Mum and baby charity closing after funding cut

A mother and baby charity which has helped 700 families, including homeless mums and their children, is shutting down because of cuts to its funding.
Blossom and Bloom runs two hubs in the White Rose Centre in Rhyl, Denbighshire, to help with support and socialising as well as training and education.
Vicky Welsman-Millard, who founded the organisation in 2020, said the "devastating" closure next month came after the local authority said it would not be giving it any money from the UK government's Shared Prosperity Fund (UKSPF).
Denbighshire council said it had to reduce the amount given to all projects due to a "significant reduction in available funding".
One woman who turned to the charity in 2023 after she became homeless with a baby and a toddler said Blossom and Bloom "literally saved" her.
Eloise Garland, 30, who now lives in Llandudno, Conwy county, said the organisation "supported her in so many different ways", including her wellbeing, with her children and to find housing.
She said it was "heart breaking" to think the facility where she made so many friends and found a "support network" was closing.
"The impact they have on parents is so great... they take a lot of pressure off other services," she added.

Sarah Jones-Wallace, 27, from Denbigh, said finding Blossom and Bloom when she was "struggling and isolated" at home with her newborn had been the "best thing ever to have happened".
"I found the hub, and they said 'come in, have a cup of tea' and I never looked back."
Now a trustee of the charity, Ms Jones-Wallace said she could not put into words how "vital" it was and she "wouldn't be here" without it.
"I would hate to think of a mum in my position not having a place like this to go."

Cerys McCormick, 25, said her son Albie was just two weeks old when she started getting help after feeling "really low".
She said getting advice from other mums and seeing they all shared the same worries was "reassuring".
"[The staff] have all been mums as well," she added.
"They know what you are going through."

Five years ago Ms Welsman-Millard said she saw the "real need" for the charity after she offered accommodation to some homeless mums in Rhyl.
Many more began asking for support and the organisation grew rapidly, offering a place any mother could come to with her baby or young child, and find practical support and a listening ear.
But she said the funding challenges faced by all third sector organisations had caught up with them.
The charity has relied on Levelling Up funding from the UKSPF for the past three years.
"Being a relatively newly established charity, we don't have any reserves," she said.
"We do receive funding from other sources as well, but it just doesn't cover the main core services."

Ms Welsman-Millard said it costs about £100,000 a year to keep the premises running and pay staff.
"If you apply that... across every family that we are supporting, it's not a lot at all for the impact we are making," she said.
"What Blossom and Bloom means to the families that engage with us is that it's a second home, somewhere they know they can get out of the house and come to."
She said she feared the loss of the support they offer would have a "detrimental impact on the mental health of the parenting community".

Blossom and Bloom is set to close on 30 May when six paid members of staff, along with six volunteers, will lose their jobs.
The council said the UKSPF money for Blossom and Bloom was "time-limited due to the nature of the funding".
It added that in spite of the reduction in Levelling Up funding it had been given, there would be "key funds" available that third sector organisations could apply for.
"We recognise it is very challenging to run a charity or community group these days and the council recognises the commitment of the operators of charities and community groups such as Blossom and Bloom," it added.