Kelda named Yorkshire’s most responsible business
04/04/2005
Kelda Group plc – owner of Yorkshire Water - was today
(Sunday, April 3) named Yorkshire’s most socially responsible
business and one of the top 50 in the UK.
The company, which over the past three years has donated more
than 650 free water coolers to local primary schools, has climbed
from 86th to 43rd in Business in the Community’s annual
Corporate Responsibility Index – the highest ranking of any
Yorkshire-based business.
The national index, which was launched in 2002, is the
UK’s most comprehensive and robust measure of a
company’s total contribution to society.
Pam Lee, Business in the Community’s Regional Director,
said:
“Kelda has not rested on its laurels. Not content with
achieving a commendable rating in last year’s index, the
company has put continuous improvement at the heart of its
responsible business practice and turned in a first class
performance.”
She added: “It’s little surprise that Business in
the Community is congratulating Kelda only months after the company
was named Utility of the Year, an award that recognises a truly
responsible approach to customers, employees, suppliers and other
stakeholders.”
Yorkshire Water’s Corporate Affairs Manager Richard
Sears said:
“We are delighted to be ranked among the top 50 companies
in the UK for the way we conduct our day-to-day business. Our whole
approach to corporate social responsibility is founded on the
principle that the interests of the environment, customers and
society at large are best served through the efficient, effective
and proper operation of our business.”
“Our Cool Schools campaign is an excellent example of how
we are prepared to go above and beyond our primary role of water
and sewerage provider and fulfil our wider responsibility to
society,” he added.
The company’s Cool Schools campaign was launched in 2002
in response to concerns raised by local health experts that
dehydration was having a damaging effect on children’s mental
and physical wellbeing.
Since its launch, more than 650 mains-fed water coolers have
been given free to more than 350 primary schools in a bid to give
the children ready access to a safe and plentiful supply of water
throughout the academic day.
As well as providing free water coolers, Yorkshire Water has
also developed teaching resource materials and a fun website and
employed a performer who tours schools giving interactive dance
performances to reinforce the campaign’s key messages.
Health experts claim children are suffering from headaches,
fatigue, irritability and poor concentration because schools are
failing to provide them with adequate access to drinking water.
They say it is also causing short and long term kidney and urinary
tract infections.
Almost 250,000 children are so far estimated to have benefited
from Yorkshire Water’s initiative, with teachers reporting a
significant improvement in the behaviour, physical and academic
performance of their pupils.
John Flockton, the headteacher of Newhall Park Primary School
in Bierley, Bradford, where the campaign was launched,
said:
“We think it’s a fantastic initiative. We have four
coolers for children and one for staff. We have volunteer monitors
who take their turn in break times or before school to fill up 20
or 30 bottles. Children have noticed the benefits of drinking water
and are saying ‘I feel better, it’s nice, it’s
tasty. This creates an atmosphere much more conducive to
learning’”
Mary Cooper, a community dietician with the South Leeds
Primary Care Trust, said:
“Two years ago I would be having hour-long conversations
with schools about drinking water but now I go into schools and
it’s the norm that they provide drinking water for children.
Yorkshire Water has played a big part in that.”
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