OTTAWA
| Nov.
30,
2007 — This
holiday season, just as in years past, hundreds of thousands of Canadians
will be lining up for donated meals at food banks instead of sharing a
traditional family dinner.
 |
| Preparing for the morning shipment of food at
the Ottawa Food Bank. |
In its 2007 report, the Canadian Association of Food Banks estimates
that more than 720,000 people across the country relied on food banks
last March. The Ottawa Food Bank says that in the National Capital
Region alone, the number of
people who need food assistance each month totals around 40,000.
The first food bank opened in Edmonton in 1981. Today, there
are 673 known food banks that work with an additional 2,867 agencies
in distributing food to the hungry. According to Health Canada, there
were 2.7 million "food
insecure" Canadians
in 2004.
Valerie Tarasuk is a professor at the University of Toronto who researches
poverty and hunger in Canada. Figures about
the number of hungry people in Canada are "gross underestimates," she
says. "They’re
tracking one portion of the total group of people in the community who’re
struggling to get the food that they need."
According to the Canadian Association of Food Banks, welfare recipients,
seniors, people with disabilities, single parents, children and the
rural poor are among the different groups that receive food assistance
in Canada.
Tarasuk says that food banks have become a fixture of Canadian society.
"There's
a generation of people that have grown up knowing nothing other than
the fact that we have food banks."
Food banks part of the problem?
Some critics say it is striking that so many Canadians – nearly
three quarters of a million – survive on food donations in
a country where the national economy is the strongest it has been in
years and real income is growing faster than the United
States: between 2000 and 2006, the growth rates for the two countries
were 15.5 per cent and 9.1 per cent respectively.
| 'Food banks create the illusion
that we’re doing something and that the problem is being solved.' |
This raises the difficult but inevitable question of whether food banks
contribute to the perpetual cycle of hunger by disguising
the underlying and more serious problem of poverty.
"Food banks create the illusion that we’re
doing something and that the problem is being solved," Tarasuk
says.
This illusion is what seems to give governments the excuse
not to address the more fundamental problem of poverty. In other words,
the assumption is that if society is filled with hungry people,
almost 40 per cent of them children, they will simply
turn to their local food banks.
But Peter Tilley, director of the Ottawa Food Bank, says it wouldn’t
help the hungry if food banks closed their doors: "Our goal is
to put ourselves out of business, but that’s not going to happen
soon."
The organization ships out 12 tonnes of food daily to feed the
hungry around Ottawa.
Tarasuk says that food banks also make it appear that the solution
to the problem is charity and not government action to ensure "a
more just, more equitable distribution of wealth in the population so
that no one is without the resources they need to afford the food that
they need."
For many volunteers and anti-poverty advocates, closing food banks
would be morally objectionable.
“We're a compassionate group and we’re
not turning our back on these hungry people,” says Tilley.
It’s hard to abandon feeding the hungry in the hope that closing
food banks, along with increased political action, would put more pressure
on governments to seek a lasting solution to poverty. The need
for food is in the present; it’s urgent. Government action takes
time.
“I’m not convinced that a rally of the people who work
at the food banks would be enough to change our politicians,” says
Tarasuk.
Food banks across Canada receive practically no funding
from the federal or provincial governments, says Tilley. Most of the
funding comes from private sources.
Marjorie Bencz, director of the Edmonton Food Bank since 1989, says
food banks have created awareness about hunger
and poverty. "If we closed our doors on people, we would make
no difference in terms of long-term solutions to the problems."
Political lethargy
Tarasuk argues that Canada is wealthy enough to effectively
fight the hunger and poverty that exists here.
 |
Peter Tilley, director of the Ottawa food bank,
says they serve 40,000 "food insecure" people each month. |
"There is an extraordinary lethargy at the political level in
terms of dealing with problems of poverty," she says. "There
is a tremendous kind of malaise there."
She points out that the recent provincial election in Ontario was an opportunity
for the different political parties to discuss their solutions for poverty
and hunger. Instead, the campaign was centred on the question of funding
for religious schools in the province. "Honestly,
I can’t think of a less important issue for us to be talking about,"
she says.
The Conservative government’s child tax cut and the reductions
in the GST amount to no more than "trivial little crumbs" going
back to the taxpayers, which mainly benefit those who are spending
a lot of money. Tarasuk also says inaction on
the part of the present federal and provincial governments isn't the only
thing that has forced the hungry to line up at food banks.
"The Liberals’ history on poverty is obscene. It’s
actually far worse than the Conservatives’ history," she
says. "They were partly responsible for the dismantling of the
social safety net ... they created the problem we're facing
today."
Bencz says that because the people who depend on food banks come from
marginalized groups in society, they "have less of a voice and
talk less about the issue."
She also says part of the problem is that sometimes people don’t
believe hunger is a pressing issue. "People see the value of their
houses go up and they're very happy with that. But they don’t
see the problem we have with hunger."
But attitudes might be changing. Research
shows that agencies both at the federal level (such as the Public
Health Agency of Canada and Health Canada) and at the provincial level
(such as chief medical officers) have been more vocal about the need
to address poverty and hunger. Coupled with research and advocacy work
done by groups such as the Canadian Association of Food Banks with their
annual Hunger Count reports, Tarasuk says she believes poverty and hunger
may soon enter the political debate.
"Things have gotten bad enough that the pendulum will start to
swing,"
she says. "I couldn’t have said this five years ago."
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