From the CBC:
“Food banks, already in crisis
mode due to pandemic, are bracing for more visits as cost of living rises”
(Volunteers with the Daily Bread
Food Bank prepare food for distribution at its Toronto warehouse. A new report
from Food Banks Canada showed a 20 per cent increase in visits to food banks in
March 2021 compared to 2019 — the sharpest increase since the 2008 economic
recession.)
Food banks in Canada have seen a
major surge in visits throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, a new report says, with
the high cost of living and ongoing economic disruption threatening to create
countless new clients in the months ahead. The findings are contained in the
newly-released HungerCount 2021 report from Food Banks Canada, which surveyed
almost all of Canada's 4,750-plus food banks and community organizations. It's
the first comprehensive look at food bank usage across the country since before
the COVID-19 pandemic. "We're seeing high food prices, we're seeing high
housing prices, we're seeing an anticipated pullback of government and we're
seeing high unemployment continuing through the COVID pandemic," said
David Armour, CEO of Food Banks Canada. "With
all of these factors, we're seeing … a really high increase in demand and food
banks are bracing for a significant increase in the months to come." The
report highlights how the pandemic has exacerbated hunger in Canada, and
advocates are now calling for a major overhaul of the country's social safety
net to reduce poverty and food insecurity.
Strain especially felt in
large cities
(Neil Hetherington, Daily Bread's
CEO, said Toronto food banks were facing a crisis situation even before the
pandemic and that better social policies are needed to ensure those numbers
don't continue.)
The report says Canadians made
1.3 million visits to food banks in March 2021, a 20.3 per cent increase
compared to March 2019, which is the sharpest rise since the 2008 economic
recession. (Food Banks Canada says it consistently uses March for comparisons
because it is an "unexceptional month, without predictable high- or
low-use patterns.") Food banks in large cities like Toronto were
especially strained, with over a quarter seeing their usage more than double
compared to previous years. Most who
visited did so as a result of pandemic-related unemployment, the report says,
with people from racialized communities making up a large proportion. Meanwhile,
it said food banks in smaller urban centres were more likely to see people with
disabilities and older individuals looking for food. "Much of the increase
can be attributed to a greater number of people requiring more frequent visits
to the food bank because of the combined impacts of low income and rapidly
rising costs of living," the report read.
'Unprecedented increase' Neil Hetherington, CEO of the Daily Bread
Food Bank in Etobicoke, said Toronto food banks saw an even more dramatic
increase in visits than the national average, with 50 per cent more people in
need of food support than before the pandemic. He said this is the first year that there
will be more first-time food bank users in the city than repeat users. "It
is the largest, most unprecedented increase in food bank usage that we've seen
both in Toronto and across the country," Hetherington said. "There
are a lot of new faces to the Toronto food banks and it just speaks to the lack
of resiliency that there is in the community, the lack of affordable housing
and the lack of decent employment." Food Banks Canada says government programs
that provided income and housing support to individuals who lost their jobs or
had their hours reduced when the pandemic struck were helpful in
"flattening the curve" of food bank visits, and likely prevented even
more people from requiring the services of food banks. But most of those programs have now been
eliminated, are in the process of being wound down or have been modified to
provide more targeted support.
Improve social safety net, CEO
says Armour, the CEO of Food Banks Canada, said governments should take
this opportunity to improve existing social policies that target the root
causes of food insecurity — mainly low-incomes, unemployment, housing costs and
poverty. "Our social safety net is broken," he said. "And as we
come out of the pandemic, as we shift our funding and shift our government
attention, we really need to build and modernize a better safety net." The
report calls for the following measures to help reduce poverty and, along with
it, food insecurity:
New support for low-income
renters.
Increase support for low-wage and
unemployed workers, primarily through modernizing the employment insurance (EI)
program.
Consider policies that would
establish a "minimum income floor" for all workers.
Increase supports for low-income
single adults.
Enhance measures to reduce food
insecurity in the North.
^ Food Insecurity is a major problem
throughout Canada and throughout the whole world – especially right now with
ever-increasing prices on basic foodstuffs. More needs to be done by the Local,
State/Provincial and Federal Governments to help feed those in need. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/food-banks-canada-hungercount-report-1.6226965
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