London food bank’s Thanksgiving drive to focus on needs of children

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The London Food Bank is focusing this year’s Thanksgiving Food Drive on children amidst signs more youth need help.

“More and more kids are falling into food insecurity and that’s a major concern for us. We’re starting to see more kids coming to us for more help,” co-director Glen Pearson said.

Recent statistics show “a creep” in the demand among children and youth from the food bank and other organizations, he said.

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“There’s this creep, where there are more and more groups having to help more and more youth,” Pearson said.

During the first nine months of 2024, there’s been a 13.8 per cent increase in the number of children in the families seeking food, compared to the same period last year, according to the food bank.

During the first nine months of this year, the food bank has served14,649 individual children, co-director Jane Roy said.

It’s still too early to see a trend, Roy said, but a Unicef report card on Canada a year ago suggested child poverty in Canada, once on the decline, was rising again.

Children have the highest rate of food insecurity among all age groups in Canada, 24 per cent in 2022 or 1.8 million individuals, the report said.

That was an increase from 1.4 million children in 2021, the report said.

Food insecurity is defined as lacking regular access to safe, nutritious food.

“Because food insecurity grew incrementally over the years, we’ve kind of accepted it. But when it comes to our kids, we just can’t,” Pearson said.

It’s not clear why the food bank is seeing more children, but Pearson said higher rents and higher grocery bills, as well as low-paying, precarious work continue to hurt families.

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