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Bank Matches Staff Donation To The Needy


It began with a simple plea from Anthea Cox, vice president of human resources at Commonwealth Bank – let’s reach into our own pockets and raise funds to make life a little brighter for the less fortunate. The idea caught on and staff donations poured in.

Executive management threw out a challenge-raise a minimum of $5,500 — $10 per person for every single employee in the Commonwealth Bank family — and we will match whatever you raise. By the time it was over, an idea born out of wanting to help the less fortunate had turned into a reality, raising $11,200, enough to help The Salvation Army and Great Commission Ministries feed hundreds of people and provide food packages to go.

Each organization received a cheque for $5,600.

“We think of hunger as something that exists in far-off places, but the tragedy is that it exists right here in our midst where it is too easy to overlook or ignore,” said Mrs. Cox.

“When we were going into the holidays with visions of heaping plates of turkey and ham and all the trimmings, some of us kept thinking, what about all those people who will go to bed hungry? We just wanted to help and we knew organizations like The Salvation Army and Great Commission Ministries have been feeding these people for many, many years. We wanted to make sure they knew people cared enough to help.”

It’s been estimated that 900 people a day in New Providence would go hungry if it were not for The Salvation Army, Great Commission Ministries, Bahamas Red Cross and other feeding programs through churches, soup kitchens and even the kindness of individuals who serve food from their own home without fanfare. In December, the extent of hunger in The Bahamas was made more poignant by the creation of the Bahamas National Feeding Network, a network of some 14 non-governmental organisations dedicated to feeding the hungry.

“We are extremely grateful to Commonwealth Bank for its ongoing generosity,” said Major Lester Ferguson, Divisional Commander. “This has been a very rough year and often the hot meal that many of these people get at our Mackey Street or Bain Town facilities is their only meal of the day so these funds will go a very long way.”

The bank with branches in New Providence, Grand Bahama and Abaco is known for its corporate social responsibility with most of its contributions going toward education and youth development.

Diane Phillips and Associates

Captions:
Commonwealth Bank with the Uncommon Touch – Commonwealth Bank staff members reached into their own pockets to raise funds to help organisations like Great Commission Ministries feed those who are less fortunate. The bank issued a challenge – raise a minimum of $5,500 and we’ll match it. Staff rose to the challenge and here Tanya Astwood, left, of the human relations department, and Carole Rodgers, Vice President, Internal Audit, right, present $5,600 to Maxine Bethel, Great Commission Ministries.

From our hearts to your hands to feed the hungry – Commonwealth Bank’s Tameka Cooke, left, Employee Relations, and Charles Knowles, Vice President and Chief Information Officer, far right, present cheque for $5,600 to Major Lester Ferguson, Divisional Commander, The Salvation Army. The bank matched funds raised by staff members, netting a total of $11,200 to organisations dedicated to
ending hunger.

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