Windsor·Sounds of the Season

Food banks' supply low ahead of holiday season as demand keeps rising in Windsor-Essex

A rise in food bank users over the last few years means the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association is all the more in need of donations. 

Pandemic driving need of services, says president of the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association

Food sorted into bins at the Roundhouse Centre warehouse hub for the second annual June 27 Miracle drive.
According to president of the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association, June Muir, the food collected from the June 27 Miracle drive is already 'gone.' (Jennifer La Grassa/CBC)

 A rise in food bank users over the last few years means the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association is all the more in need of donations. 

Shelves are "not near where we should be" heading into the holidays and the new year, said June Muir, CEO of the Hub of Opportunity, formerly know as the Unemployed Help Centre (UHC), and president of the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association.

Between April 2020 to the end of March 2021, the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association — which oversees 15 food banks in the region — served 166,000 people, according to Muir. 

She added that the UHC saw a 74 per cent increase in demand during the pandemic, compared to the year before. In total it served more than 115,000 people. 

"They came for help and the help was needed," Muir said, adding that many of those who cused the services were "new faces." 

UHC drive-thru food banks offer as many as 1,100 hampers each week for people who need them. But CEO June Muir said they still turn people away at times. (Darrin Di Carlo/CBC)

She also said that the food collected from this year's June 27 Miracle Day is already gone, and that food banks are very much relying on any and all donations. 

Every Tuesday and Thursday, the UHC hosts a drive-thru food bank where people can drop by to pick up a hamper of food. Between the UHC and Adie Knox Herman Arena sites that host the program, Muir said they make 1,100 hampers a week. 

LISTEN | June Muir speaks with CBC's Windsor Morning about the need for food:  

Sometimes, Muir said, they can't accommodate all the people who need the service  and have to "turn people away." 

"I think people don't realize, they think 'Well people are back to work there is no need,' but there truly is," she said.  

Muir added that financial donations are sometimes better, as they allow the association to buy fresh produce and meats, which can't be donated. 

Sounds of the Season is CBC Windsor's annual fundraiser in support of the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association. It's also a chance to take a closer look at the reasons people in our city are in need, and the steps being taken to help them. 

Donate to the Windsor-Essex Food Bank Association now!

(CBC)

With files from Windsor Morning