About Gingerbread | One Parent Families

This organisation was formed when two charities, Gingerbread and One Parent Families, merged. They exist to promote the welfare and independence of lone parents.

One Parent Families|Gingerbread believes they can build a fairer society for all families, in which lone parents and their children are not disadvantaged and do not suffer from poverty, isolation, or social exclusion. [Mission Report]

As someone raised in a one parent family during the late 70’s and 80’s my mother and myself faced a lot of stigma. It seems there is a certain sort of people who just love to blame all the ills of society on people who either chose, or are forced, to raise children alone. Be it increase in drugs, crime or poverty, for some people it is all laid at the foot of the increase in single parent families.

My mother faced a lot of abuse locally, as did I when I was at school. I remember being called names on the street and in the playground on numerous occasion. The worst abuse, I hate to say, came from people who should have known better - intelligent adults. Single parent families were often excluded from tax breaks, or general government legislation.

There is no denying the fact that life was difficult for my Mum, but despite that I had a wonderful and happy childhood.

I support Gingerbread this year, because it is one of the few charities that stand up for the rights of single parents, and their children. They are there for people who are forced or chose to raise children alone. Whether they are lone parents through death, divorce of abandonment or simply chose to raise their children alone, the same level of support is available to them. It is a magnificant support network that is frequently overlooked.

I chose this charity in 2007, and will continue to blog for them in 2008. This is the first time I have utilised the same charity for two years in a row, but it is a charity close to my heart and who were generous with their time in assisting me with this project. It is wonderful when a charity takes an interest in the endeavours of people participating in the blogathon, and for that alone they won my loyalty for another year.

What is your privacy policy?

Both myself and the Blogathon admin team hate spam. So at no point will we use your email to spam, or sell on. Here is the statement from the main site.

We use your email address as your login ID, and to send you emails regarding the Blogathon. For bloggers, this could be important announcements or deadlines. For sponsors, we will send out two reminders to complete your pledge at the site of the appropriate charity.

During the sponsoring process, you can choose whether or not your email is shared with the blogger you are sponsoring. If you choose, it will not be.

When you complete the sponsoring process by donating at the charity’s site, they will likely ask for personal information. These sites have their own privacy policies, and are not bound by the Blogathon privacy policy.

That’s it. We will not sell or share your personal information without your express consent, ever.

Can anyone utilise your themes?

Yes.

All I ask is that people maintain an appropriate credit link in the footer. If you amend the theme extensively then please feel free to amend the credit link to “Based on a theme by Fembat” or similar.

Who do I pay the pledge to?

First of all, no money is passed to either myself or the Blogathon team. All pledges are paid directly to the charity in question - in this particular case One Parent Families.

When pledges do open [sometime in July] you need only enter your information [name, email address etc] and the amount you wish to pledge. On succesful completion of the blogathon you will receive an email from the Blogathon team with details of how you may fulfill your pledge directly with the charity.

Questions

If you have a question not covered here or on the blogathon site please feel free to submit it via the comment link.