How an East Hants non-profit group keeps residents bundled up for winter - Action News
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Nova Scotia

How an East Hants non-profit group keeps residents bundled up for winter

An non-profit group in East Hants helps residents stay warm by collecting winter coats from all communities in the municipality to give away to residents who need them.

Organization gives away more than 150 clothing items at event on Saturday

Woman with glasses stands beside rack of coats.
Catherine Miller stands beside some of the coats that her organization helped collect. (Meig Campbell/CBC)

Catherine Miller realized there was a need to provide for her community in East Hantswhen her granddaughters' teachers asked for winter coats for some students.

Years later, Miller heads the Community Offering Assistance Together Association,or COAT. She says itsmandate is to provide winter clothing for those who need it.

"It wasn't really ever a planned thing," Miller said. "Every year, word got out and it grew a little bit more and it grew a little bit more. I did it out of our basement in the house for quite a while. It's way, way beyond that."

Hundreds of East Hants residents have donated winter coats, snow pants, hats and mittens at different locations in the municipality, including at food banks and community centres. Since September, they have collected over 700 donated clothingitems and distributed them around the municipality.

Miller and volunteers bring a portion of these donationsto the Nova Centre in Elmsdale to host the Big Giveevent. This year's event, held Saturday, allowed community members to retrieve what they need for themselves or family members at no cost.

Whatever is left from the giveaway is donated to food banks and charity organizations in the municipality.

Miller saidthe work removes some of the financial pressure households have been facing due to rising costs.

"If you can get a coat that you need that you don't have to go out and pay $100 for, that's $100 more groceries you can buy or $100 more you have to put towards a child's hockey or dance," said Miller.

Miller saidthe clothing giveawayalso served to keepsecond-hand clothesout oflandfills.

The Nova Centre, which was a former school in Elmsdale, has been the primary location of the Big Give event for the last four years.

Miller saidduring last year's event, theyused old classrooms and hallways to display their largecollectionof donated clothing items.

"As long as we had a facility other than Cathy's basement, we could collect them, make sure the zippers work, make sure they were clean, and then offer them to the community to come and choose for themselves," said Norma MacIntyre, the organization's secretary.

On Saturday, the associationhadto share itsmain facility with Elections Nova Scotia where voters filtered in and out of the Hants East returning office.

Two signs on a black door
The coat giveaway shared the same building as the Hants East returning office. (Meig Campbell/CBC)

Although this limited theeventto one room, Miller saidit did not deter the organization from giving away over 150 winter coats and clothing items to people.

"So much can be done with so little," said Miller.