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Mariot said: “Taking part in the choir provides real social and emotional benefits.
“That’s why we’re so grateful for the support we’ve received from Rainbow House, the local community, the global singing community and from the government, to make sure that every choir member can now access our sessions and be supported to gain confidence in getting online.”
Since launching as an independent, non-audition community choir in March 2019, and until Covid struck, the group met on Wednesdays at Tamfourhill Community Hub with a ‘pay what you can afford’ approach, starting from £2-per-week.
During the pandemic, all online provision, including pre-recorded YouTube singing sessions, has been delivered free of charge to choristers and interested members of the public.
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First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, wearing a Tartan face mask during a visit to New Look at Ford Kinaird Retail Park in Edinburgh. PA Photo. Picture date: Friday June 26, 2020. The First Minister viewed some of the changes in shops ahead of the gradual NICOLA Sturgeon will today launch her manifesto for a fourth consecutive SNP term with a vow to increase spending on frontline health services by 20 per cent. The First Minister will commit to an above-inflation £2.5billion rise in spending over the next five years to help the NHS recover and clear backlogs after the Covid pandemic. However the sum is in line with NHS spending in the last five years, when it rose from £12.6bn in 2016/17 to just over £15bn in cash terms by the end of 2020/21.
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of a programme created by Scottish play specialists. The online play sessions were set up by Glasgow-based Licketyspit Theatre Company to tackle social isolation and to support families during lockdown. Around 80% of the families taking part in Big Porridge and Play online are refugees who have given the thumbs up to the games, sing songs and imaginary adventures generated by the programme. The online sessions are a spin-off from the Big Porridge and Play programme created in 2017 for children living in some of the most disadvantaged areas of Glasgow. At the start of lockdown, Licketyspit was one of several organisations to address digital inequality through the Scottish Government’s Wellbeing Fund, BEMIS Scotland, the Good Things Foundation and, latterly, Connecting Scotland, to ensure that digital access was not a barrier to participating. The organisation has distributed more than 100 devices. With around 158 different languages spoken in Glasgow, the virtual play
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