Foodbank use dips in Sussex - but number in hardship remains 'heartbreaking'

Trussell says thousands are still relying on emergency food parcels

Author: Ryan Burrows and Aine Fox, PAPublished 20th Nov 2024

A gradual slowdown in price hikes and better housing benefit support might have contributed to a slight fall in the number of parcels being given out at food banks in Sussex recent months, a charity said.

There were just over 1.4 million parcels provided across the UK between April and September, around a 4% drop on the same period last year.

But food bank network Trussell said the number of people still facing hunger and hardship across the UK remains "heartbreaking".

In the six months since April, there were 46,598 emergency food parcels distributed by food banks in the Trussell community across Sussex, down from 52,469 in the same period a year earlier.

Of those, the number of parcels for children fell from 18,713 to 16,264 in the same time.

Across the county, Eastbourne recorded the highest number of parcels, with 10,901 handed out between April and September.

Trussell said possible reasons for the overall dip in demand could include a "gradual slowdown in the extortionate price hikes we experienced on food and bills in recent years" as well as the Local Housing Allowance being unfrozen in April, "bringing support for private renters back in line with local rents".

The number of parcels delivered in the April-September period this year remains much higher than in the same period in 2019 and Trussell said it is "difficult to say if there has been an actual drop in hunger and hardship".

While all four nations saw demand fall, regional breakdowns showed areas such as the east of England and London experienced slight increases of almost 1% and 4% respectively.

Trussell chief executive, Emma Revie, said: "The sheer numbers of people still facing hunger and hardship across the UK is heartbreaking. This cannot go on and we refuse to stand by while so many of us are pushed to the brink, left without enough money to live on."

She added that the charity will "continue to call for change" as she urged the Government to have a "clearer plan" to end hunger.

She said: "The UK Government was elected with a manifesto pledge to end the need for emergency food and the time to act is now.

"There have been promising steps, but we need a clearer plan with more decisive action to invest in our social security system, if we are to end hunger once and for all."

A Government spokesperson said: "The mass dependence on food banks is unacceptable - that's why we've extended the Household Support Fund again to help struggling families with the cost of essentials.

"Alongside this, we are increasing the National Living Wage, uprating benefits and helping over one million households by introducing a fair repayment rate on Universal Credit deductions, while our Child Poverty Taskforce develops an ambitious strategy to give all children the best start in life."

Hear all the latest news from across the UK on the hour, every hour, on Greatest Hits Radio on DAB, smartspeaker, at greatesthitsradio.co.uk, and on the Rayo app.