The Casandara shop next to Superdrug will close soon and open as a Sue Ryder charity shop in April.
We look forward to welcoming another charity to the high street.
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I bet you dorspca wrote:
We look forward to welcoming another charity to the high street.
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You also need to look at it from the other angle. The disappearance of another enterprise in the town takes with it employment, no longer pays taxes and hence damages the local and national economy. That increases the need for charity as neither people or the state can afford to sustain a decent standard of living. It can become a vicious circle.rspca wrote:Many of the people who live in Sydenham rely on the local charities for support and unless income is constant charities would be unable to sustain such services.
leenewham wrote:Ask Waitrose. They looked at the Greyhound development and liked it. They looked at the high street and said no way.
The RSPCA receives a huge amount of government funding implicit and explicit. Think Gift-Aid - that is the government directly funding you from the taxes of the working population. I'm not knocking that but to think that the RSPCA could fund itself to its current level of service without government support is unrealistic.rspca wrote:We do not receive any government funding unlike health and kids charities.
I presume you are just being provocative Mike about Waitrose. They are a great company with real ethics and standards. I loved working with them. More new businesses start in recession than at any other time. There are more small businesses now than in 2006.mikecg wrote:Wos up wiv em? not enough yuppies for them?leenewham wrote:Ask Waitrose. They looked at the Greyhound development and liked it. They looked at the high street and said no way.
Stuff Waitrose, they only like snobs, most high streets are in decline and the recession means a rise in payday loan sharks and charidy shops, it's a sign of the times I'm afraid.
An example was at the Beckenham Waitrose. Retailers are supposed to not discriminate in their employment policies about disabled people - but they do.leenewham wrote:I presume you are just being provocative Mike about Waitrose. They are a great company with real ethics and standards.
This is true - and on your own doorstep. Anyone been to Forest Hill lately? A year or so ago, FH got three new coffee shops. As everyone knows, build the coffee shops and they will come. Now we have Canvas and Cream, the Sylvan Post (our very own odd-yet-wonderful Antic pub), Bunka boutique and b-cards, a new traditional sweet shop opening next week (Sugar Mountain) to name just a few, and the pools about to re-open.leenewham wrote:
Many high streets are fighting back. Many are successful or turning the tide.