Quantcast
Channel: David Raymond Amos Round 3
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 3453

N.B. has second-highest rate of food insecurity of 10 provinces

$
0
0
 
 

N.B. has second-highest rate of food insecurity of 10 provinces

Fredericton food bank consistently setting new all-time records for demand

Only Prince Edward Island exceeded New Brunswick when it came to overall food insecurity, according to the 2022 report by Proof, a research team that investigates and publishes annual reports on food insecurity.

The team uses three definitions to describe food insecurity:

  • Moderate: "Compromise in quality and/or quantity of food due to a lack of money for food."
  • Marginal: "Worry about running out of food and/or limited food selection due to a lack of money for food."
  • Severe: "Miss meals, reduce food intake, and at the most extreme go day(s) without food."

Alex Boyd, CEO of Greener Village, a food bank in Fredericton, said the numbers reflect what they're seeing on the ground. 

"The last full-month stat that we have was significantly higher than any month we've ever seen in history," said Boyd. "So it's not surprising to me that those numbers are coming out in the report."

A bearded man with glasses holds a large cardboard box in a storage room. Behind him are shelves stocked with food products. Alex Boyd with some of the food donated to Greener Village in Fredericton. He said food banks are continuing to see a rise in demand. (Submitted by Alex Boyd)

That full-month statistic was 40 per cent higher than the same month last year, so Boyd predicts next year's report on food security will be "probably more grim."

"The situation that we're seeing on the ground is significantly worse than 2022, and 2022 was significantly worse than 2021. So we're basically just seeing continual increases to the demand that food banks are facing."

Boyd said the depth of the deprivation is critical.

"We're not talking about some people who are skipping the odd meal. We have a potential starvation dilemma in Canada," he said. 

A bar graph showing three different measures of food security for each province. New Brunswick had the highest percentage of people living in 'moderate' food insecurity of any Canadian province. (Proof report)

Based on statistics collected by Greener Village, Boyd said one in five clients has "a net negative income before they make any consideration for food whatsoever."

Atlantic provinces have highest rate of insecurity

According to the report, the Atlantic provinces had the highest rate of individuals living in food-insecure households in 2022 — 23.6 per cent in P.E.I., 22.7 per cent in New Brunswick, 22.5 per cent in Newfoundland and Labrador, and 22 per cent in Nova Scotia. 

"During the time of measurement, these provinces were experiencing especially high rates of inflation and unemployment," states the report. 

"Previous research has found that higher unemployment rates are associated with higher provincial food insecurity. The relationship between rising food insecurity and the high rates of inflation and unemployment during this time warrant further study."

A bar graph shows statistics for four years, with the final year higher than all others. Household food insecurity increased last year by 18 per cent over 2021. (Proof report)

According to the data compiled by Proof, based on data from Statistics Canada's 2021 Canadian Income Survey, 6.9 million people in the 10 provinces, including almost 1.8 million children, lived in a food-insecure household last year.

The report said this is a "considerable increase from 2021 during a period of unprecedented inflation." In fact, household food insecurity increased last year by 18 per cent over 2021.

"The persistently high prevalence of household food insecurity across Canada highlights the need for more effective, evidence-based policy responses by federal and provincial governments," stated the report, which was released earlier this month.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mia Urquhart is a journalist with CBC New Brunswick, based in Saint John. She can be reached at mia.urquhart@cbc.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 
86 Comments
 
 
 
David Amos 
Surprise Surprise Surprise 
 
 
 
Rhys Philbin  
What a nice expression for not having the funds to eat. 
 
 
David Amos

Reply to Rhys Philbin 
Welcome back to the circus  
 


 
 
Albert Wade  

there is always enough money for booze and cigarettes 


David Amos

Reply to Albert Wade 
and gambling machines
 
 
 
 
 
Wendy Simon  
If there is so much insecurity then why are they bringing more people into the province who do not have jobs and no prospects of one in the near future? I see a lot of people at the food banks who are in line with cigarettes and Tim's coffee. If they didn't waste what they had they could buy food. I overheard a conversation on the bus one day that a man is living in a rooming house and he eats one meal a day from Romero House ..'by the time he pays for his room and CIGARETTES he has no money for food.' Really?
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Wendy Simon 
Good questions  
 
 
Ian Scott 
Reply to Wendy Simon  
The north shore areas look hard hit with mines closures etc little new small business, far too much public service work EI . The fisherman though are pretty well off as are some cash crop folks. Seasonal though. Why we have migration levels without jobs is a question or housing. There is very little detached being built and poor inventory. 
 
 
Ian Scott 
Reply to Wendy Simon  
I'm always suspicious of the claims and conclusions. These programs, similar to lunch programs, seem to have very little control over who comes and takes from them. Its a bit of a" build it and they will come". Unless there is some means test or method to prevent abluse it's a no brainer for some to save their money and use the frrebies then as you say head to TIms and LC. No quetion inflation has hit some. How many truely fixed incomers, who knows, most are on inflation provided pensions if they worked. Renters are hit due to rent increases but home owners , short of taxes are in the money.  
 
 
Ferdinand Boudreau 
Reply to Wendy Simon 
Don't forget they most likely have a cell phone with a data plan. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Toby Tolly 
went way up when CERB payments kicked in?
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Toby Tolly 
Kinda sorta 
 
 
 
 
 
Mark Benson
Come July this won’t be an issue , the grocery rebate will solve everything 
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Mark Benson  
Surely you jest  
 
 
 
 
 
Miles Haukeness
Higgs is right.. better start frac'ing.  
 
 
Rosco holt
Reply to Miles Haukeness 
Nbers won't see any benefit from fracking.  
 
 
Ronald Miller
Reply to Rosco holt
That's based on your extensive background in the area?  
 
 
June Arnott  
Reply to Ronald Miller 
You should read up on the negative of fracking. Only the rich win, and leave nasty pollution behind . The proof is everywhere you look  
 
 
Buford Wilson  
Reply to Miles Haukeness
(Good call, Miles.)  
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Ronald Miller  
I agree with Mr Holt
 
 
David Amos
Reply to Buford Wilson
Yea Right 
 
 
Ronald Miller 
Reply to June Arnott
You should read up on the positives of NG. It is a cleaner energy than coal or oil, emits less CO2 and much fewer pollutants. You might want to look into what pays for many of our services and where that money comes from. 
 
 
 
 
 
Anna Barnes 
Lower income folks, including many working people, seniors on fixed incomes, and young families are being hit hard by unaffordable housing (and of course inflation in general) Unless this trend changes, food insecurity is going to get worse, impacting physical and mental health and leading to higher crime levels. Time for the provincial government to wake up and change their priorities. 
 
 
Rosco holt
Reply to Anna Barnes  
They won't unless you kick both main parties out of power. 
 
 
Anna Barnes  
Reply to Rosco holt 
Well I know what you mean but people have to start demanding better from whoever is actually in government. If we don't expect much that's what we're going to get.  
 
 
Michael Cain 
Reply to Anna Barnes 
Our govt gives out toll free numbers and builds jails; we are covered.  
 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Anna Barnes   
I pity the young families

Average Canadian house price rose to $716,000 in April — up by $100K since January

After tumbling for much of 2022, the average price has risen 4 months in a row

Pete Evans · CBC News · Posted: May 15, 2023 10:49 AM ADT

 
David Amos 
Reply to Rosco holt 
I concur



https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/crea-housing-data-1.6843592

 

Average Canadian house price rose to $716,000 in April — up by $100K since January

After tumbling for much of 2022, the average price has risen 4 months in a row

After plunging due to interest rate hikes throughout last year, the average price of a Canadian resale home has now increased for four months in a row, new numbers showed Monday.

The Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday that the average selling price of a home that sold on its MLS system in April went for $716,000. That's the fourth monthly increase in a row, and it marks a collective increase of more than $100,000 since the start of the year.

After peaking at just over $816,000 in February 2022 — right before the Bank of Canada began its aggressive campaign of rate hikes — Canada's housing market went ice cold for much of last year, as drastically higher mortgage rates made it more expensive to finance the purchase of a home.

Average prices bottomed out a few months later, at just under $630,000 in July.

But after moving essentially sideways until the start of 2023, the market has seemingly resumed its upward momentum ever since.

WATCH | Could empty office buildings could be the fix to Canada's housing crisis?

Can empty office towers be converted into housing? | About That

Duration 8:38
Vacant downtown office buildings are being converted into living spaces to try to address Canada's lack of affordable housing. Andrew looks into how practical the process is, and its potential.

Much of the rebound stems from an uptick in sales in the Greater Toronto Area and B.C.'s Lower Mainland, two parts of the country that saw both the biggest gains during the early days of COVID-19, and also the largest drawdown once rates went up.

If numbers from those two markets are stripped out, the national average price drops by more than $144,000, to an average house price of $572,000 in places that are not Toronto or Vancouver.

CREA, which represents more than 100,000 realtors across the country, says the number of homes that sold during the month increased by 11 per cent from March's level to 44,059, and it's now back up to its highest level since last June. But it's still almost 20 per cent below what it was during the feverish market of this time last year.

"Home sales continue to bounce back (with some force) from the multi-decade low observed at the beginning of the year," TD Bank economist Rishi Sondhi said. "Support has come from solid job markets, lower interest rates and improving buyer psychology from a central bank that's on pause [but] affordability remains significantly strained [and] subdued supply is probably playing an even larger role in pushing prices higher."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Pete Evans

Senior Business Writer

Pete Evans is the senior business writer for CBCNews.ca. Prior to coming to the CBC, his work has appeared in the Globe & Mail, the Financial Post, the Toronto Star, and Canadian Business Magazine. Twitter: @p_evans Email: pete.evans@cbc.ca









Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 3453

Trending Articles