A Dorchester school has made a splash in Parliament through its fundraising for lifesaving toilets overseas.

Staff and students at St Osmund’s CE Middle School have completed a challenge to ‘twin’ all 49 toilets in the school through the charity Toilet Twinning.

Now the fundraising goal has been reached, it is hoping West Dorset MP Chris Loder will honour his pledge to twin a toilet in the Palace of Westminster.

Toilet Twinning helps provide safe toilets, clean water and hygiene training for some of the poorest communities in the world.

It invites people in the UK to donate £60 to ‘twin’ their toilet at home and help provide a family latrine overseas. In return they receive a certificate showing their ‘toilet twin’ abroad.

Mr Loder will be attending a celebratory event at the school on Friday, May 12 when students will present him with a certificate to display in a Westminster loo. The event will include a special presentation to The Mayor of Dorchester.

St Osmund’s students have come up with many creative ideas for fundraising – from  non-uniform days to a ‘Love your loo’ Valentine’s Day raffle to which local businesses donated prizes. Youngsters have also held a number of bake sales at school.

School Chaplain Lydia Topp, who introduced the school to Toilet Twinning, said: ‘In February 2022 when our head teacher Saira Sawtell came to me with the idea of toilet twinning. I could have never imagined the journey we would go on.

“We have 49 toilets in school and trying raise just under £3,000 was challenge,  we were mindful of the current cost of living situation and Ukraine appeal over the last year.

“So, we have had to be creative. At the heart of all the fun was an important message for our pupils.

“This project helped our pupils understand to respect the things we may take for granted and bring hope to communities that don't have the same opportunities they have.”

The next step in the school’s Toilet Twinning campaign is to try to persuade other local organisations and groups to twin toilets – in a bid to make Dorchester a Toilet Twinned Town.

Toilet Twinning CEO Lorraine Kingsley said: “St Osmund’s have shown incredible generosity and we’re humbled by the students’ determination to provide life-changing toilets in communities overseas that don’t have them.

“It’s shocking to think that some 1.7 billion people worldwide still don’t have a safe, clean toilet but, thanks to St Osmund’s efforts, yet more families will have the means to keep healthy and ward off disease. For that, we’re truly grateful.”