Well I am losing my livelihood, as I pointed out above - I can't work unless it's at home, and there's not much of that kind of work these days - I just finished my last home job. I earn most of my money from rope-access, and the 16-week job I was on has been canned until further notice after only 4 weeks, so I'm screwed - we can't share accommodation, vans or work facilities, and we can hardly work together effectively, especially if there's a rescue. IRATA thankfully are extending the cards, but this could go on for months and I could easily run out of money before it starts again. So 'homeless' is far more likely than 'holiday home'. Have you seen the TSG's hut? If that's a holiday home then I must be in a playboy's penthouse apartment right now.
But I don't consider this funding a 'loophole', and I'm certainly not crowing about getting it, and I can't see where I have been crowing. What defines a hobby anyway? Not getting paid? Volunteer workers don't get paid either, but they can usually afford to be volunteers or they wouldn't do it. If we'd applied for and won Lottery funding instead would that be morally OK? That fund came from 'donations' from the public who were dreaming of winning a lot of money, and someone probably did. Is that OK? After all, they may have only put £2 in, when someone else paid £50 and won nothing. It's not fair!
All charities have seen a massive drop in donations since the lockdown started, and yet the public managed to find £30 million in one week for the NHS, via that old guy walking around his garden - impressive for him, but £30 million? Why? The NHS is already funded - that money could have gone to the regular charities instead who really need it. I'm not dissing anyone there for donating, but we are clearly not short of money.
It's a moral maze out there, and I doubt any of us feel very sure about how we feel about anything anymore. But I don't feel guilty for this, as I know how much 'work' we do via the club for nothing (at a loss), as opposed to the 'hobby', which also runs at a loss, predictably.