Food-bank use in Britain is at record levels. More than one
million food parcels, each providing enough food for three days, were given out
between 2014 and 2015, more than 400,000 of which went to children. In more
than 40 per cent of cases, the main reason for people needing food parcels is
related to delays or changes to their benefits, says the charity.
Food poverty in Britain is set to worsen in the coming
years, he fears. “We have to face the reality that what we are seeing now is
just the beginning,” Chris Mould, chair of the Trussell Trust, who ran the
Central Police Training and Development Authority and NHS trusts in Wiltshire
and Bedfordshire before becoming involved with the charity more than a decade
ago, “…we have a Government department that tolerates without shame situations
where people have no access to financial support for months on end at times.”
He also explained “We are dealing with people who have been going hungry but,
more importantly, have come to a point where they see no point in continuing to
live. What makes me angry is that I’ve met too many people who have been driven
to that place by inadequate implementation of existing public service and
policy. There are many people who have told me that the food bank saved their
lives and several instances of people where that’s absolutely true; they had
reached the end of their tether and they were planning to commit suicide.”
Mr Mould said: “I would imagine they see it as collateral
damage as they implement new policy and they don’t intend to divert or adjust
their policy, so it’s better not to hear. That’s how it feels.” Last year a
senior aide to Iain Duncan-Smith had warned Mr Mould that the “Government might
try to shut you down”, because of the charity’s campaigning on food poverty.
Asked if such threats persisted, Mr Mould said: “What’s happened is that the
messages are passed through in a more subtle way, that’s all I can really say.”
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