Keep up to date with everything IIB, sign up to our mailing list

Thank you for signing up to our mailing list.

Please fill out all required fields

First Name

Last Name

Email

Fax

NOAH Enterprise awarded 2017 Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service

Back to all news

NOAH won Queen's award

When Bedfordshire’s Lord Lieutenant Helen Nellis presented the prestigious Queen’s Award for Voluntary Service to NOAH Enterprise last week, it was fitting that two of the charity’s most staunch supporters were on hand to receive the framed citation and accompanying crystal sculpture.

Grandmother of three Phyllis Pinney has volunteered since the organisation began 30 years ago. She said: 

“I feel very proud and privileged to be part of this project and it’s wonderful to work for NOAH.

It’s not easy providing services 365 days of the year but it certainly provides us with the feel good factor.”

NOAH takes a holistic approach to homelessness and exclusion and they encourage people to make use of as many areas of NOAH as necessary to enable them to reach their potential.

Jane Lipman has been with NOAH for 13 years. The softly spoken mother–of–two has a particular affinity with NOAH’s service users because she herself was homeless for a brief period. She works mainly in the kitchen although she also spends time talking to the people who come for meals and listening to their stories. She said: 

“It can be very sad but it’s very rewarding work. I try to give them words of encouragement, to say everyone deserves to fulfil their potential.

”The Lord Lieutenant described the award as ‘the equivalent of an MBE for volunteers.”

NOAH has supported 664 people in the past year in its day centre – comprising 22,916 visits with an average of 83 people a day – as well as serving 16,413 lunches, 5,669 breakfasts and 9,118 evening soups. The charity has also provided 730 night shelter bed spaces.

Chief executive Jim O’Connor said: 

“I’m thrilled for this recognition for our 300 volunteers who do so much to enable NOAH to help those who are homeless, sleeping rough or otherwise destitute. This is done so generously in so many ways, whether it’s by preparing and serving meals in our centre, assisting in our charity shops, helping provide welfare services or acting as trustees.”

He added: “With our staff team, many volunteers and benefactors, we have come through some tough times to create an organisation that can do some extraordinary things.”

Lord Lieutenant Helen Nellis said: 

“Volunteers are not paid, but what they do is priceless, giving up their precious time to provide friendship and companionship, picking people up, giving them a sense of belonging and worth and showing them with love and compassion that there is a way back to realise their full potential. It’s a beautiful thing to do.”

She said the Queen’s Award, created in 2002 to mark the Golden Jubilee, was the highest honour and recognition the monarch could bestow on volunteer groups in the UK.

See NOAH’s website for more information on the charity’s work.