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Trustee of The Independent’s campaign charity partner awarded OBE in Queen’s Birthday Honours List

Jane Byam Shaw from The Felix Project says work providing food to struggling communities ‘needed more than ever’

David Cohen
Wednesday 01 June 2022 17:36 EDT
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Jane Byam Shaw has received an OBE in the 2022 Queen’s birthday honours
Jane Byam Shaw has received an OBE in the 2022 Queen’s birthday honours (Gary Hamill / The Felix Project)

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A trustee of the Felix Project charity, The Independent’s Help the Hungry campaign partner, has been recognised in the Queen’s birthday 2022 honours list.

Jane Byam Shaw has been awarded an OBE for services to the community in London, an acknowledgement of the contribution made by her and the Felix Project to supplying food to the capital’s struggling communities during the Covid crisis.

Last year, it supplied the equivalent of 30 million meals to 1,000 frontline charities and food hubs, becoming London’s largest food redistribution charity, and this year they are on track to deliver 40 million meals.

Founded in 2016 by Justin Byam Shaw, in honour of his and Jane’s son, Felix, who died suddenly from meningitis in 2014 aged 14, the Felix Project sought to use staggering food surpluses in London to tackle food poverty, transforming an environmental problem into a social solution.

It was backed in 2020 by The Independent’s award-winning Help the Hungry campaign in partnership with our sister paper the Evening Standard, which helped the Felix Project raise an extraordinary £12m and led to a quadrupling of its food redistribution.

In six years, the charity has expanded exponentially from just one employee and one van at a tiny depot in West London to an operation with four large depots, 50 vans and 4,000 volunteers. Currently, 750 charities are on a waiting list for Felix food, showing the extent of need in the capital.

Jane Byam Shaw OBE said: “It’s a privilege to have had the opportunity to build this wonderful charity where staff and volunteers work towards our vision of a London where good food is never wasted and nobody goes hungry. With Londoners struggling to feed their families, we are needed now more than ever.”

Justin Byam Shaw added: “This award recognises the huge contribution the Felix Project has made in response to the growing hunger crises. Jane has been a leading part of our extraordinary story and we couldn’t have achieved what we have without her.

“On a personal note, I know how much courage she has shown to create such overwhelming public good from our family’s tragedy.”

Charlotte Hill, chief executive of the Felix Project, said: “The Felix Project will play its part in the cost of living crisis with the same energy as we did the Covid crisis. We are proud to see Jane recognised with this award; she is the heart and soul of our project and, together with Justin, has provided inspiring leadership and vision to us all.”

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