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Britons turn to ‘warm banks’ to keep out the cold since they cannot afford heating bills

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Every morning on her days off, Mary Obomese wraps up in her winter coat and heads to
Woolwich Centre Library in southeast London, where she spends two hours on the computer and keeps herself warm.

The 52-year-old, who works as a healthcare assistant in Britain’s National Health Service (NHS), is among those who are turning to ‘warm banks’ – designated spaces where people can go if they cannot afford to turn on their heating at home.

The war in Ukraine has pushed natural gas prices up sharply, exacerbating a cost-of living crisis in Britain, where inflation rates are among the highest in the developed world.

Obomese, who lives in a council flat and earns about 1,500
pounds ($1,828) per month, is the main earner in her family,
with her two children still in education and her husband working
as a freelance journalist.

The family has been operating an ‘on-off’ system with their
heating, turning it on in the mornings and then off for most of
the day, then intermittently in the evenings when the children
return from school and university. When they get cold, Obomese
said, they wrap up in their coats or sit on the sofa with
blankets.

Obomese’s family is in the 4% of Britons who reported being
behind on their energy bills, according to a December survey of
more than 2,500 individuals by the Office of National Statistics
(ONS). The family had to defer last month’s payments and are
fearful they will have to do the same again this month.

CHRISTMAS STRUGGLES

“It’s really hard to see them like ‘but mummy, I’m cold, I’m
cold,'” Obomese said, speaking during a cold snap that led to
heavy snowfall and freezing temperatures.

She said she now uses a whistling kettle instead of an
electric one, in order to keep costs down, and keeps hot water
for coffee in a flask after boiling, to avoid heating the water
again.

Even though warm banks are providing a refuge for those
otherwise trapped in cold homes, library manager Amy Jackson
says there is still a stigma attached to using them.

“I think a lot of people are kind of, unfortunately,
embarrassed and a bit ashamed to admit that they’re struggling
sometimes,” Jackson said. “So promoting our clubs and our warm
spaces as different things really kind of makes it more
approachable for them.”

She added that it was “such a shame that warm banks actually have to exist in this day and age,” and that the service was being used by a wide range of people, including people sleeping rough.

Many Britons have also been struggling to afford basic necessities, with the prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages rising at the fastest rate since 1977 in the 12 months to October.

Obomese said her family had survived on just rice and pasta
earlier this year after they ran out of money to buy food, with
her children asking, “mummy, how can we be like this when we are
in the UK?”

Her main concern now is whether the family will be able to
afford Christmas presents, with her daughter’s birthday also
falling on Christmas Day.

“We will see. The week is not ended yet, so we will see,”
she said, wiping away tears.

(REUTERS)

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