º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

North East business life: charity and community events of the week

Companies featuring in this week's round-up include Barratt and David Wilson Homes North East, Opencast, Essity and the Tyneside Cinema

Members of the Opencast team at Army Headquarters North, Albemarle Barracks, Northumberland, at the recent Army Business Challenge Day(Image: Opencast)

North East technology consultancy Opencast is to host an event exploring how businesses can benefit from unlocking the potential of military veterans.

Byker-headquartered Opencast will host Military to civilian career switches: how we can all benefit, at Hoults Yard on March 18. A live audience of employers and military veterans will join a panel discussion and an interactive breakout session. The panel will include Ammar Mirza, executive chairman of the AmmarM Group and Honorary Colonel of 101 Regiment Royal Artillery; Ben Read, founder and CEO, Redeployable; Richard Handley, client leadership director, Opencast; and Louise Kennedy, founder and managing director at Oculus HR.

Richard Handley, Opencast’s client relationship director and a former captain in the Royal Artillery, said: “Our event is aimed at both companies thinking about employing ex-services personnel and also military veterans looking to meet regional employers. Throughout the event our focus will be on the benefits of employing veterans but also how to break down the barriers to make it simpler for ex-services people to enter the civilian workforce.”

The panel, taking place from 2.30pm to 6pm next Tuesday, will be moderated by Opencast’s chief people officer Cate Kalson.

Toilet rolls are the most-requested non-food item from non-profit organisations(Image: In Kind Direct)

Hygiene and health business Essity, which has a factory in Prudhoe, has announced its most impactful year yet in product donations as part of its mission to tackle hygiene poverty in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. In collaboration with charity partner In Kind Direct, Essity donated over 5.5m essential hygiene products in 2024, supporting more than 3,322 charitable organisations nationwide. Donation milestones from 2024 include donating more than 1m toilet rolls, helping support 62,500 families for a month; donating over 4m Bodyform period pads and distributing over 19,000 units of period underwear.

Essity said it is dedicated to making a difference in the regions where it operates and charities near its mills and offices have directly benefited from these efforts, including 13 charities within 10 miles of its Prudhoe mill.

Gareth Lucy, communications director at Essity, said: “We’re incredibly proud of the impact we’ve made this year, but it’s about more than just the numbers. Behind every donation is a person whose life is made a little easier, whether that’s a parent struggling to afford essentials, a young person accessing period products with dignity, or a charity able to offer better support to its community.”

Nic Greenan, chief executive of Tyneside Cinema in Newcastle

A project created to nurture the North East’s young film and music-making talent has received a £75,000 funding boost.