Southeastern N.B. Companies Look To Cheer People Up
Three businesses in Scoudouc have come together in an effort to offer encouragement during these difficult times.
Three businesses in Scoudouc have come together in an effort to offer encouragement during these difficult times.
The program aims to double the roughly 1,000 children across the province who currently play musical instruments in an orchestra setting in a 15-year vision.
Duke Creative Collective is collecting new or gently used backpacks, along with personal items like socks, toiletries, basic first aid kits, and healthy packaged items.
Bee Me Kidz helps the province’s at-risk elementary school-aged children understand their emotions and cultivate the social skills and strategies for positive mental health to help them throughout their lives.
Tuck Studio is furnishing the space, with the electrical work and construction being done by KV Electric and Manchester Construction.
To change their label for the campaign, Dylan Gaudet of Spicy Boys reached out to Kirsten Paul, an indigenous artist based in St. Mary’s First Nation.
Sankara, an online multicultural marketplace, is making it possible to help India as the country struggles with its Covid-19 outbreak by buying Indian food from a New Brunswick vendor.
Well-known restauranteurs and community volunteers Ken and Holly Singh have endowed a yearly scholarship for a Saint John or Charlotte County area medical student who plans to practice in the region after graduating.
Ocean Steel & Construction has donated a one-year supply of welding supplies and hand tools through an initiative coordinated by Ready Arc Training and Testing.
A group of New Brunswick businesses is steadily working toward its goal of raising $1-million over the course of a decade to improve the lives of the region’s children and families.