Summer initiative aims to collect 18,600 lbs of food to address 'dire' situation at Cambridge Food Bank
CBC
A group called the Cambridge Food Drive Initiative hopes to collect 18,600 pounds of food through several events this summer to help support people facing food insecurity.
Jamie Colwell, co-founder of the group, said the need for services at the Cambridge Food Bank continues to grow, adding that with increased costs of food and housing, there are "people around us that are drowning in this storm."
Colwell helped to launch the food drive initiative in 2022 while serving as a volunteer for the Cambridge Food Bank.
He said the situation has grown progressively worse over the years.
"The current situation at the Cambridge Food Bank is dire," he told CBC News.
"It's been increasingly getting more and more [concerning] since our initial inaugural event in 2022 where they saw the biggest spike of food insecurity, and it's grown year over year."
He said even people with dual incomes are "choosing between keeping a roof over their head or putting food on the table."
According to a recent Food Banks Canada report, Canada's official poverty rate doesn't tell the full story of hunger and food insecurity in the country.
Experts estimate 25 per cent of Canadians are living at a poverty level living standard, compared to the official poverty rate of 10 per cent, according to the report.
The report says 30 per cent of 18 to 30-year-olds, 44.5 per cent single parent households and 42 per cent of renters can't afford two or more household essentials.
Colwell said summer is traditionally a difficult time for food bank donations.
"It is a difficult time for many reasons. One, you have your kids out of school, we have people that are away, so food drives are not top-of-mind," he said.
"It is at the top of mind once you get back to school in September leading into fall and winter months and then obviously leading into the beginning of the following year," he added.
"'[But] there's still people that are continually needing support throughout the summer and leading into back-to-school and this is one of the biggest challenges because their supplies are getting so short right now … so we saw it as almost a sense of urgency, and it's been a sense of urgency every summer to see what we can do to support our community," he added.