“Reducing household food insecurity, and the poverty that underlies it, is a win-win situation. It is a win for people facing low income, and for Canada as a whole. One does not need to look far to find many libraries worth of evidence that poverty is a key negative influence on health. Reducing low income leads to better health, which leads to higher levels of economic participation and lower costs related to health care and social services.”
— Food Banks Canada, Hunger Count 2012
Here is the hunger news from our northern neighbors, and my “Home and Native Land” …
The Numbers:
According to Food Banks Canada:
- each month, 882,188 Canadians need to rely on food banks to feed their families
- 31% more Canadians rely on food banks now, than before the recession
- over one third are children and teens
- 14% of the elderly Canadian population who live alone, are impoverished
- 3.2 million Canadians live in poverty
The Solutions:
Food Banks Canada recommends some small policy changes that will help rectify some of the root causes of hunger and poverty:
- make housing more affordable, and therefore more attainable
- increase social investment in Northern Ontario
- make pensions more adequate for the seniors who are impoverished, and who are experiencing food insecurity, as well as health issues
- invest in good quality, support-intensive social assistance programs
- address the issue of the decline in well-paying jobs
For more solutions, itemized in the Say No To Hunger campaign petition(sponsored by Food Banks Canada), go to:
http://www.saynotohunger.ca/SayNoToHunger/Our-Solution.aspx
Canadians, you may want to consider signing the petition!