• This website uses cookies to improve your experience. You can change your cookie settings at any time. If you keep browsing, then we'll assume you are happy to receive all cookies on the Pennies website.

    To find out more about the cookies
    we use, see our Privacy Policy.

  • Pennies
    The Electronic Charity Box
    • Home
    • The difference we make
      • Charities that benefit
      • How your donations help people out
      • The Entertainer and four children’s hospitals case study
      • Zizzi Restaurants and The Prince’s Trust case study
      • Domino’s Pizza and Special Olympics GB case study
      • St Andrew’s Hospice and the Grimsby and Cleethorpes Community Initiative case study
    • How Pennies works
      • Pennies benefits
      • FAQ
    • Get Involved
      • Where can I donate?
      • Become a Pennies retailer
      • Become a Pennies technology partner
      • Become a recipient charity
      • Spread the word
      • Join the team
      • Press releases
      • News
    • About us
      • Our trustees
      • Our management team
      • Messages of support
      • Supporting organisations
      • Our history
      • Publications
      • Pennies in the press
      • Press office
      • Contact us
    Home » 2012 » April » Your micro-donations help protect the welfare and safety of vulnerable children

    Your micro-donations help protect the welfare and safety of vulnerable children

    By Pennies on April 10, 2012

    As well as providing vital services, many of the charities benefiting from the donations you make through Pennies dedicate their time to raising awareness of important issues.

    The NSPCC is one of the charities to share 25% of every donation, which means that every time you decide to give through Pennies you’re helping them provide important services and supporting their campaigns to raise awareness of child welfare. So far, £10,000 has been raised for the NSPCC through Pennies.

    For twenty years, the NSPCC’s helpline service has been a point of call for people worried about the safety or welfare of a child. Callers contact the helpline about a range of concerns, from worries that a parent isn’t coping or noticing a child has been left alone at home for long periods of time.

    However, figures from 2011 showed that over half the people who contacted the NSPCC that year had been worried about a child for at least a month before they made the call. To highlight this and to urge people to trust their instincts, the NSPCC launched a new campaign in March 2012 called ‘Don’t wait until you’re certain’. Part of the campaign is this video, made by the director of Misfits and Skins, Amanda Boyle.

    Supporters can also get involved through a facebook app designed specifically for this campaign.

    The donations you make through Pennies help the NSPCC deliver this campaign and support vital services like the helpline to advise concerned callers. The money raised so far for this charity is equivalent to the cost of helping helpline counsellors make 500 referrals to children’s services. These referrals can potentially protect 1,000 children so next time you decide to give through Pennies, think of the reach your spare change could be having.

    Read more about the NSPCC and the work they do.

    Posted in News | Tagged charities, child welfare, electronic charity box, fundraising, helpline, micro-donations, NSPCC, one million donations, Pennies Foundation, vulnerable children, worried neighbour

    « Previous Next »

    Post Archive

    • May 2013
    • April 2013
    • March 2013
    • February 2013
    • January 2013
    • 2012
    • 2011
    • 2010
    • 2009
    • Follow us on Twitter
    • Join us on Facebook
    • Videos on Youtube
    • Join us on Google+
    • Britain's Most Adored Charities Award
    • Technology 4 Good WINNER
    • BSC
    • imrg supplier member
    • Institute of Fundraising Organisational Member
    • FRSB - Give with confidence

    © 2013 The Pennies Foundation. UK Registered Charity Number 1122489

    • | Sitemap
    • | Privacy policy
    • | Complaints procedure
    • | Terms & conditions