The Journal

Food bank is even having to help people in exclusive areas

- CATHERINE FURZE Reporter catherine.furze@reachplc.com

AFOOD bank set up in one of Northumber­land’s desirable market towns has revealed it has even delivered food parcels to exclusive Ponteland as the cost of living crisis bites.

Sam Gilchrist, who set up West Northumber­land Food Bank in 2013, says poverty can be found in some of the most unexpected places, and nearly half of the food bank’s current clients have either not used a food bank for a long time or had never used one before.

The food bank, which serves the whole of the former Tynedale area from its base in Burn Lane, Hexham, has seen a massive increase in demand for its services – up 100% compared to this time last year.

And project manager Sam can see no end to demand as rising prices mean more and more families are struggling to make ends meet. And she hit out at Nottingham­shire MP Lee Anderson’s suggestion that people use food banks because they are unable to cook and budget properly. Mr Anderson, who represents Ashfield in Parliament, later defended his comments, but his statement in the House of Commons last week has caused an uproar among poverty campaigner­s, including food writer Jack Monroe.

“I had to watch the clip three times as I just couldn’t believe what he was saying,” said Sam, who manages a team of around 40 volunteers and four paid staff at the food bank. “We have seen a huge increase in demand over the last six months due to the Universal Credit uplift ending, the cost of living increase and massive hikes in energy prices. I can assure Lee Anderson that a lack of cooking and budgeting skills is absolutely not the reason for the alarming rise in poverty we are dealing with at our food bank.”

A lot of families in the food bank’s area are struggling with rural poverty, according to Sam. “Our patch covers a very large rural area as well as the towns of Hexham, Prudhoe and Haltwhistl­e, and 30% of our deliveries are outside of the main towns. We have even delivered parcels to families in Ponteland, which just shows how far the cost of living crisis is reaching.”

Ponteland, famous for its wealthy residents, including past and present Newcastle United footballer­s, boasts one of the North East’s most expensive streets to buy a home, Runnymede Road, where the average selling price was £1,200,000 last year.

“Rural poverty is a big thing in our patch, and brings its own challenges,” said Sam. “Families living in very rural areas are much more reliant on small, corner shops, which tend to be more expensive; and the cost to get anywhere is much higher than if you lived closer to or in a town. Lots of families have been just about managing – but the combinatio­n of rising costs everywhere, huge energy bill hikes and the loss of the Universal Credit £20 a week uplift have basically plunged them into poverty.”

West Northumber­land Food Bank, which is part of the Independen­t Food Aid Network, operates a delivery service from its base, and Sam says the volunteers and staff offer targeted, flexible support and people in need to do not need a referral to access their services.. The food bank has a policy of trying to support local businesses as well as local families, and tried to support rural retailers if possible.

“During the pandemic, we had to stop our drop-in service and move over to delivery,” Sam said.

“We’ve not been able to go back to drop-in because the number of people who are accessing our services is so big, we could not accommodat­e the number of people in our premises. Instead, the food bank’s two vans are out every day, helping families all over the patch.

“We don’t ask for a referral to use our services, and we will support people for as long as we feel they need to be supported. We have around 20 trained helpline staff to take calls, and they will quickly establish if someone is able to claim more benefits than they are doing, for example and what their food and support needs are.

“We will help people for as long as is needed. Less than 20% of our clients are long-term food bank users, and for those people, their situation is very unlikely to change. We don’t turn people away.

“We are aware that we are not solving poverty, we are just putting a sticking plaster over it, but if we can provide food for a household, it means that the money they would have spent on that can be diverted to energy bills or paying off debt.

“I think a lot of people don’t realise how much people are existing on if they claim Universal Credit.

“People are quick to judge, but don’t know the figures. No one is existing on benefits through choice.”

As well as food, WNFB can also help people with energy costs, and have given £49 vouchers to families who have ‘self-disconnect­ed’ by not topping up their meters because they had no money to do so.

“It’s a vicious circle,” said Sam. “If you only have £3 in your purse, you can either buy food but don’t have the power to cook it, or put it in the meter and go hungry.

“And that’s a very real choice lots of households are having to make. With every small change to welfare law, more people become affected and poverty becomes entrenched.

“The two children limit for Universal Credit immediatel­y plunged 10,000 families into poverty.

“And every time there is a change like that, demand for our services goes up.”

 ?? ?? A worker packs a parcel at West Northumber­land Food Bank in Burn Lane, Hexham
A worker packs a parcel at West Northumber­land Food Bank in Burn Lane, Hexham

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