GTA food bank gets $2M from U.S.-based church - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:58 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

GTA food bank gets $2M from U.S.-based church

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints announced the contribution to Daily Bread Food Bank on Monday, saying its the largest donation its ever made to a Canadian organization

The LDS Churchs largest ever donation in Canada is going to the Daily Bread Food Bank

Aerial (drone) images of the Daily Bread Food Bank warehouse and distribution centre in Etobicoke. Volunteers sorting goods in a large warehouse full of cardboard boxes
Daily Bread Food Bank, which is dealing with a record number of people relying on its services, has received a $2 million donation from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. (Patrick Morrell/CBC)

More Torontoniansthan ever are relying on food banks andcharitable groups outside the country are taking notice.

This week, the U.S.-based Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, a Mormon church with17 million members worldwide, donated $2 million to Daily Bread Food Bank. It's the religious group's largest donation yetin Canada, according to a Daily Bread news release.

About one in 10 people in Toronto now rely on a food bank, according to Daily Bread.

Church elder David LaFrance saidLDS members were shocked by that statistic, and parishioners from around North America contributed to the donation, which is part of the church's global humanitarian and emergency relief efforts.

"It's just part of what motivates us. We're motivated by the desire to serve our fellow being," he said at a food sort in Etobicoke Monday, where the donation was announced.

Daily Bread CEO Neil Hetheringtonsaid the food bank'sannual spending has gone up from $1.5 million before the pandemicto $29million this year. Monthly visits have shot up in that same time, he said, going from roughly 65,000 to over 350,000 as of May, with about 13,000 new clients each month.

As more people struggle to afford the cost of living, Hetherington saidthat's putting more pressure on food banks to fill in gaps. Nearly a quarter of Daily Bread clients now spend all their income on housing, the food bank said in a news release Monday.

Hetherington saidthe organization is desperate for funding, and he's grateful for the donation. He saidit will buy about twomillion meals for people in needand two new trucks to distribute food around the GTA.

"The difficult thing is we need about 40 to 50 million meals every single year for the city of Toronto," he said. "So that means we're going to advocate to the different levels of government even harder."

He saidthere is progress on government efforts to increase and preserve affordable housing to reduce food bank use, but there's still more work to do.

All three levels of government that represent EtobicokeLakeshore were present at Monday's food sort. Toronto Coun. Amber Morley, MP James Maloney and MPP Christine Hogarth all said they're ready to work together to reduce the need for food banks in the GTA.

Daily Bread saidthe LDS Church made smaller donations to the organization in 2022 and 2023. The church says it has about 50,000 members in Ontario. In 2023, the church contributed $1.36 billion toward 4,119 humanitarian projects in 191 countries, according to Monday's release.

With files from Clara Pasieka