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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Politics
Patrick Butler Social policy editor

UK’s biggest food bank network to spend millions on parcels this winter

A food parcel
The Trussell Trust said the expenditure was needed as donations from the public was failing to keep pace with rapidly increasing demand. Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA

The UK’s biggest food bank network is preparing to spend millions of pounds topping up charity food parcels this winter as it offers help to record numbers of families at risk of going hungry as a result of the cost of living crisis.

The Trussell Trust said the expenditure was needed to ensure food banks had adequate food reserves because its customary main source of food supplies – donations from the public – was failing to keep pace with rapidly increasing demand.

The trust said it expected 1.3m emergency food parcels would be distributed by its members over the next six months to help soaring numbers of households in need – including 500,000 to families with children.

Its 420 food banks have already this year had to buy three times as much food as they did the previous year to maintain supplies, it said, each spending £1,400 a month on average to ensure they met the growing need for food parcels.

Unexpectedly high demand for food parcels in August and September when demand is normally slower meant its food banks have been unable to stockpile sufficient food, leaving many with relatively depleted stores as they prepare for their busiest time of year.

Food banks traditionally relied on food donations from the public, businesses, schools and faith groups, tending to only use cash reserves to meet occasional shortages in specific food stuffs. With need currently far outstripping food donations, however, almost a sixth of Trussell Trust food banks’ food supplies are typically now bought in.

The Trussell Trust chief executive, Emma Revie, warned the government “food banks could not be the only response” to the cost of living crisis, and called on ministers to offer a fresh round of targeted financial support to low income households over the winter to head off growing hardship.

Although the government introduced a package of cost of living payments in July for people on low incomes, Trussell Trust research in August found two-thirds of recipients had already spent the first tranche of support they received. “It went to the right people but it wasn’t enough,” said Revie.

The Trussell Trust on Thursday launches an emergency fundraising appeal to enable its UK-wide network of local food banks to top up food supplies, offer financial advice services to food bank users and give out non-food aid such as blankets and hot-water bottles.

“We never wanted to run an appeal like this, we would rather there was no need for food banks at all. But right now they are on the frontline of this cost of living emergency, we have no other option,” Revie said.

Jamie Ginns, the head of Greenwich food bank in south London, part of the Trussell Trust network, said it was currently giving out around a tonne of food a week in food aid more than it received in food donations, requiring it to spend about £9,000 a month on buying food.

With soaring food prices helping push up inflation to 10.1% in September, on top of rising energy bills, the Trussell Trust and other food banks are bracing themselves to meet what Revie called a “tsunami of need”.

Food Foundation data published earlier his week showed the UK is experiencing alarming levels of food insecurity. Hunger levels have soared since the turn of the year, with nearly 10 million adults and 4 million children regularly skipping food.

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