New Brunswick

New Brunswick food bank use exceeds national averages

A new national report shows greater proportions of food bank users in New Brunswick are children, homeowners, or welfare recipients.

Figures show 20% of food bank users in New Brunswick own their home compared to 7% nationally

Hunger Count 2015, a new national report, shows greater proportions of food bank users in New Brunswick are children, homeowners, or welfare recipients. (CBC)

A greater proportions of food bank users in New Brunswick are children, homeowners, or welfare recipients, a new national report shows.

Hunger Count 2015 found the number of people using food banks across the country is up for a second year in a row to 850,000 people a month.

In New Brunswick, 40 per cent of food bank users are children, compared to 35 per cent nationally.

Close to 20 per cent of New Brunswick food bank users own their own homes while the national figure is seven per cent.

Also, 70 per cent of food bank users receive social assistance benefits in New Brunswick, which exceeds the Canadian average of 50 per cent.

"Social assistance in New Brunswick is actually the lowest in Canada," said Katharine Schmidt, the executive director of Food Banks Canada.

She said a single person on social assistance would receive $560 a month in New Brunswick.

"So you're trying to cover your basic housing and also be able to purchase food and any other life necessities. It's really, really tough," she said.

Schmidt's group is asking governments to take a hard look at revamping social assistance programs into something more effective and to invest in affordable housing, education and training.

She said that will reduce the cost of poverty in the long term.

Food bank use today is 26 per cent higher than when the global economic downturn hit in 2009, says the organization.