Demand is 'spiking': Feeding Calgary's kids in a pandemic - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:02 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Demand is 'spiking': Feeding Calgary's kids in a pandemic

A school teacher in Bowness. A youth advocate in Ogden. A decades-old school lunch charity. They share acommon goal in trying to help feed hungry children in Calgary whose families have been shaken by a year-long pandemic.

Teachers, volunteers, donors rise up to meet growing needs of hungry children

Children line up outside Youth Centres of Calgary to pick up a bagged lunch and some groceries. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

A school teacher in Bowness. A youth advocate in Ogden. A decades-old school lunch charity. They share acommon goal in trying to help feed hungry children in Calgary whose families have been shaken by a year-long pandemic.

As families have struggled financially, emotionally and socially so too have the volunteers and organizations whose goal is to feed kids.

"Hungry kids can't learn," said Megan Dobchuk-Land, a Calgary teacher who started up a lunch program in the days right after the COVID-19 pandemic was declared and schools were closed inMarch2020.

"Our first reaction was, what are we going to do?"

Dobchuk-Land, another teacher and a group of volunteers knewthe closureswould leave vulnerable children without access tobreakfast and lunch programs, so they put together aplan involving a couple of restaurants thathad also been closed.

A fundraising campaign and a government grant to re-hire restaurantstaff launched their program which ran through the summer, handing out 19,000 bagged lunches and 7,500 frozen meals over six months.

Volunteers with the Bowness Food Network organized a free lunch program for children in the northwest community of Bowness during the pandemic in 2020. (Megan Dobchuk-Land)

Dobchuk-Landsaidit touched many lives. The program not only fed childrenbut re-hired restaurant staffand connected people who wanted to make a difference.

"We have so many volunteers that stepped up to do that work that really saw the need as much as us," said Dobchuk-Land.

"I think that the need is not going away, it's only increasing."

From hoops to bagged lunches

The Youth Centres of Calgary used to offer a place for kids to hang out after school, do their homework, shoot some hoops, play games and get something to eat. But the pandemic forced Jane Wachowich to close down the space and pivot to afood preparation and distribution hub at the modest two-storey home in the southeast community of Ogden.

Volunteers assemblebag lunches in the garage behind the house,loadthem into their vehicles and deliver them topick-up spots inseveral south and northeast neighbourhoods.

Jane Wachowich, the executive director of Youth Centres of Calgary, says she along with dozens of volunteers have distributed thousands of lunches for school kids from a youth drop-in home in the southeast community of Ogden. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

"We were being told by school principals and the social workers with whom we work that the kids were going to be hungry, the kids were likely not to be fed at school, agencies were in an upheaval,we had to close our doors, but we also knew that we needed to stay connected with the kids in the community," said Wachowich.

Donors chipped in with either food or money and the program has taken off. Prepared lunches, frozen meals, fruits, veggies and snacks are now being offered seven days a week on average about 200 meals a day.

Volunteers at Youth Centres of Calgary in Ogden prepare lunches for children at a drop-in home that's been closed to gatherings since the pandemic. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

Last Wednesday afternoon, children started lining up outside the house waiting to grab some of the goodies.

Wachowich saidshe'll probably keep going for a few more months but she saidit's going to be difficult to stop.

"We'll continue through the summer or at least until we see that the need hassubsided, andright now we're seeing it spiking."

School lunch program pivots

One of the city's long-standing school lunch programs said it was hit hard by the pandemic and admits it was slow to pivotafter schools were shut down.

"In the early days, it would be fair to say that there were some challenges," said Tanya Koshowski, the executive director of Brown Bagging for Calgary's Kids (BB4CK) during an interview last fall.

Today, Koshowski saidithas jolted the charity into rethinking how it operates.

Tanya Koshowski is the executive director of Brown Bagging for Calgary's Kids. She says the pandemic has reduced the number of bagged lunches the charity provides to children. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

The organization uses various kitchens and volunteers across the city to prepare and deliver bagged lunches for kids at school. It also provides funding to schools to buy groceries and make their own meals for students. And, since the pandemic, it started offering $40 grocerygift cards directly to familieswhose children haven't returned to class.

Koshowski saidit'sproviding bagged lunches for about 3,900 children a day while 1,768gift cards were mailed out this month.

Bagged lunches down 17%

That means BB4CK is no longer providing lunches to approximately 1,100kids a dayKoshowskisaidthat's down17 per cent.She saidthe pandemic is forcingthem to look at potentially new longer-term strategies.

"We're now looking at kind of a bigger, systemic issue of maybe we need to change how we access and care for these kids andthese families," she said.

A volunteer with Brown Bagging for Calgary's Kids prepares lunch at the charity's downtown kitchen. (Bryan Labby/CBC)

The organization has been around for 30 years. It has an annual budget of $4 million and 18 employees.

The Calgary Board of Education says BB4CK is working in 123 of its schools, while the Calgary Catholic School District said64 of its schools are involved. The CBE said35 schools are on hold because of issues related to food-handling permits.

Demand for food rising

The volunteers, non-profit organizations and charities know the demand for food is not easing.

"We're not seeing a reduction in kids, we're seeing growth," said Wachowich.

She saidwhat they're doing is not going to end child poverty orunemployment.

"There's a lot of new need in the city," said Wachowich.

"Kids need what they need right now. And we're motivated by that."


Bryan Labby is an enterprise reporter with CBC Calgary. If you have a good story idea or tip, you can reach him at bryan.labby@cbc.ca or on Twitter at @CBCBryan.