Thousands of emergency parcels handed out at St Helens food banks

Food banks in St Helens provided thousands of packages to people in need last year, new figures show.
Stocks of food at the Trussell Trust Brent Foodbank, Neasden, London.Stocks of food at the Trussell Trust Brent Foodbank, Neasden, London.
Stocks of food at the Trussell Trust Brent Foodbank, Neasden, London.

Food banks in St Helens provided thousands of packages to people in need last year, new figures show.

The Trussell Trust, a charity tackling poverty in the UK, supports the country’s largest network of food banks.

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Over the course of the coronavirus pandemic, they have seen a dramatic increase in the number of emergency food parcels handed out to those in need nationally.

Figures from the charity show 8,420 emergency food parcels were handed out to people in St Helens at Trussell Trust-run food banks in the year to March – a decrease on the 8,478 provided in the year to March 2020, before the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic.

However, this was an increase on the 6,720 packages distributed in the year to March 2021.

The charity typically hands out emergency packages containing three days’ worth of food. Since the start of the pandemic, it has also started providing supplies in seven-day packages, in response to growing need and to limit the number of deliveries.

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Across the North West, 252,048 parcels were handed out by the region’s 235 distribution centres in the year to March.

The Trussell Trust warned that food bank use has accelerated in the past six months, as the rising cost of basic amenities has hit people’s pockets.

Emma Revie, chief executive of the charity, said: “People are telling us they’re skipping meals so they can feed their children. That they are turning off essential appliances so they can afford internet access for their kids to do their homework.

“How can this be right in a society like ours? And yet food banks in our network tell us this is only set to get worse as their communities are pushed deeper into financial hardship.

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“No one’s income should fall so dangerously low that they cannot afford to stay fed, warm and dry.”

In year to March, 37% – or 3,117 – of the parcels handed out in St Helens were given to children, down from 3,162 in the year before the pandemic.

And across the UK at large, nearly 2.2 million parcels were distributed in the year to March 2022 – fewer than the 2.6 million the year before, but a significant increase on the 1.2 million provided five years ago in the year to March 2017.

The Department for Work and Pensions said that it recognises the pressures on the cost of living and is "doing what it can" to help, such as spending £22 billion across the next financial year to support people with energy bills and fuel duty.