Food bank use below pre-pandemic levels in Doncaster

Food banks handed out more packages in Doncaster last year, according to new figures, but demand for emergency parcels remains below pre-pandemic levels.
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The Trussell Trust, a charity tackling poverty in the UK, supports the country’s largest network of food banks.

Over the course of the coronavirus pandemic, they have seen a dramatic increase in the number of emergency food parcels handed out to those in need nationally.

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But figures from the charity suggest food bank use fell below pre-pandemic levels in Doncaster last year.

The Trussell Trust has seen a dramatic increase in the number of emergency food parcels handed outThe Trussell Trust has seen a dramatic increase in the number of emergency food parcels handed out
The Trussell Trust has seen a dramatic increase in the number of emergency food parcels handed out

The Trussell Trust’s distribution centres handed out 4,089 emergency food parcels to people in Doncaster in the year to March – up from 3,459 the year before, but a decrease of 20 per cent on the 5,136 provided in the year to March 2020, before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.

However, due to a growing number of independent food banks and the existing work of other organisations and charities, the Trussell Trust warns that its figures do not show the full extent of food poverty in the UK.

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The charity typically hands out emergency packages containing three days’ worth of food.

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Since the start of the pandemic, it has also started providing supplies in seven-day packages, in response to growing need and to limit the number of deliveries.

Across Yorkshire and The Humber, 156,120 parcels were handed out by the region’s 102 distribution centres in the year to March.

The Trussell Trust warned that food bank use has accelerated in the past six months, as the rising cost of basic amenities has hit people’s pockets.

Emma Revie, charity chief executive, said: “People are telling us they’re skipping meals so they can feed their children. That they are turning off essential appliances so they can afford internet access for their kids to do their homework.

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“How can this be right in a society like ours? And yet food banks in our network tell us this is only set to get worse as their communities are pushed deeper into financial hardship.

“No one’s income should fall so dangerously low that they cannot afford to stay fed, warm and dry.”

In year to March, 35 per cent – or 1,414 – of the parcels handed out in Doncaster were given to children, down from 1,705 in the year before the pandemic.

In these confusing and worrying times, local journalism is more vital than ever. Thanks to everyone who helps us ask the questions that matter by taking out a subscription or buying a paper. We stand together. Nancy Fielder, editor.

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