Daily Mirror

Free school meals were a lifeline for me... and for some kids it’s the ONLY meal they get in a day

STRICTLY STAR SHIRLEY ON CHILD POVERTY TODAY

- matt roper BY Senior Feature Writer HELEN KENNEALLY OF CHARITY ZARACH matt.roper@mirror.co.uk @mattroperb­r

RAISED by a single mum in a small council flat, Strictly judge Shirley Ballas says she knows what a rising number of British children in poverty are going through.

Recalling her mother’s struggles to feed and clothe her and brother David, she remembers looking forward to her free school meal.

She said: “I thought it was amazing, I figured out in the queue where I could stand, I got a nice lunch every day.”

Shirley, 63, is helping to highlight the struggles of Britons living on the breadline in an ITV Tonight documentar­y, Kids in Poverty.

There are 4.3 million children in Britain whose only meal is at school, whose parents can’t afford to buy them food or clothes and who have to sleep on the floor or even in their bath.

Some 30% of UK children – nine out of a classroom of 30 – are living below the poverty line, official figures show.

A million of those are classed as being in extreme poverty, meaning they cannot stay fed, clean, dry and warm.

Shirley grew up on Leasowe housing estate in Wallasey, Merseyside, still one of the UK’s most deprived areas.

Her mother worked several jobs, but Shirley said: “We didn’t have a lot. I can see how tough it was for my mother.

“David and I stayed home alone from a young age, there wasn’t a possibilit­y to put us in childcare because finances were so low. Often on a Friday money would run out. But neighbours would lend you some money, if you were short of a meal everyone would muck in.”

We’ve been into houses where the children are sleeping in baths

It’s criminal that great parents who work hard are still struggling

CHLOE RUSSELL ASSISTANT HEAD AT MONKSDOWN PRIMARY IN LIVERPOOL

ELIGIBLE

One single mum with five kids, who relies on disability living allowance and universal credit, tells Tonight: “Trying to pay for the bills all out of that one Universal Credit payment a month.

“You can wake up in the morning and not even want to get up because it’s the same stuff again – I haven’t got enough food in the cupboard and all the electrics are going to run out.

“You feel like a failure. It’s horrible.” Her 11-year-old son adds: “Sometimes I’d want something from the shops, like shoes or a coat. I don’t really ask in case I make her feel sad.”

With a record 146,000 children now living in temporary accommodat­ion in England, Shirley thinks they are worse off than when she was growing up.

She said: “Every child should be entitled to at least one hot meal a day, and if that’s via the school system I feel strongly about that. The Government needs to do more.

“I still meet friends I had who have got children who are still on the housing estate. There certainly seems to be a lot more people who are struggling who just can’t afford basic essentials.”

The share of children living in absolute poverty in Britain has increased by 148% since 2017 and is at its highest level for 30 years, according to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation.

The largest rises are in Nottingham and Birmingham, where 40% and 42% of children respective­ly live in poverty.

Despite the cost of food rising by 25% in two years, new rules on free school meals mean many of those children aren’t eligible, with an estimated 900,000 children in poverty missing out. And

This is the worst it’s ever been and I’ve been through poverty myself

MICHELLE ROACH WHO RUNS COMMUNITY STORE AND FOODBANK

deprivatio­n doesn’t stop there. Nearly 900,000 children share a bed with other family members or sleep on the floor.

Helen Kenneally, of charity Zarach, which helps struggling families, says: “The bed has become a luxury for many. We’ve been into houses where there are children sleeping in baths.”

A survey found 60% of teachers gave food or clothes to children and 20% of

all primary and secondary schools now run a foodbank. At Monksdown Primary in Liverpool, assistant head Chloe Russell says food poverty is hitting working parents the hardest.

If working families on Universal Credit earn over £7,400 a year, their children aren’t eligible for free school meals. And while all kids in state primaries in London, Wales and Scotland

get free meals, in the rest of England it’s only kids aged up to seven. Ms Russell says: “It’s criminal that great parents who work hard, who do everything in their power to help their children, are still struggling.”

Michelle Roach, who runs a mobile community store and foodbank in Liverpool, says many people she helps are in work but struggling to pay bills.

She says: “This is the worst

I’ve ever seen and I’ve been through poverty. Everybody’s feeling the pinch, not just people on benefits. We get a lot of NHS workers, constructi­on workers and teachers.”

They include student nurse Hannah, a single mum of twins. She says: “Over the past three years I’ve really struggled financiall­y just trying to better our lives.” Former primary head Greg Oates, who worked in Oldham, Gtr Manchester, believes the key is early interventi­on. He slammed the Tory Government for shutting 40% of Sure Start centres since 2010. They were launched by

Tony Blair in 1999 to give families in need additional health, money and employment support. Greg said Sure Start engaged with struggling families early on. He added: “Now schools have children that present very challengin­g circumstan­ces. They have to spend an awful lot trying to sort those out.”

Charities also want an “essentials guarantee” for families on Universal Credit. Iain Porter, of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said: “It would ensure that everyone has a protected minimum amount of support to at least afford essentials like food, toiletries and energy bills. That could help 600,000 children out of poverty.”

Tonight – Kids In Poverty: Britain’s Shame, 8.30pm, Thursday, May 16, on ITV1 and ITVX

148% How much child poverty in Britain has increased since 2017

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? STRUGGLES Shirley speaks out on new ITV documentar­y
STRUGGLES Shirley speaks out on new ITV documentar­y
 ?? ?? VITAL Kids from poorer families need school meals
VITAL Kids from poorer families need school meals
 ?? ?? TOUGH LIFE Shirley’s mum
TOUGH LIFE Shirley’s mum

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