Homeless charity Streetwork receives 50 all weather coats bought by the council from a not-for-profit outdoor clothing firm
Edinburgh Council have partnered with Livingston’s The Ootsider” to provide 50 sleeping coats for rough sleepers.
The council is the first local authority to partner The Ootsider, which has now provided over 250 Sleeping Coats directly to beneficiaries, or to charities that work with people experioencing homelessness. John Keogh, the Broxburn man behind the company, presented the sleeping coats to staff at The Simon Community which runs Streetwork services for people facing homelessness in the city. It comes as the council said the city “is in the grip of a housing emergency.”
The Ootsider is a Community Interest Company (CIC) that reinvests the profits from its outdoor clothing sales to make and donate the coats for the benefit of rough sleepers. Each coat is individually hand-made and has been made to be multi-functional; working as a coat and a sleeping bag with room inside to change clothes and with a detachable foot section that converts into a bag to store the coat, act as a cushion or hold personal items.
The Ootsider was founded by John after he came across a homeless man with a waterlogged sleeping bag, cold and soaked to the skin begging on the street. He gave the man some food and a hot drink. For wild swimmer John this encounter led him to invent The Ootsider and begin a mission to improve the lives of rough sleepers by providing waterproof, warm, hard-wearing coats to support their health, welfare and dignity whilst on the streets.
Set up as a Community Interest Company, The Ootsider has the freedom to sell the products it makes and to accept donations. No one working for The Ootsider is paid a salary.
John said: “Our aim is to make the highest quality clothing that is most appropriate to its intended user, all of our materials are sourced from UK suppliers and our transport costs are low”.
Over the last year, the reputation of The Ootsider has flourished and interest in the company has spread, also thanks to the help of a loyal band of supporters.
The Ootsider has championed fundraising activities, including ‘Sleep-Oots’ where people sleep rough for one night, become involved in educational initiatives and support to events, particularly those involving wild or cold-water swimming.
Commenting at the presentation of the coats on The Ootsider’s social media pages, the council said: “Edinburgh is in the grip of a Housing Emergency. Close to 5,000 households will spend tonight in temporary accommodation. But rough sleeping is reducing.
“Helped by incredible partner agencies, charities, volunteers and local businesses who work together and reach out to those in urgent need.
“One day we hope to end rough sleeping for good. But until then, we’re very grateful to The Ootsider and Simon Community for helping us to distribute these warm waterproof jackets. Doubling up as sleeping bags, we hope these 50 garments will go some way towards making a difference.”
by Stuart Somerville Local Democracy Reporter
The Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) is a public service news agency. It is funded by the BBC, provided by the local news sector (in Edinburgh that is Reach plc (the publisher behind Edinburgh Live and The Daily Record) and used by many qualifying partners. Local Democracy Reporters cover news about top-tier local authorities and other public service organisations.