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Food bank client Elena visits the Daily Bread Food Bank in the Etobicoke area of Toronto, Ont. on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. Photo by ERNEST DOROSZUK /TORONTO SUN
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Like tens of thousands of people across the GTA, Elena comes to a food bank to top up her grocery shopping every week.
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“It has been difficult,” said Elena, who did not wish to share her last name.
On Thursday, she had a 12:30 p.m. appointment at the Etobicoke food bank to select whatever she needed.
Daily Bread is a massive hub supplying 189 food banks across the GTA.
“It’s really hard to get food because everything is getting more expensive,” said Elena, minutes before collecting a range of goods including fresh produce.
She is on disability and lives with her daughter on limited income.
She still ventures to the grocery store, but each visit, she says, brings added pressure to her monthly budget.
“It’s been tough because I go in the store and practically every time I go, the prices are higher for things I have purchased in the past. So it’s not fun,” Elena said. “If I go and let’s say the bread was like $3 last time, and then it’s $4 or $5, it really upsets me,” Elena said.
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Across town, the Thorncliffe Food Bank is also replenished by Daily Bread.
Organizers there say they have noticed a major increase in demand this year.
“We are seeing four times as many families as we usually see,” said coordinator Shumaila Saeed.
She said most of the residents in the area are recent arrivals to the country and she has registered a marked increase of clients from Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Ukraine.
“It’s difficult for them — and many of them are coming for the first time. They are shy about having to need the food bank,” Saeed said.
One of its most pressing needs is flour.
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Volunteer Donna Muystra sorts food at the Daily Bread Food Bank in the Etobicoke area of Toronto, Ont. on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2022. ERNEST DOROSZUK/TORONTO SUN
Many of Thorncliffe’s clients prefer making their own bread, rather than taking donated sliced bread.
In Ottawa, the federal NDP wants a deep look into whether grocery stores are profiting off inflation by charging more.
While inflation was running hot at seven per cent in August, food inflation was pushing 11%.
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