Toronto

Number of people using Ontario food banks rose nearly 40% last year: report

A report released Monday indicates the number of people who used Ontario food banks went up 38 per cent last year — the largest single-year increase recorded by the province's food bank network.

Food bank usage has gone up for the last seven years in a row, report finds

Man stands in front of a pile of boxes.
Food bank use has continued to rise even though the unemployment rate returned to pre-pandemic levels in 2022, according to a new report by Feed Ontario. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

A report released Monday indicates the number of people who used Ontario food banks went up 38 per cent last year — the largest single-year increase recorded by the province's food bank network.

The new report by Feed Ontario, a collective of hunger relief organizations, says more than 800,000 people in the province turned to emergency food support between April 1, 2022 and March 31, 2023.

It says the total number of visits to food banks also rose similarly in that time, totalling more than 5.9 million, or 36 per cent more than the previous year.

The report says much of the growth came from first-time visitors, who accounted for two out of five people who used food banks. It notes that's a 41 per cent increase from the previous year.

Food bank usage has gone up for the last seven years in a row, according to the report.

It points to precarious work, the erosion of social support programs and a lack of affordable housing as longstanding factors, with the skyrocketing cost of living as a more recent contributor.

The report says food bank use has continued to rise even though the unemployment rate returned to pre-pandemic levels in 2022.

It notes more workers are turning to food banks, with one in six food bank visitors citing employment as their main source of income in the period covered by the report. That represents a 37 per cent increase over the previous year and an 82 per cent increase over 2016-17, the report says.

"It used to be that having a job meant that you would not need to access a food bank," Feed Ontario's chief executive officer, Carolyn Stewart, wrote in a statement.

"This is no longer the case. Working Ontarians are having trouble earning enough income to afford today's cost of living, even when working multiple jobs or trying to cut expenses."