Charity gets no places in junior Great North Run

Jim ScottIn Newcastle
BBC/JIM SCOTT Five people wearing red hoodies, with white printed words that say Red Sky Foundation, are standing on a bricked road on Newcastle's quayside. Two women, and one man wearing black rimmed glasses, are looking unhappy, while two children, a young girl and boy, are also upset. In the background is the Newcastle Gateshead Tyne Bridge and Swing Bridge.BBC/JIM SCOTT
Parents say they are disappointed no places have been offered in the runs

A charity allocated no places in this year's Junior & Mini Great North Run, when it usually gets up to 400, said it was "heartbreaking" having to tell hundreds of children they could not take part.

Sunderland-based Red Sky Foundation, which supports young people and adults with complex heart conditions, said it now felt "excluded" from the 1.5km (0.75 miles) and 4km (2.48 miles) events.

The Great Run Company (GRC) said no charity was excluded, or banned, from its events and said demand this year had been the "biggest we've ever seen".

"Each year we work positively and constructively with over 900 charity partners across the Great North Run weekend," it said.

Places for the runs are allocated either on an individual basis or in blocks assigned to charities.

GRC said the Red Sky Foundation had asked for 400 places for this year's junior and mini events, which was "turned down", but said it had not received any further request for places from the charity.

The charity insists it was told it would not be offered any places for those events.

The Red Sky Foundation said by the time discussions concluded, it had been too late for runners wanting to support the charity to apply as individuals.

"It came as a devastating shock to us," chief executive Sergio Petrucci said. "It seems incomprehensible why that opportunity be taken away from us."

BBC/Jim Scott Beth Graham, who is wearing a red hoodie with white Red Sky Foundation lettering, along with her daughter, Heidi, who is also wearing the same hoodie, are on the Newcastle Quayside. Behind them can be seen the Tyne Bridge to one side and The Glasshouse International Centre for Music to the other, on the Gateshead side of the River Tyne.BBC/Jim Scott
Beth Graham said her daughter, Heidi, hoped to take part in the seven-year-old's first ever Great North Run event in September

Petrucci, who founded the charity after his daughter had life-saving heart surgery, said the children had been looking forward to the event.

"I truly am heartbroken for them," he said. "The feedback from their parents, schoolteachers and coaches is devastating."

Beth Graham, from Fulwell, whose seven-year-old daughter Heidi had planned to run for the charity for the first time this year, said she had "always wanted to do it".

"We were really disappointed," she said. "I had been building it up because her friends and cousins had done it previous years."

Petrucci said the charity was told complaints had been made about its participation in previous years and that it was too "big".

He had asked GRC what the charity had done wrong and how it could resolve the issues in the future, but the run organiser said it could not give further information without revealing the identities of complainants, he said.

The company said the complaints related to the charity's conduct during its "activation" in the event village at the Junior & Mini Great North Run in 2024 and 2025.

The BBC understands activations include charities playing music, putting up banners and handing out merchandise from an allocated space, and understands the complaints relate to the noise and scale of the charity at the events.

PA Media Runners in the Great North Run in 2024. Men and women wearing a variety of colourful tops and vests, running on a road.PA Media
The junior and mini events are usually held the day before the main Great North Run

Joseph, 10, and from Newcastle, has completed the junior event twice before and said he did it because he has "a good heart" and was sad he could not take part in the 2026 run

"I really like doing good things for Red Sky and it's really a big shame," he said.

Petrucci said he hoped to be able to work with GRC for the 2027 event.

GRC said there were a number of factors that determined the number of charity places available and both events had "sold out in just a few weeks, six months earlier than last year".

"We are actively exploring options to increase the event capacity in the future," a spokesperson said.

"Whilst the Red Sky Foundation do not have any official charity places for the 2026 Junior & Mini Great North Run, anyone with a place can still raise funds for them or another cause close to their hearts."

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