
'Most challenging Thanksgiving:' Long weekend marked with soaring food bank use
CTV
Food banks across Canada continue to face soaring need this Thanksgiving, with one executive warning that things could quickly get worse.
Food banks across Canada continue to face soaring need this Thanksgiving, with one executive warning that things could quickly get worse.
Amid inflation, increasing food and housing costs, and precarious employment situations, the country's food banks have watched the need for their goods balloon as the organizations enter what, for many, is a critical time of year for fundraising.
Neil Hetherington, CEO of Toronto's Daily Bread, which supports more than 200 food programs in the area, said this long weekend has been the "most challenging Thanksgiving we have ever had."
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, the organization saw about 65,000 client visits per month, he said. That number last month was 275,000.
"You've got food prices, you've got a precarious work environment, and most of all lack of decent, affordable housing," he said.
"And you put all of those things together and suddenly you can understand why people are turning to food banks."
At the Greater Vancouver Food Bank, chief operating officer Cynthia Boulter said the demand for food her food bank has seen this year is "unprecedented."

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