
'We've saved 800 items from landfill in a year'
Group founder John Fitzgerald worked for Royal Mail for 20 years but had always enjoyed fixing neighbours' household items. He said: "I noticed how many people didn't have anyone to fix things for them. A lot of people haven't got tools anymore. "The old handy person who had a little corner shop where you could take something in to be fixed are gone."Mr Fitzgerald said the group had grown beyond his wildest dreams with about 20 repairers giving up their time for free every month. "To take Winston Churchill's phrase: never has so much been achieved by so few," he said.
Jo Liversidge is the group's events organiser and loves helping the local community, for example when a primary school needed all its scooters fixing or a nearby care home brought along its broken bingo machine. She said: "We are restoring stories not just objects. We have a barometer from a Hull trawlerman, a camel saddle stool from Egypt, a 'dead mans penny' from World War One and a vintage one-armed bandit. Each has a tale."Sometimes people are embarrased [to ask for help], but you're stopping that thing from going into landfill."
Residents at HC-One Mountview Care Home in Rothley were delighted when their bingo number generator was fixed by the group.Care worker Annette Bunney said: "It stopped not so long ago at number 70 and we couldn't get to the end of the game."We found the fix it group and they are amazing."It stops us throwing stuff into landfill and really in this day and age we really do need to consider that."The group's World Environment Day event takes places at Mountsorrel Memorial Hall between 09:00 and 13:00 BST on Thursday.
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9 minutes ago
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Times
22 minutes ago
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