top of page

Publican Visits Downing Street To Highlight the Important Role of Pubs in Supporting Local Communities

ree

Publican Rhiannon Metters from The Halfway in Tal-y-Coed, Wales, visited 10 Downing Street this week talking with Prime Minister Kier Starmer to highlight the vital role that pubs play in supporting local communities. 

 

The Halfway joined five other artisan food producers and creative retailers for a Christmas market-style showcase hosted by the Prime Minister ahead of Small Business Saturday. The event was celebrating small firms, frontline workers and community champions and included the annual Christmas lights switch-on.

 

Rhiannon, along with her son Ben, hosted a Christmas stall inside the Prime Minister’s residence showcasing the activities that the pub hosts to bring people together in this isolated rural community. 

 

She chatted with him highlighting the important impact the pub has on community cohesion and helping local people to overcome loneliness and social isolation.

 

As the hub of this rural area, where many residents, including farmers, live and work alone, The Halfway provides essential opportunities for social interaction. With support from Pub is The Hub, the pub has opened a village store and a community marquee.

 

The village store has proved so popular that its range of products have been expanded to support more than 15 other local businesses that supply items such as flowers, butter and local chocolate – all from within 10 miles of the pub. 

 

The marquee has become a vibrant space for social connection, hosting creative workshops such as chunky knitting, lino printing, wreath-making, and even CPR and defibrillator training to ensure locals can use the pub’s life-saving equipment. 

 

Rhiannon Metters said: “It has been a fantastic experience to attend this Small Business Showcase and highlight the important role that pubs have in bringing people together and creating human connections.

 

“From a pint by the fire to wreath-making in the marquee, from the village shop to live music and shared skills, everything we do is about bringing people together, tackling loneliness and social isolation, supporting local makers and giving our little corner of Monmouthshire a place to gather, laugh, learn and belong.”

 

Image:

 

Publican Rhiannon Metters presents Prime Minister Kier Starmer with a Pub is The Hub apron at Downing Street. (Left to right: Rhiannon Metters, PM Kier Starmer and Victoria Starmer)

 

Editor’s Notes

 

Pub is The Hub is a not-for-profit organisation, which offers independent specialist advice to publicans on rural services diversification and activities so they can provide social value at the heart of their community. 

 

With a proven track record of rural project development and delivery over the last 24 years, Pub is The Hub has worked with great publicans to open shops, libraries, cafes, community cinemas, allotments, play areas and much more. Since 2013, the organisation has also been able to offer small grants through its Community Services Fund.

 

Pub is The Hub has helped over 600 pubs diversify, with more than 200 of these benefitting from help through the Community Services Fund.

 

Building on its community services work in 2019 Pub is The Hub conceived its ‘Join Inn – Last Orders for Loneliness’ campaign. ‘Join Inn’, specifically looks to support publicans and their communities to become better connected, helping local people feel less isolated and, in the process helping to alleviate loneliness.

 

Twitter: @PubistheHub_uk



Third-party news items that are posted on the Guild website come from press releases and emails received by the Guild. These are posted as they have been received. Their publication on the Guild website is an informational service only and is neither an endorsement of the content, nor its sender, by the Guild. For enquiries, please use the contact details that can be found at the bottom of each post.

Comments


© British Guild of Beer Writers

Guild of Beer Writers Limited is a company registered in England and Wales

Registration number 10214210

bottom of page