More people relying on the Calgary Food Bank than ever before, according to new data - Action News
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More people relying on the Calgary Food Bank than ever before, according to new data

In 2024, total annual visits to the Calgary Food Bank were up by 28 per cent from the year prior, as the organization says it continues to see a rise in the number of people needing food support.

'There isn't a one-size-fits-all sort of persona of who's using a food bank'

a teal milk crate reads
In its 2024 fiscal year, the Calgary Food Bank recorded 485,900 total annual visits, up from 381,029 total visits the year prior. (Dan McGarvey/CBC)

The Calgary Food Bank says more people are relying on its services than at any time in its history, with a significant spike in demand in the pastyear.

"We are feeding more people today at the Calgary Food Bank than we ever have before," president and CEO Melissa From told CBC News on Monday.

In its last fiscal year,from Sept. 1, 2023, to Aug. 31, 2024, the agency logged485,900 total annual visits. That number is up by more than 100,000 compared to the year prior a notable 28 per cent increase from 2023's total visits.

From calledthis level of food support "unprecedented," adding there is no longer a typical type of client who uses the food bank.



"Gone are the days when we had an average profile of who a food bank user would be," she said.

"I think there was a time when it was maybe someone who just fell on hard luck and lost their job, or maybe had a health diagnosis. There were a few common categories like that, and I think the reality is, today there isn't a one-size-fits-all sort of persona of who's using a food bank."

For the 2023-24 fiscal year, the Calgary Food Bank reported nearly 37 per cent of the hampers were applied for byat least one working person, which is up nearlysix per cent from the year prior.

The agency's data was released in response to the2024 HungerCount report from Food Banks Canadapublished Monday. It's an annual survey of 770 affiliate and independent food banks across the country, conducted in March of each year.

This year's HungerCount snapshot showed there were over two million food bank visits across Canada in March of 2024, indicating a strong demand for food bank services countrywide.

The Calgary Food Bank had 40,841 visits this March, up from 34,559 in March 2023.



From said she's shocked to see the increase in the agency's working users, and that her organization's statistics coupled with the HungerCount survey indicates an increase in what she called Canada's "working poor."

"Working folks who simply can't make ends meet are having to come here to get food support," From said.

Canada's lowest minimum wage

Not everyone is taken aback by the data around working individuals, however.

One anti-poverty advocate said it's unsurprising more working Calgarians are having to rely on the food bank considering Alberta recently tied with Saskatchewan for the lowest minimum wage in Canada.

"We haven't had a minimum wage increase since 2018, but food has become quite astronomical in that period of time," Meaghon Reid, executive director of Vibrant Communities Calgary, told CBC News.

Reid believes it's becoming increasingly difficult for low-income individuals to afford to eat.

"Food insecurity is a real signal of how people are doing income-wise in our city and our province," she said.

WATCH | New report on Canadian food banks:

Canadian food banks are seeing a record number of visits

15 hours ago
Duration 0:52
Food Banks Canada released its Hunger Report today showing more than 2 million visits to food banks across the country in March. It's an increase from last year's record-breaking number. The report also shows annual visits in Calgary are up 28% from last year.

Considering the latest numbers from the Calgary Food Bank, the chief economist with Alberta Central, Charles St-Arnaud,said"it's clear that Albertans have been hit harder financially in recent years than other Canadians."

St-Arnaud saidwage growth in Alberta has been consistently underperforming the rest of the country.

"What's interesting here is that it's not because inflation in Alberta has been higher than the rest of the country since the start of the pandemic, we've actually been roughly in line with the national average," said St-Arnaud.

The economist added that other indicators, such as increased debt and lower spending, would also suggest that Albertan households may be more affected by the recent economic environment than other provinces.

Overall, Reid said, the recently released food bank data points to a need for more income-geared policies federally and provincially that directly support people's day-to-day lives.

"We know that the solution to food and security is not more food, it's more income," she said.

With files from Dan McGarvey, Jo Horwood and Jennifer Jensen