refurbishing the site, and she would be "devastated" to see it go."When the council first gave us this space, it was an empty post office with a bulletproof screen. It needed so many repairs."We turned it into something special by making it into a place where people in the community feel at home."This decision is cold and callous. That is how I feel."A Nottingham City Council spokesperson said: "Chayah have occupied the unit on the Chase since 2016 on a peppercorn basis. They took on the unit in the knowledge that the arrangement was temporary until decisions about redevelopment of the site were taken."We met with Chayah representatives in February this year to advise them that we were proposing to redevelop the shops for housing, and that if the proposal was approved, they would be required to vacate the unit."We have also offered to help them vacate the unit, and to inform them if suitable alternative premises become available in the local area."
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