Hungry Britain: More than 500,000 people forced to use food banks, warns Oxfam

Independent

 

The number of people using foodbanks has trebled in past 12 months

 

THURSDAY 30 MAY 2013

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More than half a million Britons have resorted to using food banks to stave off hunger and destitution, the Government has been warned.

Major charities signalled their alarm over a dramatic rise in the nation’s “hidden hungry” – families who are forced to ask for help to feed themselves – because of wage cuts, the squeeze on benefits and the continuing economic downturn.

The numbers have trebled in the past year alone and are likely to continue rising rapidly despite Britain’s status as one of the world’s wealthiest nations, according to a joint report by Oxfam and Church Action on Poverty.

They say cuts to welfare payments – including below-inflation rises in benefits, new Jobseeker’s Allowance sanctions and reassessment of entitlement to invalidity benefits – are the biggest cause of the surge in demand for food banks in all parts of the country. The charities are also fiercely critical of the numbers of mistakes and delays in benefits payments, which leave claimants without cash through no fault of their own and lead to “food uncertainty” among Britain’s poorest families.

The hunger crisis has been exacerbated by the falling living standards of many people in employment, who have seen their wages trimmed or their working hours cut. Rising food and fuel prices are also driving families into poverty, the charities add.

The cost of basic foodstuffs has leapt by 35 per cent and the cost of heating a home has jumped by 63 per cent in the past five years – a period in which many incomes have risen only marginally or not at all.

Mark Goldring, the chief executive of Oxfam, said last night:

“The shocking reality is that hundreds of thousands of of people in the UK are turning to food aid. Cuts to social safety-nets have gone too far, leading to destitution, hardship and hunger on a large scale. It is unacceptable this is happening in the seventh wealthiest nation on the planet.”

The Trussell Trust, the biggest organiser of food banks in Britain, said almost 350,000 people received at least three days’ emergency food last year, compared with about 130,000 in 2011-12. But because there is an array of organisations distributing food, the new report conservatively estimates that well over 500,000 people are now relying on charity handouts.

Niall Cooper, the chief executive of Church Action on Poverty, said:

“The safety net that was there to protect people is being eroded to such an extent that we are seeing a rise in hunger. Food banks are not designed to, and should not, replace the ‘normal’ safety net provided by the state in the form of welfare support.”

The Government has sent out mixed messages over the steep rise in food bank use. While Downing Street sources had previously said welfare payments were set at a level “where people can afford to eat”, David Cameron has acknowledged the work of food-bank volunteers as “part of the big society”.

The Prime Minister visited the independent Oxfordshire West Food Bank in his Witney constituency in February, but did so without inviting photographers or journalists, and has so far failed to take up the Trussell Trust’s invitation to visit one of its more established centres. The Labour leader, Ed Miliband, has joined a Food Aware appeal for food donations, visited the Witney food bank and raised the issue at Prime Minister’s Questions.

Earlier this month, Tim Lang, a former adviser to the World Health Organisation and one of Britain’s leading food policy experts, told The Independent that he feared food banks were becoming “institutionalised” and taking Britain back to a “Dickensian” model of welfare.

The Trussell Trust launched a nationwide network of food distribution centres in 2004. It feeds people referred to it by social services and other professionals such as school liaison officers, doctors or Job Centre Plus staff. It now runs 350 food banks in all areas of Britain, manned by an estimated 30,000 volunteers, with an average of three new centres opening each week.

Its chief executive, Chris Mould, said yesterday:

“We are seeing massive growth in the numbers of people being referred to us. Low income is a serious problem across the UK, with people facing acute challenges in trying to survive. Increases in basic prices of food and heating your home have a really big impact on people’s ability to cope.”

Today’s report calls for an urgent parliamentary inquiry into the relationship between benefit payment delays, errors or sanctions, welfare reforms and the growth in the numbers of “hidden hungry”.

It is also damning about ministers’ failure properly to monitor the problem, and calls for agencies to record and monitor people experiencing food poverty in order to establish more accurate numbers.

Imran Hussain, the head of policy for the Child Poverty Action Group, said:

“It is a national scandal that half a million British people are now having to turn to food aid. It is a problem that has quickly escalated and shows that something has gone badly wrong with the safety net that is supposed to help families in need.”

Case studies: Living on the breadline

Brian Ahern

Retired postman, 57, from Stockwell, South London

I worked for my last company for two decades but had a nervous breakdown. I received a good pension of £95 a week, which meant I wasn’t entitled to any benefits. Unfortunately, I had a problem with alcohol and this swallowed up all my money for a period of time. I first went to the Brixton food bank in May 2012. I’d got myself into a bit of a mess and it was the last resort for me: I literally didn’t have a can of beans in the cupboard. I saw a sign in a shop window and was referred by Ace of Clubs, a soup kitchen and social centre in Clapham North. They do lunch for a quid – with dessert! I went three times, which was the most I was allowed with the vouchers I was given. They are very well stocked but I was surprised by how hard it was to have vouchers issued. They have helped me a few times and, now that I am over my crisis, I volunteer there. They are a great organisation and all the staff are very dedicated to what they do. People shouldn’t feel shame in using them when they need to, but unfortunately there is stigma attached.”

Karen Woods

Unemployed mother of one, 47, from south London

My daughter starts school in September. I went to a food bank because I couldn’t afford to put food on the table for her. I receive Jobseekers’ Allowance, child tax credit and child benefit but it is all swallowed by gas and electric bills, and by a loan I took out three years ago to pay for Christmas. Extra things need paying for – a missed bill, new shoes for my daughter – and then you can’t afford food. I saw the food bank advertised and went in to ask how it could be used. I was then referred by a community centre. I had to provide proof of income. I didn’t want to have to depend on charity – but it’s either that or nothing.”

Jane McBlane

Retired civil servant, 57, from West Croydon

I was at the Ministry of Defence for 20 years. I’m now unemployed but not old enough for a pension. When the council changed benefit payments on 1 April, I had no money for food. I complained to the council and they suggested a food bank. I have no family and don’t want my friends to know about my situation, so had no where else to turn.”

The Independent

MRadclyffe • an hour ago

‘Congratulations to the Tory Party. Finally, a sector in which they have found a way to create growth.’

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12 thoughts on “Hungry Britain: More than 500,000 people forced to use food banks, warns Oxfam

  1. Annos says:

    “The ultra-wealthy, banks and corporations from around the globe have some $32 trillion of wealth hidden in off-shore tax havens”

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2013/05/30/taxh-m30.html

    Let me explain something to you all…The “$32 trillion” may in fact be MUCH higher, some have said it is into the hundreds/thousands of trillions ?, I think it is at least into the hundreds of trillions. The Queen is said to have trillions banked around the world, her family have had centuries to accumulate great wealth. If people only knew the truth of it all, but that is hidden from us…

  2. Stepping Razor Sound Plate says:

    So the UK has agreed with turning the UK into a 3rd world country with 10th class citizens.

  3. jeffrey davies says:

    why are the bankers still free and still fixing the system to suite its not us who are broke but them who lost it while the 99percent put it back for them whilst they still eat their caviar and salmon sandwhiches while we starve nice isn’t it jeff3

  4. Stepping Razor Sound Plate says:

    Then after eating all that they play fiddle sticks. It is worse than in Victorian times, at least the WorkHouses were still open.
    Sounds worse than Charles Dickens.

  5. AL says:

    Food banks are just one source of help for people struggling to afford to live. Families are also having to chip in. Ask how many pensioners are sharing meagre pensions to help their kids get by. Nice as it is that people care to donate, it’s demeaning to have to ask for food because you have nothing. People are having to swallow the last of their pride to survive and often it’s because of DWP mistakes. It’s a disgrace. When will the Govt act responsibly and base benefits on what it actually costs to live? Eating cornflakes and turning off the heat because theres no more money is hardly living. Having no social life, no hot water, is pretty miserable. All I can think is that providing anti depressants is cheaper than ensuring an adequate income for all. Guess if you take enough you don’t care if you’re cold, or hungry, or lonely, or ashamed, or in debt, or fighting with your partner over money or anything?

  6. Annos says:

    “Catherine Austin Fitts was interviewed on The Power Hour on August 29, 2013. She asserted that we are in transition between the Old Economy and the New Economy, which are parallel worlds so to speak. The New Economy will seize the assets of the Old Economy while casting off all its liabilities. Examples of this are cities that are declaring bankruptcy where billions of dollars in the pensions of the retired public employees are being eliminated, freeing the Elite to take over the unburdened assets of the municipalities by starting anew.

    Fitts believes this is a planned agenda by the Elite that has been in effect since 2001. The Elite in any major financial crisis will come out on top and not suffer serious consequences such as what happened in the meltdown of the economy in 2008, which was a goal of the Elite’s agenda.

    It would appear from her argument that the primary goal of the Elite is to bring about The Great Default, probably sooner than later. This way they can engineer the elimination of all liabilities from the Old Economy, such as social security, and begin anew with the New Economy that will be under their total control and to their exclusive benefit.

    So The Great Default in inevitable if for no other reason than the Elite see it as a way to achieve their agenda.”

    http://educationforum.ipbhost.com/index.php?s=aa8d242dc7bb733c4e72e04f24d32874&showtopic=20431&hl=

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