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It was only eight months ago that
a determined committee of enthusiastic villagers started to explore
the possibility of reinstating their village shop.
Now the ribbon has been cut and the
new shop - run entirely by volunteers - is up and running, proving
to other villages that a community shop can be feasible so long
as you have the determination to see the project through.
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| Julie Allen |
Julie Allen, a relative newcomer
to Blunsdon, moved in only a year ago and as a member of the village
shop committee she was somewhat taken aback by the numbers who turned
out to celebrate the shop's official opening.
"I feel a bit choked actually
- it's brilliant! We didn't expect to see this number of people
here."
And the turn out probably said a
great deal about the people of Blunsdon - something Julie recognised
whilst working on the committee: "What I found important was
that this team of people have become my friends and I wouldn't have
made friends so quickly had I not been in the team."
Blunsdon's village shop is in a portable
building - in fact, an old site office from a building firm, not
that it bears any resemblance to what arrived off the back of a
lorry at the end of January.
In the space of just two months a
rather damp, grubby shack has been transformed in a bright, clean
and extremely well stocked store.
Volunteers helped replace the floor
and roof, and there were plenty of hands to add a lick of bright
paint inside and out.
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| Malcolm Ward |
Malcolm Ward, the chairman of the
Blunsdon Shop committee says that success of the project was due
to the strength of the committee and he too was delighted to see
so many people from the village at the shop's official opening.
"When the last shop shut it
took the heart out of the village and there was no gathering of
people like you see today. And this is absolutely fantastic!"
Malcolm says that the shop now needs
all the support it can get - including volunteers to help run the
shop on a day to day basis along with a steady flow of customers."
"We now have to get across the
point that people have to keep coming here, that they've got to
keep supporting the shop and buying the produce in order to keep
the shop open," he says.
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| Blunsdon Village Shop |
The shop sells pretty well everything
you'd expect for a store of its size. The committee went to their
larders to draw up a list of provisions and according to Julie,
those villagers who've called in have been surprised to see the
variety of goods available.
"Customers have been very complimentary
about the range of goods on offer and it has been commented that
the shop seems bigger once inside.
And looking to the future, Julie
says: "We are a community enterprise for the benefit of the
village. Once we have paid back our loans, the profits will go back
into supporting other village ventures."
The project hasn't come cheap - despite
the offers of practical help, the shop has cost around £34,000,
£4000 coming from the villagers themselves
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| Your village needs you: volunteers
help out at Blunsdon's new community shop. |
The balance was found from a number
of sources, including Cooperative Futures, which, through its coordinator,
Jane Ryall, worked with the Blunsdon committee, helping the team
locate a number of funds and resources.
Jane recalls: "I met this group
very early on to help them through the process of finding partner
organisations which could help with funding and resources, such
as Vital Villages, Blunsdon Parish Council and the Oxford and Swindon
Co-op."
And Jane is kept pretty busy in the
county: "I have an enquiry about every other month of a shop
that is closing in Wiltshire; the rate of village shop closure in
is quite high," she says.
"Blunsdon has now joined two
other community run shops in Wiltshire and I think the more there
are, the more support and knowledge there is to be shared."
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