News: Lizzie Homer
City Works, Alfred Street, Gloucester, United Kingdom, GL1 4DF
29Oct
Changing our approach to engage young people on our trustee board
Recruiting board members can be challenging, nationally three quarters of charities say they find it difficult to recruit trustees, perhaps it is why new trustees are often recruited from the people the board already know.
Read more
22Oct
Physical activity and healthy weight
We know that some of the reasons that people find it hard to maintain a healthy weight are also the challenges that they face in being physically active.
Read more
30Sep
Black Lives Matter – starting a journey of reflection and change within Active Gloucestershire
At the start of 2020, our team could not have imagined that the Black Lives Matter movement, which in recent months has swept across both America and the UK, would become a catalyst for change in our organisation.
Read more
22Sep
Partnership working to support communities in Gloucestershire
It has been inspiring to hear how organisations and communities have responded to the COVID crisis and rallied to support those in need of extra support.
Read more
11Aug
Statement on inequalities experienced by BAME communities
Evidence has shown that because deeply entrenched inequalities exist in Gloucestershire, people from black, Asian and minority ethnic communities are less likely to do as much physical activity as the government recommends. As such, our scope of work has grown to include working with people from minority ethnic communities.
Read more
27Mar
Lydney-Sharpness: We need to be more curious, or risk being left behind
Debate about resurrecting the Lydney-Sharpness bridge is shining a light on the way we think about travel, pollution and health. For nearly 100 years, the Lydney-Sharpness bridge carried coal and people across the Severn between the two towns and beyond. Children in one town went to school in the other. People lived and worked on opposite sides of the river.
Read more
Page 4 of 4Previous