Category: Whalley Range Community Forum
The Whalley Range Community Forum (WRCF) is a voluntary representative residents group formed in 1995 to facilitate and improve communication between members of the community and those who serve/represent Whalley Range.
The Forum act as an umbrella organisation, bringing residents and local services together to address local issues, to promote consultation and community cohesion – and to encourage participation.
The Forum produces a bimonthly newsletter and residents meetings to address local concerns with Police, Councillors, local council and planning officials, sends out a regular email bulletins featuring opportunities, events and news to around 400 residents from Whalley Range – and co-facilitates an annual local community festival.
The Forum worker supports new and emerging groups to access funding to set up their own community groups, holds funds for unconstituted groups and addresses resident priorities by facilitating relevant classes at the JNR8 centre during school term times.
Classes and initiatives for the diverse local community include mixed and women-only ESOL classes, women fitness, Tai Chi, confidence building sessions, basic computer and work club support and art and wellbeing classes and afternoon tea for older residents. JNR8 is also registered as a Third Party Hate Crime Reporting Centre.
The community website features local news and events, consultation links, age-friendly news and current vacancies and opportunities.
Follow @WhalleyRangeorg and @AgeFriendlyWR on Twitter
JNR8 Youth & Community Centre, 82 Cromwell Avenue, Whalley Range, M16 0BG
Tel: 0161 881 3744 | Email: communityforumwhalleyrange@gmail.com agefriendlywhalleyrange@gmail.com
Community Speedwatch scheme
Registering interest for the Community Speedwatch scheme:
Active members of the community join together with the support of the police to monitor the speed of vehicles using detection devices.
Volunteers receive appropriate training, and are supported by neighbourhood policing team (NPT) staff. The scheme aims to cater for the problem of real or perceived speed related offending, and through partnership with the community it is to be used in circumstances that are necessary, justifiable and proportionate in order to:
Improve the quality of life for Whalley Range and Chorlton communities
Increase public awareness of inappropriate speed
Reduce the speed of vehicles to the speed limit
Reduce the risk of injury on the roads
Speed Watch activity is not about interfering with neighbours behaviour; it is a proactive solution to improve the safety and quality of life for everyone in the community.
All Aboard for Cromwell Community Cuppa and the Creative Conversation group!
On Wednesday 13th of September our two JNR8 over 50’s groups went on an adventure aboard the Prince Henry narrow boat to Boothstown from Stretford Marina.
The trip was paid for thanks to a donation we’d received last year from our local pharmacy, Well Whalley Range.
7 of us: Chris, Margaret, Sue, Joyce, Audrey, Sheila and her friend Kay – booked onto the trip and invited 4 of the members of the Live Well Make Art group: Lotte, Carol, Gail and Jasmine to join us.
The Art group actually took part in an iPad masterclass with Lotte!
The trip was a real success and a great experience – and we would all recommend it to any groups who are looking for a day trip with a difference!
Read more about the project who organises the trips below – and see more of our photos here: https://www.whalleyrange.org/8785-2/
All Aboard is Emma, Claire, Richard, Liz and Julie, a group of parents who were regular users of Trafford Council’s Openlock Project. When the project came to an end earlier this year, we put in a successful bid to take on one of the narrow boats, ‘Prince Henry,’ for local community use for the next three years.
The canal is the fastest way to slow down and our aim is bring you a variety of workshops and events to help steer away from the pace and pressure of everyday life and promote well being, relaxation and learning in a calm and peaceful environment.
We also offer a range of standard skippered day-hire trips plus themed and seasonal days out.
All are welcome aboard. We offer subsidised rates for charities, CICs and community groups, including children and young people with SEN and learning differences; carers; the elderly, and people with disabilities. Please contact us directly to discuss individual access requirements due to the space and layout of the boat.
Henry is moored at Stretford Marina on the Bridgewater canal. Free car parking is available. Alternatively we are a 10 minute walk from Trafford Park railway station or a 15 minute walk, along the canal towpath, from Stretford Metrolink station.
For bookings and enquiries please e-mail: allaboardmcr@gmail.com
https://www.facebook.com/AllAboardManchester/
Befriending, connecting and more: Age-friendly news
Members of Age-friendly Whalley Range and Chorlton were happy to welcome a group of delegates from the Standing Committee for Health and Social Welfare from Oslo City Council to our community centre recently.
We received a message from the group upon their return to Oslo:
Good morning 🙂
On behalf of The Standing Committee on Health and Social Welfare in Oslo I want to thank you a lot for hosting us last Monday.
You have a very inspiring place, attitude and experiences and the group visiting you expressed that in plenum.
We have arrived safely in Oslo after interesting and great days in Manchester and Leeds.
Good luck with your future work.
Yours sincerely
Hans–Olav Toft
Secretary of The Standing Committee on Health and Social Welfare
(Thanks to Russell and Dave for letting us use the the church as it was enrolment day in the JNR8 hall for our ESOL learners!)
Manchester Cares is a brand new community network of young professionals and older neighbours hanging out and helping one another in our rapidly changing city.
We do this because our home town of Manchester is a wonderful place, with innovation and influence, history and heart at its core. There’s always so much going on, from new music to new businesses to new people arriving all the time.
But the city we love is now growing and changing at double speed, and that leaves some people feeling anonymous, isolated and left behind.
For our older neighbours in particular, many of whom have spent a lifetime in their home neighbourhoods, the rush and pace of the city can often now feel too much. Getting around can be difficult, and trends including globalisation, gentrification, migration and digitisation are transforming communities faster than ever before.
The multiplying effect of those pressures is that many older people have deep roots – from Ancoats to Ardwick, Longsight to Levenshulme – but few connections. Meanwhile, young professionals – often graduates from across the country and around the world – can have hundreds of connectionsin the social media age, but often no roots in their communities.
The separation of those parallel worlds wastes human potential, entrenches loneliness and isolation, perpetuates social division and is ultimately corrosive for our society.
Manchester Cares seeks to address this modern blight of disconnection by harnessing the people and places around us for the benefit of all.
Our objectives are to:
- Reduce isolation and loneliness amongst older people and young professionals alike
- Improve the connection, confidence, skills, resilience and power of all participants so neighbours can feel part of our changing city rather than left behind by it
- Bring people together to reduce the gaps across social, generational, digital, cultural and attitudinal divides.
Find out more: https://manchestercares.org.uk/about-us
ABOUT CYRIL FLINT BEFRIENDERS
With over 5 million elderly people living on their own, and 50% citing television as their main source of company, loneliness is an ever-present problem within our community (Campaign To End Loneliness).
Cyril Flint, an elderly pensioner living on his own in the Trafford area, was a classic example of one such individual. Having spent 20 lonely Christmas holidays on his own, since the passing of his wife, Cyril story not only evoked a wave of compassion within the community, but it also made us want to do something to help. Setting up an informal befriending service, designed to help prevent social isolation, seemed like the perfect solution. Since its creation, our scheme has grown throughout the Manchester area and we now have an increasing number of active volunteers throughout the community. https://www.cyrilflint.org
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New Computer Classes @ JNR8 Youth & Community Centre
FREE Computer Classes – refreshments provided!
Term time Thursdays – back in November!
The book is here! Alexandra Park Manchester – A park for the people since 1870
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Celebrate Festival Photos 2017
Photographs from our volunteer photographers who captured the fantastic atmosphere of the 20th Whalley Range ‘Celebrate’ festival.
Our theme this year: The Heart of Whalley Range.
Photographs from Anthony Morris
Photographs from Andrew Thompson
Age-friendly Whalley Range event at Ivy Court, Chorlton
On March 17th, Age-friendly Whalley Range & Chorlton held a Community event at Adactus Housing’s Ivy Court on Beech Road in Chorlton – to bring older people together to socialise, to enjoy a hot meal and to access information in good company.
Loren Grant of Foodwiser gave a presentation about food and nutrition: Foods to Remember – how food and lifestyle can help protect you from memory loss and dementia.
We were also really happy to welcome the Lord Mayor of Manchester, Councillor Carl Austin-Behan to the event to welcome everyone and to talk about the great work volunteers are doing in communities across Manchester – and of course to pose for photographs with everyone!
A huge ‘Thank You’ to Trina, Andrea and Roger for all your help – and Una and Lotte for pampering and the bag-making workshop.
The Lead Station provided a delicious St Patrick’s Day themed lunch of Irish potato & chive soup and a selection of sandwiches including Guinness braised beef and Irish cheddar ploughmans… and our host – Scheme Manager Gloria Thompson – provided lots of tea and coffee, cake and biscuits!
Age-friendly Whalley Range & Chorlton is a local network and steering group aiming to support and engage with residents, to promote healthy ageing and access to information.
After the event Gloria said:
“Residents who attended are still buzzing about the information they received, the food and the visit of the Lord Mayor.
Comments about the event include, “The presentation on nutrition was excellentâ€. “I learned so muchâ€. “I would attend the event againâ€. “It great to see our lounge used for an event like thisâ€. “The person who did the hand massage even told me about oils that can help me sleep betterâ€.
See some more of the photos from the event below.
Thanks to our Age-friendly photographer Anthony Morris – who has an exhibition of his photographs in Chorlton library from 3rd-29th of April.
Adactus Housing Group Ltd: photographs courtesy of Samantha Ryan from Marketing & Communications
The History of Whalley Range Lawn Tennis & Cricket Club
The first volume of the club history is now available. It is A4, 200+ pages long, lots of photos etc, and retails for £20, but is just £10 to current members. Copies are available from the club when there is access to the bar.
To buy mail order, please send cheque for ££20 inc p&p made payable to Whalley Range CC, and address it to Mike Hill c/o WRC & LTC, Kingsbrook Road, M16 8NR. Please remember to include your postal address.
Two England cricket captains, three Olympians, a famous music composer, a sprinkling of county cricketers, international rugby players, a prolific author, a renowned amateur astronomer, and the cream of the country lacrosse players are just a few of the stars who have graced the club from Whalley Range down the years.
One of the oldest clubs in the area, with cricket dating back to 1845 and tennis first staged in 1881, Whalley Range truly boasts a most colourful and illustrious pedigree, and this volume charts the first 100 years, from its early existence on College Road, its brief tenure at Hough End, through to its current residence on Kingsbrook Road, where it benefited from a rich influx of talent from the nearby William Hulme Grammar School.
The book is as much a social history of this area of Manchester as a sports book and recounts the many ups and downs and the devastating heartbreak caused by the wars, as well as stunning performances, record scores, and regular appearances at Old Trafford.
Generate our Kitchen
The JNR8 Youth & Community Centre is the weekly base for the Whalley Range Community Forum, Whalley Range Youth Opportunities Association (WRYOA) Whiz Youth Project, Celebrate, Age-friendly Whalley Range & Chorlton and Whalley Range Mental Health & Wellbeing.
The JNR8 centre is a fantastic community resource – and we run a wide range of activities during the week for all ages, including ESOL, fitness, confidence building and social and self-help groups for people to come together to reduce isolation/encourage participation and friendships.
Cookery has always been a big part of our community engagement at JNR8 (our under 12 group even featured on Ready Steady Cook!) and we have a long history of providing community meals and food projects including the Food 4 Us cookery toolkit, Heritage cookery projects and intergenerational recipe sharing.
We are currently fundraising to improve our kitchen – as many of our cookery and nutrition classes have had to be put on hold as the kitchen is not fit for purpose.
Our exciting plan is to access funding to turn our current inadequate facilities into a professional kitchen so we can resume all the regular classes – and provide so much more!
We run a work club under the banner Generating Opportunities: a professional kitchen will enable us to provide catering, cooking and nutrition classes to improve skills and employability and projects that use cookery to improve English
In addition we want to resume our shared community meals – such as the successful Come 4 Tea, Festive Feasts and share recipes from around the world.
The Building is lovely – fantastic multi-use hall, storage for our projects, a chill out room, an IT room for computer beginners and improvers, a classroom for learning, teaching, presenting, planning and meeting.
Now look at our existing kitchen…
And look at some of the fantastic projects that go on here:
Imagine what we will all be able to do when we…
Generate our Kitchen!
Classes and Activities for adults during the week…
TUESDAY…
Women ESOL Practical
Tuesday 10-11am
Women with low-level English skills
Women ESOL Computer class
Tuesday 11-am
Women with low-level English skills: access to free online practice ESOL courses
Finding your Confidence and Motivation for getting into
Work, Training and Volunteering
Tuesdays from 1-3pm on
April 25th, May 2nd, 9th, 16th, 23rd & 30th & June 6th 2017
Jobseekers and people moving from benefits and back into Work, Training and Volunteering
WEDNESDAY…
Keep Fit for Women only (female instructor)
Weds 10-11am
Afternoon Tea
Wednesdays 2-3pm
Age-friendly Whalley Range: www.whalleyrange.org/category/agefriendly/
Local older residents, community events, older people food project, newsletter,
THURSDAY…
Generating Opportunities: New classes starting again 27th April
Basic Computer class 10-11am
Job search workshop 11-1pm
Thursdays 10-1pm
Local jobseekers
FRIDAY…
Whalley Range Mental Wellbeing group
Time to Change
Every Friday
6:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
JNR8, 82 Cromwell Ave, M16 0BG
Contact: 881 3744 or Carol: 07788855544
Come along to a free, volunteer led, self help mental wellbeing group.
Offering:
• Music, Art
• Pool and table tennis
• Tai Chi
• Food
• Good Company
It has been the highlight of my week
Wellbeing group member
www.whalleyrange.org/whalley-range-mental-health-group/
WRCF Advice/Drop in Local residents Call 0161 881 3744
Hate Crime 3rd Party Reporting – 0161 881 3744
www.whalleyrange.org/third-party-hate-crime-reporting-centres/