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Mutual Aid Groups give communities power to help each other through COVID-19

More than 900 groups have been set up since the weekend, showing how “people are pulling together” to help people in self-isolation

Covid-19 Mutual Aid Group

The coronavirus pandemic has empowered communities to pull together as the Mutual Aid Group movement has exploded across the country since the weekend.

More than 900 community groups have been set up through Facebook since the weekend, with more being added by the hour, with national group COVID-19 Mutual Aid UK keeping track of them all.

Anyone can set a group up, creating a platform for people to help others locally, whether it be for people to help others who are self-isolating to get food by going shopping or any number of other needs.

Jamie Potter is part of the grassroots movement and set up the Hull Covid-19 Mutual Aid group on Facebook on Sunday. He saw more than 400 people join up in the first 24 hours and now almost 1,300 people have pledged their support at the time of writing.

Jamie insists that the city-wide group he has set up has already spawned more direct help locally and has also been able to tackle issues like the impact of panic buying in supermarkets.

“The reaction has been really positive. I’m quite impressed with how quickly it’s grown,” said 33-year-old Jamie, who works in marketing. “We got nearly 400 members in the first day and people are starting to make their own contributions and starting to generate their own activity. It’s really encouraging to see.

“People are also starting up more specific hyperlocal WhatsApp groups that are related to streets and neighbourhoods because my group is for the whole entire city.

“On a local level, they are distributing flyers with contact numbers on for people who are happy to make themselves available to help others.

“We know that there has been a shortage of bottled milk for babies in the supermarkets so one member has even offered to share spare breast milk for any mother who gets caught out. These things are starting to come through now.”

COVID-19 Mutual Aid UK is advising that people keep groups small and use Facebook and WhatsApp communication to ensure that needs can be met quickly.

They are also sharing leaflet templates (here and here) to allow local groups to get word out swiftly.

Anna Vickerstaff, one of the coordinators of the national network, said: “No matter what we look like, where we live, or how much money we have, getting sick reminds us that at our core we’re all just human. And in every country it’s the old, the sick and those already struggling who will be affected worse.

“That’s why we set this network up – because we want to make sure that no one in our communities is being left to face this crisis alone, and because we want to try and redress some of the serious inequalities this outbreak will expose.”

The Government ramped up its response to the virus yesterday, urging people who can work from home to do so as well as advising those aged over 70 years of age should self-isolate for three months to avoid catching the coronavirus.

There has been little indication of the government formally setting up local support groups but Jamie believes that the community-based response through Mutual Aid Groups would have happened either way.

“This shows that people are inherently good. That is something that I believe in and it’s a part of my politics that people should help each other,” he told The Big Issue. “It’s encouraging to see that, in times like this, people do pull together and are willing to go out of their way to help people who may not be in a position to help themselves.

“I think that this has risen out of the vacuum of the Government setting something up more formally. But I also think that people just like to help each other and, if the Government had set something up, this kind of thing would have been happening anyway. It’s part of human nature to want to do that.”

Find your local Mutual Aid Group or how to set one up here

Image: COVID-19 Mutual Aid Group UK

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