Ontarians are Drowning Amid Surging Affordability Crisis
September 10 2024 - 12:01AM
Today Feed Ontario is releasing a new piece of record-breaking
data: over 1 million people in Ontario visited a food bank in the
last year. The organization also shared that food banks in the
province were visited 7.6 million times over the course of the
year, which is a 134% increase from 2019-2020. This represents a
continued trend in the rise of food bank visits, marking an all
time high and the eighth consecutive year of growth.
“When we released record-breaking data last year, we thought
that was the high-water mark. But food bank use has only continued
to climb as more Ontarians find themselves struggling to make ends
meet,” said Carolyn Stewart, CEO of Feed Ontario. “When will our
governments say enough is enough and take meaningful action against
food insecurity and poverty?”
Feed Ontario’s data shows that the main drivers of food
insecurity in Ontario are a result of the rapid spike in the cost
of living, which many incomes have not kept up with, and a
heightened economic vulnerability that is being felt throughout the
province. The organization points to policy decisions like the
erosion of social support programs, a failure to adequately invest
in affordable housing, and the growth of precarious work as key
causes of why Ontarians can’t keep their head above water.
“Food banks cannot keep up with the unprecedented need they’re
seeing,” said Stewart. “Across the province, we are hearing reports
of long lines, empty shelves, and a growing concern that some food
banks may have to close their doors.”
Feed Ontario reports that with this added pressure, 69% of food
banks in their network are concerned about not having enough food
to adequately provide support to those in need, and 53% worry about
having enough funding to adequately meet the demand in their areas.
Food banks primarily rely on the generosity of their communities,
and with an increasing number of people struggling, there are fewer
able to help food banks stay afloat with donations and support.
“Food banks were only ever designed to be a temporary measure.
They were never meant to patch holes left in our weak social safety
nets. We need to act now,” Stewart said.
The Province is entering its final year of the 2020-2025 Poverty
Reduction Strategy and, in light of this, Feed Ontario questions
why the number of people living in poverty continues to skyrocket
in all regions of Ontario. The organization calls on the provincial
government to develop a more robust poverty reduction strategy
moving forward, to ensure those who are struggling in Ontario can
access a basic standard of living.
Further, Feed Ontario calls on all Ontarians to get involved.
September is Hunger Action Month, a time to work to reduce poverty
in your community. Feed Ontario recommends advocating for
improvements to Ontario’s social assistance programs, the creation
of quality employment, and investments that help make the cost of
living more affordable.
Stewart also said she has hope for the possibility of a more
food-secure Ontario: “If we work together, we can build a better
future where everyone in Ontario has access to the food they need.
Together, we can achieve an Ontario where everyone is food
secure.”
Key Facts
- 1,001,150 unique individuals visited
a food bank between April 1, 2023 and March 31, 2024, an increase
of 25% over 2022-2023.
- Food banks were visited 7,689,580
times between April 1, 2023 and March 31, 2024, and increase of 31%
over 2022-2023, and 134% over 2019-2020.
- 2023-2024 is the eighth consecutive
year food bank use has risen in the province.
About Feed Ontario:From securing fresh and
healthy food sources to driving change through policy research and
innovative programming, Feed Ontario unites food banks, industry
partners, and local communities in its work to end poverty and
hunger. Join Feed Ontario and help build a healthier province.
Every $1 raised provides the equivalent of 2 meals to an Ontarian
facing hunger. Learn more at: www.feedontario.ca.
For more information, please contact: Andrea
Waters | Feed Ontario | andrea@feedontario.ca| 416-656-4100
x2941