To date, The Big Issue and Big Issue Foundation staff have supported over 1,600 vendors across the UK and over £400,000 has been dispersed in the form of food vouchers, meter top-ups and other emergency aid to support vendors through this crisis. Not only have The Big Issue staff supported vendors with financial assistance, they have supported them emotionally through this lonely and difficult time.
When the Coronavirus crisis hit the UK, The Big Issue magazine took the decision to safeguard its network of vendors and the public by asking that they stop selling on streets across the whole of the UK with immediate effect on 20th March, for the foreseeable future.
We then rapidly innovated to provide readers with alternative ways to purchase the magazine and support vendors up and down the country in the face of adversity. An urgent appeal was launched asking the public to give to an appeal fund or to subscribe whilst vendors were unable to sell the magazine.
We also launched an app and secured listings in major retailers, including Morrisons, Waitrose, WH Smith, Sainsbury’s, McColl’s and Co-op.
In addition, The Times newspaper group chose The Big Issue Foundation, as one of two recipients of a reader appeal during the crisis. A number of partners have also provided support throughout the crisis in the form of company-wide subscriptions or grant funding including Advent International, Permira, Crisis, Barratt Homes, Veritas Asset Management and many more.
Ritchie, 47, a Big Issue vendor who usually sells outside of M&S in Lincoln, said: “I would of been absolutely up a creek without a paddle without The Big Issue. I was waiting for my benefits coming through when my freezer stopped working. I had to throw all my food in the bin. I would have been in a really desperate situation again without the support and kindness from The Big Issue. It’s amazing what you have been doing and are doingto help out the vendors. It is a fantastic magazine. I love absolutely selling the magazine and I enjoy chatting to the people I meet every day. I can’t wait until we go back to selling.”