It’s Clean Ltd Supports Launch of IT Recycling Charity in Harrogate

david • 10 December 2024

Reusing IT is a charity that sources and refurbishes IT equipment to support educational and other projects

A new charitable organisation in Harrogate which sources and refurbishes IT equipment for disadvantaged children has received a funding boost from local contract cleaning firm It’s Clean Ltd.


David Whan, MD of It’s Clean Ltd, presented a cheque for £250 to the charity Reusing IT, which is based at Techbuyer on Hornbeam Park.

The donation is part of a £2,500 fund created to mark the 25th anniversary of It’s Clean Ltd, which is also on Hornbeam Park. Donations have already been presented to local charities including Dementia Forward, Martin House Hospice, Time Together, Ripon Men’s Shed, Henshaws and Carers’ Resource.

Ross Cockburn of Reusing IT Harrogate (reusingit.org) said: “We are very grateful to David and his team for choosing to support our new venture with this generous donation.


“By re-using and recycling computers we will support the work of Reusing IT both in the UK and internationally to further children’s education.”

David Whan said: “Reusing IT is an excellent concept that gives refurbished and recycled computer equipment a new lease of life to support a wide variety of educational and community projects.


“I am delighted that It’s Clean Ltd’s anniversary fund has been able to support them as they launch here in Harrogate.” 

by david 1 March 2026
When I hit 60, I didn't want a party. I wanted to do something that would actually matter. So instead of celebrating at home, I flew to Ghana and spent a week volunteering with a charity called Village by Village getting my hands dirty, sitting in open-air classrooms, and meeting some of the warmest, most resilient people I have ever encountered anywhere in the world. This is what I found there, and why I think you should know about it. The Charity Village by Village was founded by an old school friend of mine and has, over the years, evolved into something beautifully self-sustaining: it is now predominantly run by Ghanaians in Ghana. That is not an accident, it is central to the charity's entire philosophy. The approach is simple and powerful. Before a single brick is laid, the charity asks the village what they need, and what they can contribute. There is no imposition, no outside organisation deciding what is best for communities they don't understand. The result is genuine local ownership, stronger outcomes, and projects that endure long after the volunteers have gone home. The work focuses on two areas: education and healthcare. In the remote villages of Ghana that the government's budget cannot reach, Village by Village builds schools and medical centres from the ground up and then keeps them supported. What a Volunteer Week Actually Looks Like I'll be honest: I wasn't sure what to expect. What I got was a genuinely physical, genuinely meaningful week that I will never forget. Most mornings began on a building site, mixing cement alongside professional local builders, plastering walls, shifting materials. I wore a bright pink polo shirt bearing the logo of my company, It's Clean, which helped fund the trip, and I got absolutely filthy in it. There is something grounding about hard physical labour in service of something real. There were also two young men — just finished their A-levels — who were wrapping up three months of volunteering. In that time they had helped build playgrounds and medical facilities with their own hands. Their energy, their commitment, and what they had achieved at their age was genuinely extraordinary.
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