Taranaki Daily News

Hundreds queue for City Mission food

- HARRISON CHRISTIAN

Needy Aucklander­s have started camping overnight outside the City Mission to ensure they receive a Christmas food parcel.

At 7.30am yesterday there were 200 people queueing in Hobson St, with that number expected to double by 9am.

One of them, Marietta, had been camped on a deck chair since 10pm the previous night. She was first in the queue, right beside a doorway manned by a security guard. She said she chose to stay overnight to ensure she could give her five children a better Christmas.

‘‘I don’t have much to have a Christmas with my kids, and I heard the City Mission was able to provide something little for families,’’ she explained.

There was a time when Marietta was working, and wouldn’t have needed to fall back on the services of the Mission. But she had to travel to the Pacific to look after her mother and on her return she has struggled to resume her job as an educator.

‘‘I’m a solo parent, unemployed. I do have a degree but the downfall is that my teacher’s registrati­on has expired, and to do a refresher course costs $4000, which I can’t afford. At the moment I do voluntary work at my kids’ school but I would love to get back into the classroom.’’

‘‘I’m so grateful to the Mission,’’ she said. ‘‘Especially during Christmas time, because it’s a time where I feel depressed, because I can’t give what I want to give my kids.’’

Mission at capacity

Alexis Sawyers, the Mission’s team leader of fundraisin­g, said the organisati­on wanted to ‘‘avoid people waiting overnight’’ if possible.

‘‘But we obviously can’t stop people doing that.’’

Sawyers said five days out from Christmas, the Mission was now working at capacity.

‘‘Yesterday, we had just under 400 people. And that really is the limit of what we can get through in a day.’’

A family food parcel typically contains bread, sausages, vegetables and toiletry items, but each parcel is different depending on what has been donated.

‘‘We still definitely need food donated to us, but our priority is to try and get in financial donations which help us do all of this, because it continues ... so we get a lot of people who come to us in the weeks after Christmas as well.’’ Donations needed

Sawyers said donations had been ‘‘slower than we hoped’’.

‘‘It’s not too late for people to donate. Just a few dollars make a big difference.’’

The parcels are packed by volunteers at a warehouse in Grafton, then trucked to the Mission building each morning. On top of the food parcel service, the Mission provides a community drop-in: daily coffee and morning tea for rough sleepers.

About 80 per cent of the food parcels go to families, with 20 per cent going to individual­s.

‘‘The single people are often pensioners, or they’re previously homeless people that have been housed, or single people that do casual work and with Christmas they run out of hours.

‘‘It’s a lot of women as you can see in the line, and they’re coming because they need to feed their children.’’

Sawyers said people like Marietta didn’t choose to be in the position they were in.

‘‘It’s really easy to look on the outside and say: Well I know why people are there. Actually, you probably don’t.

‘‘Christmas is hard for heaps of people, and you’re just really lucky if you can manage to scrape things together and do it.’’

 ?? PHOTO: HARRISON CHRISTIAN/STUFF ?? Crowds queue for emergency help at the Auckland City MIssion.
PHOTO: HARRISON CHRISTIAN/STUFF Crowds queue for emergency help at the Auckland City MIssion.

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