New Start Highland

Inverness-based charity and social enterprise New Start Highland is celebrating its 25th anniversary by starting construction on what will be Scotland’s first Training and Reuse Village.

The £500,000 project, opening soon in Carsegate, Inverness, willfeature pre-loved retail outlets, a bike repair hub, a tool library, a café and a training kitchen. It is expected to create up to 40 new trainee and employment opportunities annually, building on the support New Start Highland offers to over1,500 people each year.

The Training and Reuse Village is a longstanding vision of New Start Highland’s founding chief executive James Dunbar. Against the backdrop of the cost-of-living crisis, and current figures highlighting child poverty, the Village will provide training opportunities for people to gain skills required to find employment.

He said: “New Start Highland was founded 25 years ago to support people experiencing crisis, in many forms, including poverty, homelessness, mental health, social isolation and long-term unemployment. The opening of the Training and Reuse Village represents a pivotal point in our journey, and will provide an environment where people can learn, thrive and build confidence and skills that pave the way to a brighter future. Currently 24% of children in Scotland live in poverty. We need more training opportunities open to parents so they can be supported to lift themselves out of crisis and give their children better lives.

“We are committed to driving meaningful change by providing support services, collaborating with partner organisations, and addressing critical issues such as poverty and homelessness. Beyond this, we strive to foster a cultural shift from disposability to ethical reuse. The New Start Highland Training and Reuse Village is a testament to this mission, made possible by our team and very generous funders, to whom I am deeply grateful.”

Thousands of people have come through New Start Highland’s doors in the past 25 years who have needed help. Over the past year alone the charity has served the local community over 129,000 times.

Patrick Mills, who spent six years serving in the army, came to New Start Highland as a volunteer to work in the upholstery workshop after suffering PTSD. He commented: “I was referred to New Start Highland through the NHS when life had become difficult, and I had nowhere else to turn. I knew going into mainstream employment would not be possible and through the volunteer programme I was able to pick an area to learn and work in at my own pace. Having been previously taught to sew by my mum, I was drawn to upholstery and with the unwavering support of the team, I have now grown my confidence, skills and feel like I have purpose and life has structure again. New Start Highland, and my workshop in particular, is a haven, a place for me to express myself creatively and undoubtedly is at the centre of my improved mental wellbeing. I can now look to the future with positivity and hope, with a goal that one day I will be able to use my experiences to help others on a similar path.”

In 2025 the Randal Charitable Foundation provided significant grant funding for New Start Highland’s Village Project, which will help support the upgrading of the site, so all of the charity’s services can be brought under one roof. This will include the creation of a brand new training café and kitchen, designed to be scalable to support a growing capacity of people facing multiple deprivations in the Scottish Highlands.

Starting out in 2000 by supplying homeware starter packs, New Start Highland steadily grew to supply furniture, employability training and housing support. In 2008 the charity evolved into a social enterprise launching various services including retail, removals, storage, house clearances and fulfilment, which fund its charitable aims of alleviating poverty. Reuse is core to its mission and since inception, it has diverted 10,000 tonnes of furniture from landfill.

To find out how you can get involved with New Start Highland visit here: www.newstarthighland.org

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