'Every week it's gone up for us': Hamilton food banks see rise in number of those needing support
CBC
As the price of groceries continues to climb, food banks in Hamilton say they are noticing an uptick in requests for food assistance and other needs.
"We've seen an increased demand for food, which always rises in the summer historically, but this year, we're seeing that just happening quicker," Shani Doherty, program manager at St. Matthew's House, told CBC Hamilton.
"The food that we purchase, of course, is getting more expensive also."
Food prices have risen by 9.7 per cent in the past year, while shelter costs are up by 7.4 per cent, Statistics Canada reported in May. The cost of living has been climbing at the fastest pace in decades, with Canada's official inflation rate rising at a 6.8 per cent annual pace in April, a new 31-year high.
Meanwhile, a new survey suggests a growing number of Canadians are struggling with the rising cost of food as prices for basics like pasta, bread and meat all soar. The poll from Food Banks Canada indicates hunger and food insecurity are increasing across the country, with lower-income Canadians hit hardest by inflation.
Doherty says St. Matthew's House is a small operation and the clientele is made up mainly of senior citizens.
"It's not the same people that call in every month. Last month, for example, I noticed lots of people that I had never put down on the sheet before," Doherty said.
"Rising rents, rising food costs — that's what we're hearing everywhere. If you're not in affordable housing, you're looking at massive rent increases for new units, and fixed incomes just don't cover it."
It's a similar situation at Stoney Creek Community Food Bank. Interim manager Shirley Vandenberg says the number of people seeking assistance from the organization has "gone up 25 per cent in the last couple of weeks," she said.
"We have definitely noticed that recently there has been a significant increase in the number of clients that are coming and needing our services... Many of these clients will also comment on the cost of food, gas. We have many, many [clients who] usually get rides for somebody else to come.
"Every week it's gone up for us."
Stoney Creek Community Food Bank serves about 160 households per month, but Vandenberg says between Monday and Wednesday of this week, they had already registered 55 households.
"Every single age group gets impacted — from families with children, families with young children, families with grade school children. We have some students who go to either Mohawk College or to McMaster University who are really on tight budgets, who also have registered," Vandenberg said.
"We certainly have senior citizens as well and one of the communities that we do get quite a few of are individuals who got disabled [after a workplace incident] ... We have a significant number of single men who are in that situation."