Windsor Star

One in five CK homes struggling to buy food, report says

- TREVOR TERFLOTH tterfloth@postmedia.com

With one in five Chatham-kent households having trouble putting food on the table, public health officials are continuing to raise awareness that more than shortterm solutions are needed.

The release of CK Public Health's 2023 Cost of Eating in CK infographi­c stated that, due to financial challenges, 20 per cent of the community find themselves having to choose between buying food or paying their bills.

“In Chatham-kent, people living with food insecurity must choose between paying for housing or paying for food. The increasing cost of food is making this issue worse,” Carmen Mcgregor, chair of the Chatham-kent Food Policy Council, said in a release this week.

Mcgregor stressed the problem goes deeper than inflation, noting households simply aren't bringing in enough income to make ends meet. “It is important to realize though, that food prices are not the root cause of food insecurity for the CK community,” she said. “It is a lack of adequate and secure income.”

The release said community organizati­ons are essential in providing emergency food assistance to those in need, but officials stressed this is only a “temporary solution, and it does not address the true cause” of food insecurity, nor its health impacts.

Not having enough money to pay for food takes a toll on physical and mental health, as it significan­tly increases the risk of diabetes, heart disease, anxiety, depression and other ailments.

Brock Mcgregor, health board chair, told The Chatham Daily News on Thursday that public health remains focused on addressing the social determinan­ts of health.

“It is clear social supports are inadequate in Ontario. We need to advocate for solutions to the affordabil­ity crisis, and increased supports to the vulnerable in our community.

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