COLCHESTER United Football in the Community are celebrating the EFL's Day of Action today.

The Day of Action is a chance for all community schemes to display and celebrate the work that they do within the community.

All 72 clubs from its three divisions have joined together to demonstrate the impact that football has in positively changing people’s lives.

Throughout the Day of Action, club players and managers will join participants in a range of community activities including food bank deliveries, projects to tackle loneliness and mental health, support programmes for refugees and asylum seekers, initiatives for children living in poverty, and disability sports sessions.

Colchester United and their Football in the Community charity partner have played a huge role in helping people, during the Covid-19 pandemic.

The Shrub End-based charity have been assisting the NHS and the local community as much as possible with 35 different community projects continued or started, last year.

Colchester United Football in the Community currently deliver more than 450 hours of provision to 7,500 people, each week.

EFL chairman Rick Parry said: “The way that our Clubs and CCOs have adapted to deal with the challenges of the past year is remarkable, responding to the growing needs of their communities affected by the pandemic while also continuing to deliver critical life-changing programmes in towns and cities across England and Wales to people who need it most.

“The EFL Day of Action gives us a platform to step back and take the time to acknowledge the hard work that our clubs are doing in their communities every day of the year.

“Community work delivered by football clubs is without a doubt one of the key mechanisms in helping to address important societal issues with the aim of building stronger, healthier, active, more cohesive communities.

“It’s great to see all 72 EFL clubs, players, managers, staff and participants come together to highlight the power of football in uniting people and working for the greater good.”

Despite the financial and logistical challenges that EFL Clubs have faced during the last 12 months, community work has remained at the heart of football, withclubs and Club Community Organisations (CCOs) continuing to provide vital support to some of the most vulnerable people living in England and Wales.

The importance of football clubs to their local communities has never been clearer than in the last year, with millions of people across the nation relying on their local club for food donations, mental health and wellbeing support and even transport to and from Covid-19 testing and vaccination sites.

Since March 2020, EFL Clubs have collectively distributed more than 1.4 million food parcels, more than 179,000 items of PPE, 22,000 prescriptions and donated over 2,100 laptops and tablets to people facing technology poverty.

Club staff and their players have had in excess of 527,000 outgoing and incoming conversations with fans and vulnerable people, and more than 600 job opportunities are being delivered for young unemployed people.

There is a real need for clubs to bounce back from the financial implications of the pandemic in order to sustain the delivery of these life-changing community programmes.

Using the power of football, the EFL is able to engage some of the most vulnerable members of society to address important issues in the areas of equalities, diversity and inclusion, education, employment and health and wellbeing.

Every season, EFL Clubs and CCOs provide more than half a million hours of group activity and over 40 million hours of participation.