Overdue: 367 days
Public benefits
The direct benefits which flow from purpose 1 include: Individual families identified to be in need will be able to afford basic needs leading to improved health and wellbeing. Communities will have access to basic infrastructure, water and gas supplies, basic childcare, employment opportunities, leading to improved local economy and community
development. These benefits will be evidenced through a periodic newsletter including photographs and testimony of the charity activities. The charity’s public beneficiaries are families which are poor, requiring basic needs, and also communities requiring basic infrastructure, supplies, lacking basic childcare, lacking employment opportunities, and poor economy. In providing aid to families with alcoholism or inability to manage money, there is risk of abuse of financial aid. We account for this and therefore we pay a fixed amount of money in the village shop that the family can draw on as needed. Our local operator checks that this fund is used properly, especially in regards to the needs of children. This reduces risk of harm and the benefit outweighs any harm. The direct benefits which flow from purpose 2 include: Improved relations between Northern Ireland and Moldova. Greater humanitarian support from the people of Northern Ireland. These benefits will be evidenced through a periodic newsletter including photographs and testimony of the charity activities, feedback from the public, increased numbers providing support. The beneficiaries are the general public in Northern Ireland. There is no harm from this purpose. There is no private benefit from our purposes.
... [more] [less]What your organisation does
We laise with the town hall and school teachers in each village to identify the poor and their needs. We give money directly to families bi-monthly. We pay for the education of students that cannot afford it. We give direct help with money, appliances, utility bills etc as we assess family needs. We provide humanitarian aid directly from
Northern Ireland. We renovate kindergartens. We assist in providing clinics in villages. We assist financially in the provision of gas and water supplies. We provide new textbooks for schools. We run a canteen for the poor providing 1 meal a day to children in Tiraspol. In person to person meetings we provide individual family needs on a case by case basis. In cases where we pay or assist in paying utility bills we pay the bills directly to the utility companies. In families with alcoholism or inability to manage money we pay a fixed amount of money in the village shop that the family can draw on as needed. Our local operator checks that this fund is used properly, especially in regard to the needs of the children. We produce a newsletter periodically to inform donors of the work of the charity and the situation in Moldova.
... [more] [less]The charity’s classifications
- The prevention or relief of poverty
- The advancement of education
- The advancement of health or the saving of lives
Who the charity helps
- Children (5-13 year olds)
- Men
- Older people
- Overseas/developing countries
- Preschool (0-5 year olds)
- Women
How the charity works
- Accommodation/housing
- Community development
- Education/training
- General charitable purposes
- Medical/health/sickness
- Overseas aid/famine relief
- Relief of poverty