20% increase in visits to Canadian food banks over pandemic, report finds
CBC
There was a 20 per cent increase in visits to food banks across Canada during the pandemic, according to a new report from Food Banks Canada.
Waterloo region saw a 26 percent increase in food distribution and a 36 percent increase in food hamper use compared to 2019.
It's the largest increase since the Great Recession in 2008, and organizations are bracing for numbers to spike even more in the months ahead.
The Food Banks Canada HungerCount 2021 report, released on Thursday, suggests conditions are being impacted by the pandemic that saw high housing costs, job losses and rising food costs. Those factors and an anticipated pull-back on government support may worsen conditions, the report suggests.
"It's creating a perfect storm," said Wendi Campbell, CEO of the Food Bank of Waterloo Region,
"We are bracing for what's next. We knew this at the beginning of the pandemic. We knew at some point all of these things were going to really bubble up and it's coming and we need to be prepared as food banks, as partners across our province and across the country," she added.
The report gathered data from more than 4750 food banks and community organizations from all corners of the country, including each province and territory.
The reports main findings include:
The provinces experiencing the largest increases compared to 2019 include:
Campbell said, locally, organizations have worked hard to ensure no one in need gets turned away.
"We were prepared, to some extent, for the pandemic through our innovative food system here in Waterloo Region, through our network of supports and programs that we have [and] through pandemic planning that we had done years prior. It put us in a good situation to to meet that growing need," she said.
The report suggests government support such as the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) helped temporarily flatten some visits.
The report highlights several recommendations to be considered to tackle the increase in demand.
It calls for a national rent support program to help people living with low income. About 67 per cent of current clients live in rental housing and 46 per cent of clients say the cost of housing is their biggest obstacle in affording food.