UK & World News
PM Meets Families Facing Poverty At Food Bank
The Prime Minister has made a secret visit to his local food bank, after criticism that Downing Street does not understand the increasing role they are playing in 'Austerity Britain'.
Mr Cameron visited the charity, which operates out of a church hall in his constituency in Oxfordshire, and spoke to volunteers who supply up to 10 families each week with emergency food parcels.
Nationally, the use of food banks has grown, with the largest operator, the Trussell Trust, now running 310 centres. The trust helped 260,000 people in the past year, an increase of 60,000 on the year before.
The Witney food bank was set up by Jo Cypher, who told Sky News: "We've had people coming in saying 'we've had a choice this week, either we buy electric, we buy gas, we pay bills, or we eat'."
Her colleague Julie Walker-Lock said they were helping a variety of people. "We're seeing from the elderly down to the families with young children. We've had a barrister in - he'd been looking after his wife and she'd passed away and he'd lost everything, and he came here, and we helped him out."
Melody Hopkins is one of the those who has used the Witney food bank. She told Sky News she was a victim of domestic violence, and then lost her job as a carer for disabled people.
Despite receiving benefits and child tax credits, she said she struggles to pay rising food and heating bills, and care for her eight-year-old son Toby who requires daily medication for Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder. She found it difficult to make the transition from wage earner to welfare recipient.
"My wages had stopped, so I had to wait for the benefits to kick in. We were desperate. We didn't have any food. At one point I had a fiver, in my back pocket, to just go and get some food.
"It's sad to think that I used to work, I used to do three meals a day, it was great, and now it's come down to one meal a day, because Toby gets free lunch at school. So I haven't eaten today - I'll eat later with him. I have gone without because Toby comes first ... it's sad when I can't give Toby the food he wants."
Difficulties in finding childcare after school for a child with special needs mean Ms Hopkins cannot get a full-time job, so she does voluntary work instead.
"I don't want to be on benefits. I want to go back to work and do a job. I've always worked. This is the only one or two years I haven't had a job," she said.
Ms Hopkins added that she shops for clothes once a year, gets furniture from charity shops and avoids big supermarkets.
"Every aisle is temptation, you need to go around those shops and not even look at the prices. I can't do that. I go in with a basket and it's the bare essentials - can we make tea out of what we've got? And you see people walking out with big trolleys and you think OK, I haven't got that, we've got what we need and we will go," she explained.
To help as many people as possible, and to avoid dependency, food banks permit only three visits per year, and recipients have to have been referred by a charity or other agency. GPs are now prescribing food as well as medicine to patients.
Dr Raj Kohli, from the Deer Park Medical Centre in Witney, told Sky News: "I do come across families who are struggling to appropriately feed their children. Particularly with fresh fruit and vegetables, it's expensive.
"We're not necessarily seeing the physical effects of malnutrition at this stage, but they are struggling. We need to look at their immediate needs, and a food bank can help their immediate needs."
Witney is not the sort of place you might expect to find poverty. The Cotswolds town has only 909 people claiming Jobseeker's Allowance and its unemployment rate is less than half of the national average.
But there are enough people struggling to make ends meet to mean the food bank has become a vital resource. Even the local Brownie pack saved loose change and then put all their money together to buy tins of food to give to the poor. Shoppers and supermarkets both donate groceries which can be used in food parcels.
The volunteers at the Witney food bank were sworn to secrecy about the Prime Minister's visit, and no cameras were present.
But they said that he listened to their comments about why the food bank was needed and their fears that changes to the benefits system in April could bring a fresh influx of people who find it hard to pay their bills.
Previously, a Downing Street spokesperson has said: "Benefit levels are set at a level where people can afford to eat. If people have short-term shortages, where they feel they need a bit of extra food, then of course food banks are the right place for that. But benefits are not set at such a low level that people can't eat."
Volunteer Julie Walker-Lock told Sky News: "I think that was a very ill-informed statement they made. There is a genuine need for us to be here."
Ms Cypher said: "We were glad he came, because I think he was blind to the fact that, like everybody else, supposedly Witney is very rich. It's actually quite the opposite. It's not.
"I think he went away with a better understanding of how the system works and why we're here. I'm hoping that we went away with some of those thoughts, and he will act on them."
For those who use the food banks, items like pasta and tins of soups can be an essential part of their diet. But sometimes it's having an occasional treat which can lift people out of depression. An unexpected Christmas hamper made all the difference to Ms Hopkins and her son.
"To everybody else they're not luxuries, but to me and my son they were luxuries. They were things I wanted to buy but couldn't afford to buy, and it brought some tears to our eyes.
"Christmas Day we just had a standard chicken. Most people have turkey, we didn't, we had tinned veg. I mean, it was OK, but we had the little extras like a cracker each, and mince pies. My son was like 'I got sweeties' and I actually wrapped them up and put them in his stocking - that's how important it is to us," she said.
Update:
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what do you think?

James R McCulloch
Secret visits??? What does he have to hide? Cameron will never ever want for anything in his life!! The wolf doesn't visit the chickens in the coop to count the eggs!

pjbeckett
I hope they searched him before he came out.

Hector Gomez
He was appalled to find no caviar.

stevie may
And some capitalists/tories here on orange world continue to claim there is no poverty in the UK. Typical tory ignorance. Its hard to see hardship, hunger and despair when your high-up in your ivory tower.

gordon
Stevie. Some of the greatest philanthropists in history have been very rich and capitalists.What is wrong with capitalists? Without them we would all starve

happymike CHESTER
Err! no we did not we worked locally traded local and had a happy life .

dave
So now he's stealing from the poor at food banks. Don't we pay him enough? Bring in payment by results for politicians.

Bazil Brush
he is probably looking at taxing it

Robert Egan
He'll be checking to see how best to tax it, the more money the revenue can take, the more the MPs (Ministerial Parasites) can claim on their expences.

Russell6730
This is nothing but Tory sop to try and convince Joe Public that hes still in tune with their concerns after being cast aside at the Eastleigh bye election.Whoever goes hungry in benefits happy Britain needs to look at the way they manage their affairs. Camerons handlers should have sent him NHS hospitals where people are systematically being starved to death through neglect they are the most vulnerable people in our society. Maybe he thinks they dont count.

Eric Clutterbean
surely he gets paid enough to buy his own food the scrounger

jamesmid
Food banks are not a true reflection of the state of this country.Many people don't eat three meals a day because they are to proud to go cap in hand begging for a hand out .......

bjnk
You are right jamesmid,its ten times worse than is being portraid in this article.It states you can visit 3 times a year,what do they do for the other 49 weeks starve,and it will get worse when people have to pay for their extra empty bedroom.

El Bubsio
And this just in..... Tomorrow, Mr Cameron will be at a homeless shelter for a visit soooo secret it will only be covered by 15 newspapers. Can we say publicity stunt, kids?
Name witheld
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

happymike CHESTER
That's what Cameron want`s back to the good old days when the poor where mean`s tested and sent to work houses. Charities will fill in for the state the poor chastised for asking for more.

George Clement
Trying to save face after the last by election results.

George Clement
What a testimony to the Tories and the LibDems, overseeing the rise in the need for food banks in our country, it's good to see who Cameron's mentor was.





bissett285
4:22am on 3/3/2013
Cameron will do nothing he only cares about him self and pepole like him the rest of us can go without