Food Bank

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There was a food bank bin by the door when I went in the Co-op the other day. There were a few lonely items in the bottom: a multi-pack of Quavers, some washing-up liquid and a packet of sanitary towels among the tea and cereal.

Open Hands Food Bank.jpg
The bin was on behalf of Open Hands, a Leicester charity that helps anyone in need. Their food store has received a 23% increase in visits since last year.

Open Hands was asking for help to replenish The Big Ten: the items most requested at the Food Store:

  • Soup
  • Tinned fruit and vegetables
  • UHT milk
  • Coffee
  • Cereal
  • Tinned meat and fish
  • Biscuits
  • Tinned Tomatoes

I went round with a separate basket picking up one of each item on the list. I felt sad doing it, imagining families and people on their own, in the dire need of emergency supplies from a food bank; the diminishing process of getting a referral; the limited items on display; living out of tins and packets.

My small contribution came to £16.53. It seemed very meagre as I put it in the bin, hardly making a dent in the collection. Some items had been on special offer and I had bought two of them. There was barely a meal for a family, possibly enough to provide food for a single person for a day or two.

The bin was gone the next time I went back. It had only been in the shop for a week. In its place were serried rows of Valentine's bouquets at £15 and £20 each. I wondered how much food had been donated over the week the bin was there.

My neighbour is a volunteer at Open Hands. She teaches English as a Second Language, two classes a week on Mondays and Fridays. The classes are run on an academic basis.

Pie Night takes place at 7pm on Tuesday where anyone in need can get a free meal. Pukka Pies Ltd sponsors the meals by donating pies every week.

There's a Furniture Store and a Drop-In twice a week in which clothing, toiletries and household items are available for free on receipt of an Open Hands Referral Form. Tea and toast is there, too, for anyone who needs it.

Alongside the English classes there is are mentoring programmes, a pre-school, and an advice centre.

The charity also runs 6 Degrees coffee shop on London Road, just up from the station, with all surpluses re-invested back into the organisation's work.

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Source The Clothing Store at the Open Hands Drop-In Centre.

There's an emphasis on the social side, opportunities for people to have a cup of tea or a meal and engage with other people as well as get practical help.

Over 200 people visit Open Hands every week, with a 23% increase in visits to the Food Store since last year. One good thing about Getting Brexit Done is that Ministers can get on with doing their proper jobs. Although with ten Housing Ministers in as many years, I wonder how much will change.



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16 comments
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According to the Bible, Charity Means Love (5 of 5)

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Likely nothing will change. When it comes to politicians, you should always judge the future by the past. The job of the housing minister , in Ireland at least, is to fanny about talking about how much housing he's going to provide......after the next election.

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Disappointingly, you're probably right.

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Our local supermarket i go to often has a food bin, i try to once every week or two add extra things to my cart so I can drop a few pieces into the bin

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That's probably a good way to do it, but it grieves me that people are dependent on emergency supplies. We're supposed to have a safety net here that no-one falls through.

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Yeah it is so sad to think of how many are dependent on the goodwill of others or else they would be starving :(

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Kudos to the person who dropped in the sanitary towels, they ought to be on the list of necessities.

Freecycling used to be an expanding movement 10 years ago but not sure it is now when things like FB marketplace mean people can sell things easily, sell things they might once have thrown out. I also think council recycling centres could do more to allow people to take stuff that others wish to dump, there is some great stuff gets chucked .

From your other post, you hit a very important point about the advantages of minimalising. There have recently been a number of articles I've read recently in opposition to the decluttering argument but none touched on the advantages of reducing our material impact by reducing consumption of goods.

Lovely post as always and thanks for 'serried'......I will attempt to use it soon :-)

PS Pukka Pies are available here in a few very upmarket supermarkets starting around £4 a pie! No..I draw the line at my £3 a bottle HP!

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I'm in two minds about minimalising, I think it's mainly (middle class) hipster bandwagon nonsense; on the other hand, stopping buying so much churned out rubbish is a good thing :)

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Well, I prefer 'decluttering' and for me its been very good for the soul since I started many years ago! Then again, my style and tastes have always been simple. Clutter, mess and stuff stress me, and simplicity keeps me from being stressed.
Things lose their value when they become trendy and have buzzwords attached!

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The owners of a local business set up a little free pantry where anyone who is in need can come and pick up food, and other, items. It stays pretty well stocked most of the time and, when not, a quick callout on Facebook gets it better filled soon.

It is outside so anyone can pick up, or drop off, items without having to interact with anyone if they don't want to.

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(Edited)

In my local co-op a while ago I saw two normal guys getting stuff out the bin at the side but they looked normal not homeless or destitute so started chatting to em. They said they just took it coz the stuff is still fine and the shop has to throw it away due to sell by date but is still edable for at least a week or so. They said it was amazing how much they took out bags full and the shop was alright with it. The main problem is food waste if they could combat that there would be ample food for everyone noone need go hungry but big cooperation just don't care coz there is no money in it all about profit

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We have some schemes here where expired food goes to shelters and, I believe, a kitchen that provides free or low-cost meals. It could be better organised so that no food is wasted, perhaps a tax for waste? I agree there's enough food, and enough money to pay for food, but it is not distributed so that everyone has enough.

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