Chelmsford
Fairtrade Supporters' Events
This page is designed to promote events
that are run by Chelmsford Fairtrade supporters. Fairtrade Fortnight is our
busiest period but activity in a variety of forms take place throughout the
year.
During Fairtrade Fortnight 2008 our supporters held at least 28 events. These
included community organisations, faith
groups, businesses, trade unions, colleges and the university. We also
publicised many others during the year so please bookmark this page if you would
like to find out what is
happening.
CHELMSFORD FAIRTRADE TOWN CAMPAIGN: 23 August from 10am to 5pm
Fairtrade information table and Traidcraft table at Chelmsford Museum.
CHELMSFORD FAIRTRADE TOWN
CAMPAIGN: 4 October Anglia Ruskin University Family Day Traidcraft
Table noon to 3pm.
CHELMSFORD CO-OPERATIVE PARTY CONFERENCE
“Health in the Community - is there a Co-operative Solution?"
Saturday 11 October 2008 10.15 to 2pm Great Baddow Community Centre, Recreation
Ground, Baddow Road, Chelmsford.
£7.50 including lunch, Fairtrade wine and coffee. To reserve your place please
contact chris.fegan@blueyonder.co.uk or telephone 07725 485404. Tell us if you
require a vegetarian meal.
SPEAKERS: Ruth May (Chief Executive Officer Mid Essex Hospitals Trust) “Why we
need a Foundation Hospital in Chelmsford"
Joyce Sweeney (Public Engagement Manager for ECC) "The new approach to patient
and public participation”
Stella Wifa (Finance Manager, South East London Doctors Co-operative) "A Doctors
Co-operative"
There will be ample opportunity for questions and the conference will conclude
with an Open Forum.
CHELMSFORD FAIRTRADE TOWN
CAMPAIGN: 12 October Chelmsford High Street Fairtrade information
table and Traidcraft.ESSEX
FAIRTRADE GROUPS:
6 November 7.30pm Room 3 Christ Church, Meeting of Essex Fairtrade
groups to discuss how to make Essex a Fairtrade County.
CHELMSFORD FAIRTRADE TOWN
CAMPAIGN: 18 November 7.30pm Room 3 Christ Church. Annual General
Meeting.
Thriftwood
School Every Tuesday and Wednesday in term time the
school's coffee shop is open from 10am to 2pm. You can buy Traidcraft products
and much more.
A Few Ideas to Promote Fairtrade
Fairtrade Fairground
What about holding a
Fairtrade Fair in your school on a Friday and call it Fairtrade Friday. Try to
ensure that as many of the lessons that day have some kind of Fairtrade theme
e.g. use Fairtrade sports balls in PE lessons, look at where products come from
and how they are grown in Geography lessons etc. Hold a Fair at lunchtime and
get different year groups to put on different activities to get the whole school
involved. Students could also do a survey at their local supermarket and collate
the information as part of a project on Fairtrade. Look at
www.fairtrade.org.uk/schools for lots more ideas.
Workplaces. Organise a mini-fair in
your office one lunch time. Have some Fairtrade products to sample and a couple
of activities – maybe a quiz – for colleagues to take part in. Organise a coffee
morning.
Get your workplace canteen,
school canteen, or university café to have a Fairtrade day during Fairtrade
Fortnight when they prepare as much as possible with Fairtrade products. This
might help them to switch to more Fairtrade products permanently. Don’t forget
to promote it widely and get as many people as possible to try the Fairtrade
options.
Pot-luck Dinner. Hold a pot-luck dinner
party at your house for your local organisation, with everyone having to bring a
dish using Fairtrade ingredients.
Mothering Sunday and International Women’s Day.
Both
Mothering Sunday on 2 March and International Women’s Day on 8 March,
fall during Fairtrade Fortnight. Why not use these nationally recognised days as
an opportunity to encourage people to think about women rights across the world?
Fairtrade is helping to empower women across the developing world by giving them
their own income and involving them in decision making.
Ask your trade union
branch, workplace or organisation to mark International Women's Day by having a
Fairtrade Tasting.
Hold a stall with suitable
gifts for Mothering Sunday such as chocolate and wine and give people
information about the nearest place they can purchase Fairtrade roses, to ensure
that mothers have a completely Fairtrade Mother’s Day.
Create a Fairtrade
Fortnight display with a Mothering Sunday or an International Women’s Day theme.
There are lots of case studies of women in Fairtrade and posters featuring
female producers.
Make
Mothering Sunday cards with a Fairtrade theme and sell them – you could
use dried Fairtrade rose petals.
Bake a Fairtrade cake for
your mum or wife!
Use a notice board in your
workplace to let colleagues know the nearest place to get Fairtrade chocolates,
wine and roses for Mother’s Day
or International Women's Day gifts.
Use the stories of women in
Fairtrade as part of Mothering Sunday services.
Have a film night in your
home and invite friends round to watch one of the suggested films on the
Fairtrade website with some Fairtrade drinks and snacks.
Competitions. Hold a poster competition
to promote your Fairtrade campaign.
Get people to show their
support of your Fairtrade campaign by making their mark (handprint!) on a sheet
of Fairtrade certified cotton. You can take this round to other events during
Fairtrade Fortnight. Display it somewhere prominent afterwards.
Fashion Show.
The range of Fairtrade
certified cotton clothing and homeware is increasing at a phenomenal rate. There
are currently almost 1,000 products available from baby clothes to school
uniforms. A great way of showcasing these products and having a social event –
possibly a fundraiser – is to hold a fashion show.
Hold your fashion show in the most
unusual place you can think of – but keep it practical. How about a catwalk down
the high street, on a boat or by the canal, or on the steps of the town hall?
Get in touch
with local retailers that sell Fairtrade certified cotton products and get them
to support your event by providing clothing samples – an event like this is a
great advertising opportunity for them. A lot of high street retailers now have
a range of Fairtrade clothing. Look at
www.fairtrade.org.uk/cotton for more details.
Make a night
of it and put on some other entertainment – perhaps a band or a DJ. Make sure
there is a slot for someone to talk about your Fairtrade campaign.
Promoting Your Event.
To create visual impact and
get a good picture for the local papers, how about trying some innovative ways
of representing the FAIRTRADE Mark? Don’t forget that the Mark is a
certification label, and as such it is important to maintain its integrity at
all times so check the resources section for how to use the Mark properly.
Create your own Fairtrade
product costumes – everyone loves to dress up – and go bananas in the high
street.
Create a giant map of the
world and place Fairtrade products in the places they come from, or have a
little quiz and see if participants can correctly place products on the
countries they come from.
Create your own FAIRTRADE
Mark mosaic by downloading a high resolution version of the Mark, getting it
blown up and cut out into squares, which people can hold above their heads for
an aerial photo.
OTHER
IDEAS
The above are only a few
ideas for possible events and activities you could arrange to raise awareness of
Fairtrade during Fairtrade Fortnight and throughout 2008 – there are a whole
host of other ways to engage people and get them to choose Fairtrade.
Have a look at the
Fairtrade Fortnight Action Guide from 2007, which can be read online at the
Fairtrade Foundation's website – there are more ideas in there that might
inspire you. Here are a few to try:
Get
sporty. Don’t forget about Fairtrade
footballs, rugby balls, netballs, volleyballs and basketballs! So why not hold a
sports day with Fairtrade sports balls and refreshments?
Get your football club to
use Fairtrade footballs for their matches during Fairtrade Fortnight; if this is
not possible for the actual match, then suggest a half-time penalty shoot-out.
Fairtrade pledge. Get individuals to pledge
that they will switch one of their regular grocery purchases to Fairtrade e.g.
bananas – you could create a pledge form and collect them to display somewhere
public.
Workplaces that have made a
commitment to use Fairtrade products can enter details on the
Fairtrade at Work
website and receive a pledge form to display in the office.
Fairtrade themed quiz. There is a range of
quiz questions that you can download from the Fairtrade Fortnight resources page
– one set for primary schools, one for secondary schools and one for adults. Use
these for anything from a school quiz to your local pub quiz.
Blind
tastings. There are a few people out there
who are not aware of the great range and quality of Fairtrade products and get
nervous about switching from their usual brand. Put their fears to rest by
offering them the opportunity to do some blind tastings of Fairtrade and non-Fairtrade
products e.g. chocolate, coffee, tea etc. Get a couple of similar priced
Fairtrade and non-Fairtrade products, remove the packaging and ask people to try
them. Create a survey to see which are the most popular – hopefully the
Fairtrade ones will come out on top!
PowerPoint/speaker events. Download the
Fairtrade Fortnight 2008 PowerPoint presentation from the Fairtrade
Foundation's website and use it to introduce Fairtrade to the uninitiated.
Invite speakers from other local organisations who might be able to contribute
to a debate or discussion. Schools can use the Schools PowerPoint on the
Fairtrade Schools website – present it at an assembly during
Fairtrade Fortnight and let the whole school know what you are doing on
Fairtrade.
Supermarket trolley dash. Approach your local
supermarket and arrange a ‘Supermarket Sweep’ trolley dash in which participants
can only pick out products with the FAIRTRADE Mark. This could be really fun and
a good way to engage with the supermarket staff as well as their customers and
help them learn more about where the Fairtrade products are located in store!
LAST
BUT NOT LEAST - ENJOY YOURSELVES

