This week is Hunger Awareness Week in Canada, and so I am providing a bit of background of it and asking again for people to support their local food banks.
In March 2016, 863,492 people received food
from a food bank in Canada. This is 1.3% higher than the same period in 2015,
and 28% higher than in 2008. Of the more
than 800,000 people 36%are children and youth, this was 28% higher than 2008. 8
of 10 provinces saw an increase
Too many Canadians do not have enough income
to pay for rent, bills, clothing for growing children, transportation,
medication – and food. Food is unfortunately one of the most flexible household
expenses, and it is often nutrition that suffers when money is tight
Food
banks come to the aid of a diverse range of people who do not have enough
income to cover food. More than one-third of individuals helped are children
and youth, and more than 40% of households receiving food are families with
children. Single people living alone – who face a very high risk of living in
poverty – have grown as a proportion of households helped.
A
large number of households accessing food banks are on some form of government
assistance, including pension, disability-related income supports, and welfare
– a stark indication of the very low level of support provided by these programs.
On the other side of the coin, nearly one in six households helped are working,
yet still need a food bank to make ends meet
The Hunger Count study has been performed
annually since 1999, when 718,292 people were helped by a still-growing network
in March of that year. Exactly ten years later, near the peak of the 2008-2009 recession,
794,738 Canadians were assisted by a more mature, organized, and diverse
network. Now, seven years since the end of the economic downturn, food bank use
continues its elevated post recession plateau. Today, 188,000 more people need help
each month than in 2008.
Hunger Awareness Week is a growing movement to
raise awareness about the solvable problem of hunger in Canada. Food banks
across the country host events during Hunger Awareness Week to tell the story
of the work they do and the stories of the hungry Canadians who use food banks.
Since the first annual Hunger Count report,
other national food bank networks have sprung up to join those in North
America. These networks exist in Australia, New Zealand, 24 countries in
Europe, and across South America. Each of them exists for one overarching reason:
to help our most vulnerable citizens make it through the hard times caused by a
lack of well-paying jobs and inadequate government supports.
Who uses a food bank?
Hundreds of thousands of Canadians who live in
cities, towns and villages, in the country and in your neighbourhood use food
banks because they do not have enough money to feed themselves or their
families. Children. Seniors. People with disabilities. People who have jobs and
still can’t make ends meet. As you can see from the chart below the biggest
percentage of Canadians who use the food bank are parents with children.
AGE In years
|
0 - 2
|
3 - 5
|
6 - 11
|
12 - 17
|
18 - 30
|
31 - 44
|
% of Canadian Population
|
3.2%
|
3.2%
|
6.4%
|
6.5%
|
17.7%
|
18.8%
|
% of people helped by food Banks
|
5.8%
|
6.9%
|
12.4%
|
10.4%
|
17.0%
|
19.4%
|
In Canada, the percentage of those between the
ages of 45-65 and 65+ are less than those helped by the food bank. The 45-64
year are 28% of the Canadian population while only 22.7 percent are helped by
foodbanks. Those who are 65+ are 16.1 percent of the population yet only 5.3%
are helped by food banks
Hunger in Canada exists because deep and
persistent poverty continues in the country. For more than a decade, diverse
and inter-related factors have sustained this situation: a labour market that
fails to provide enough jobs with stable, livable wages; a rise in precarious
and non-standard employment; a fraying income security system that does not
provide sufficient financial support for those in need; a lack of affordable,
social housing; and accessible and affordable child care. People living in
poverty cannot afford sufficient, nutritious food. Many turn to food banks to help
them meet this most basic need.
Hunger in Canada can be alleviated. Everyone
can play a part in reducing hunger. You can volunteer at the local food bank,
donate food and funds, approach local representatives, join local Hunger
Awareness Week activities and events, spread the word at various milieus (work
place, faith groups, schools, etc
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