Community Impact

Drama group fears closure due to cutbacks

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Simon Dedman/BBC Victoria Jarmyn at JTD ARTSSimon Dedman/BBC

Victoria Jarmyn said the debts at Thurrock Council could “massively” impact her group

A businesswoman is worried she will have to close her performing arts group because of the local council’s bleak financial situation.

JTD ARTS offers classes for children and adults including those with special educational needs.

Victoria Jarmyn said JTD had received council funding for 14 years but had not been promised anything from April.

‘Life skills’

“We’re a bit petrified because we don’t know what’s going to happen,” the 37-year-old told the BBC.

“These adults have been coming here and they have relied on this service and it has helped them integrate within the community to be able to become a lot stronger within society,” she said.

“To take that away has quite a lot of impact on their life skills.”

Ms Jarmyn said her group also receives funding from Active Essex but was worried due to the uncertainty about whether it would still receive money from Thurrock.

Simon Dedman/BBC JTD ARTS at the Thameside complexSimon Dedman/BBC

JTD ARTS offers drama, dance and singing classes at the Thameside complex in Grays

Simon Dedman/BBC (top to bottom) Courtney Lee, Esme Jarmyn-Purvis Melanie Jane-LoveSimon Dedman/BBC

(top to bottom) Courtney Lee, Esme Jarmyn-Purvis and Melanie Jane-Love all told the BBC how much they value the Thameside complex

The group is based at the Thameside theatre complex in Grays which the council has suggested could be sold after a report in 2021 said it cost £500,000 per year to operate and would cost £16m to refurbish.

“The Thameside is basically our second home,” said an emotional Esme Jarmyn-Purvis, who attends the classes.

“If the Thameside goes we don’t know what we would be doing.”

Simon Dedman/BBC Ellie Lee at JTD ARTSSimon Dedman/BBC

Ellie Lee at JTD ARTS said the Thameside theatre offered a safe space

Simon Dedman/BBC Thameside theatre complex in GraysSimon Dedman/BBC

The council said in 2021 that the Thameside complex was surplus to requirements and it could run services without the building

Ellie Lee, a 17-year-old apprentice working at JTD Arts, said: “There’s been a few people I know who have actually got chased and they have run into the theatre and the security have helped them so much and resolved that problem.

“If that theatre isn’t there, where’s our safe space?”

Conservative council leader Mark Coxshall said on Wednesday: “We’ve never said that the Thameside was closing- what we’ve said is we need to relook at that… and saying it’s wasted disposal doesn’t mean we are going to lose our cultural offering.”

Regarding the £8m in savings proposed for 2023-24, including the plan to stop funding for non-statutory youth work in the borough, Mr Coxshall added: “We will be making some savings but I’m not talking about severe cuts and stopping things.”

Simon Dedman/BBC Protest about Thurrock CouncilSimon Dedman/BBC

About 300 protesters gathered outside the Thurrock Council meeting on Wednesday night

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