#MONTEGO BAY, May 5 (JIS): St. Ann educator, Beverly Grant Ellis, has been extending a helping hand to needy families and elderly residents in Runaway Bay in the parish as the country continues to grapple with the novel coronavirus (COVID-19).
With the support of corporate
Jamaica and other donors, the grade-three teacher at the Runaway Bay All-Age
School was able to deliver 115 care packages to help ease the financial hardship
being faced by some residents.
She told JIS News that the packages
contained items such as rice, sugar, flour, pumpkin, eggs, bread, water,
beverages, toiletries, cooking oil, canned food and snack bags for children.
Mrs. Ellis also provided phone cards
to facilitate online learning for children due to the closure of schools.
She told JIS News that she felt compelled
to assist after recognising the challenges being faced by individuals within
her community, particularly parents, who have lost their jobs due to COVID-19.
“Most of the hotel workers lost
their jobs, so I said ‘I think there will be a need for this drive in my
community since most parents work in the hotel industry’,” she noted.
“I got up one morning and said ‘I am
going to pack some stuff, especially for those in the hospitality industry’.
You also have some parents, who are live-in helpers and you know most persons
are home now, so there is no need for them. Therefore, I saw the need to assist
them by taking food packages to their homes” she added.
The grade-three teacher explained
that following a public appeal, a number of corporate entities came forward to
assist.
“I got a busload of snacks from
Excelsior Biscuit Company in Kingston. I got bags of rice and flour from C.R.
Hylton & Company, an accounting firm in Kingston, and that took us a far
way. The juices I got from Island Dairies Limited in St. Ann and the breakfast
items like the bread I got from Spicy Nice [in Brown’s Town]. I got eggs from a
small farmer, and Bravo Supermarket in St. Ann’s Bay donated some water as
well,” she told JIS News.
Mrs. Ellis pointed out that she was
able to conduct three food drives, the first of which was carried out two weeks
after the closure of school.
Meanwhile, Mrs. Ellis has spent approximately
$150,000 to construct a concrete bathroom as well as undertake repairs to the
home of an elderly, visually impaired man in Runaway Bay.
The educator explained to JIS News that the gentleman’s living conditions came to her attention
following a visit to his home to distribute care packages.
“I made a specific appeal to the
public for immediate assistance to have the place cleaned and that was done
through the assistance of some ladies,” she informed.
Mrs. Ellis is no stranger to
charitable work. Before the advent of COVID-19, she had been assisting 12 needy
students in three parishes to attend school through her ‘Help the Children Stay
in School’ programme.
JIS NEWS MONTEGO BAY BY NICKIETA STERLING