- Jan 3, 2012
- 17,357
I started working for the Churches in and around Southampton in 1993 and there was a food bank ( and a basics bank) in the City then. Soon after one opened in Winchester, too. The Trussell Trust, which is based just up the road in Salisbury, visited both to see how they did it in the early days. That was all under a Tory Government.Just to set the record straight this from HoC Library. I seem to remember Labour as the government then.
The Trussell Trust opened its first UK food bank in 2000 and operates over half of food banks in the country. IFAN represents food banks outside the Trussell Trust and since 2020 has been collecting data from them across the UK. Both the number of food banks and the quantity of emergency food parcels they distribute has increased over time, with the exception of a partial drop after the Covid-19 pandemic subsided.
What is frightening/disgusting/shameful is how much more they are used and needed now than ever before, and that was happening before the current “cost of living crisis”.
There are a number of examples from the past (probably not so much if at all now) of Tory politicians in their ignorance decrying food banks and assuming they were places people could go along and just help themselves - NO, people have to be referred by responsible people or agencies and only normally for three days worth.
And Local Authorities can not afford to do what they need to do to help people who are really in need. Mrs DiS yesterday was in a meeting at a local school in Southampton where the subject of persistent absence of one child came up. It was a story of a very difficult family background, mother with serious mental health issues (not her fault) and the relevant people in the City Council too stretched to do anything about it - “we see far worse than that, they’re ok”. And in the meantime that child’s life chances are going down the drain.
all this is happening against a background where an ignorant MP like Philip Lee can stand up in Parliament in the cost of living debate recently and say we shouldn’t raise taxes because “what we don’t want is a bloated public sector as they do in France”. The truth of the matter is that the public sector has given up all hope of doing their job properly and can not do anything for loads of people who really need serious help.
To be fair, there are plenty of decent Tories around who would be - who are - appalled by all this too.