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安大略省最新宣布粮食不安全紧急状态的城市

(2025-01-21 23:33:45) 下一个

金斯顿成为安大略省最新宣布粮食不安全紧急状态的城市


作者:Kevin Nielsen Global News 2025 年 1 月 21 日
https://globalnews.ca/news/10970159/kingston-food-insecurity-emergency/

点击播放视频:“金斯顿现在是安大略省第三个宣布粮食不安全的城市”

金斯顿现在是安大略省第三个宣布粮食不安全的城市
金斯顿市议会上周宣布粮食不安全紧急状态,成为过去几个月内安大略省第三个宣布粮食不安全的城市。

金斯顿上周在一次议会会议上采取了这一举措,因为该市在过去几年中经历粮食不安全的人数迅速增加。

KFL&A 公共卫生部门表示,该地区三分之一的人正在经历粮食不安全,这一数字已从 2022 年的九分之一跃升至九分之一。

“今年的情况比以往任何一年都更糟,不仅在我的选区,而且在整个金斯顿,”议员说。提出该动议的 Brandon Tozzo。

该市社区发展和福利主管 Ruth Noordegraaf 指出,社会救助率远远落后于通货膨胀率。

“上一次更新是在 2018 年,目前单身成年人每月可获得 733 美元,这显然是省政府规定的,”她告诉议会。“所以作为一个城市,我们无法控制这一点。我们显然看到了这样做的结果。”
议员 Greg Ridge 表示,圣文森特德保罗在 2019 年提供了 18,347 份餐食,2024 年提供了 46,997 份餐食。

然后,他分享了一个关于粮食不安全的个人故事,试图为议会的决定提供背景。

“我八岁的时候,父亲在工作中受伤,我不得不转学,离开我的朋友,”他说。 “然后我就在想,为什么我的祖父母总是过来送杂货,为什么我的父母总是在厨房里低声谈论钱,或者听到我妈妈在厨房里哭,告诉我妈妈,‘妈妈,一切都会好起来的。’

“这些都是会伴随你一生的事情。”

该动议呼吁安大略省政府立即提高社会救助率,增加学校食品计划的资金,并努力实现全民学校食品计划。

它还要求联邦和省政府建立有保障的可居住基本收入,并将减少粮食不安全纳入政府政策和政党纲领。

该动议将与主要政治领导人分享,包括总理贾斯汀·特鲁多、安大略省省长道格·福特、当地议员和省议员,以及市政和教育组织以及所有省和联邦政党的领导人。

金斯敦成为安大略省第三个通过此类动议的城市,继 2024 年 11 月的密西沙加和 12 月的多伦多之后。

密西沙加市市长卡罗琳·帕里什在一份新闻稿中指出,密西沙加市是安大略省食品银行使用率增长最快的城市。

“这种情况是不可接受的,也是不可持续的。虽然食品银行继续填补关键空白,但这是一个更广泛的问题,他们——和我们——无法独自解决,而且这不仅仅是密西沙加的问题,”她说。

“我们呼吁我们的省级和联邦合作伙伴与我们合作,通过解决导致粮食不安全的根本原因和结构性问题来实现持久的变革。”

Kingston becomes latest Ontario city to declare food insecurity an emergency

By Kevin Nielsen  Global News Posted January 21, 2025
 
Click to play video: 'Kingston now third Ontario city to declare food emergency'
 
Kingston is now the third Ontario city to declare a food emergency

Kingston city council declared food insecurity an emergency last week, becoming the third Ontario city to do so over the past few months.

Kingston made the move last week during a council meeting as the city has seen a rapid rise in the number of people who have experienced food insecurity over the past few years.

KFL&A Public Health says one in three people are experiencing food insecurity in the area, a number that has jumped from one in nine people in 2022.

“It had gotten worse this year than any other year, not just in my district, but throughout Kingston,” said Coun. Brandon Tozzo, who put the motion forward.

Ruth Noordegraaf, the director of community development and well-being with the city, noted that social assistance rates have fallen far behind inflation rates.

“The last update was in 2018 and currently a single adult is receiving $733 a month, which is obviously provincially mandated,” she told council. “So as a city, we don’t control that. We’re obviously seeing the outcomes of that.”

Coun. Greg Ridge said St. Vincent De Paul provided 18,347 meals in 2019, and 46,997 in 2024.

He then shared a personal story of food insecurity in an attempt to provide context for the council’s decision.

“When I was eight, my father was injured on the job and I had to change schools and leave my friends,” he said. “And then I was wondering why my grandparents were coming by and dropping off groceries all the time and wondering why my parents were talking in hushed tones about money in the kitchen, or hearing my mother cry in the kitchen and tell my mom, ‘Mama, it’s going to be OK.’

“These are things that they stay with you for your whole life.”

The motion calls on the Ontario government to immediately raise social assistance rates, increase funding for school food programs and work toward a universal school food program.

It also requests that the federal and provincial governments establish a guaranteed livable basic income and incorporate food insecurity reduction into government policies and political party platforms.

The motion will be shared with key political leaders, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Ontario Premier Doug Ford, and local MPs and MPPs, as well as municipal and educational organizations and the leaders of all provincial and federal parties.

Kingston becomes the third Ontario city to pass such a motion, following on the heels of Mississauga in November 2024 and Toronto in December.

In a release, Mississauga Mayor Carolyn Parrish noted her city has the fastest-growing rate of food bank use in Ontario.

“This situation is unacceptable and unsustainable. While food banks continue to fill a critical gap, this is a broader issue that they – and we – can’t solve alone, and it’s not just a Mississauga problem,” she stated.

“We call on our provincial and federal partners to work with us toward lasting change by addressing the root causes and structural issues driving food insecurity.”

1/3人挨饿!加拿大多个城市宣布紧急状态

www.bcbay.com | 2025-01-20 15:50:07  加西网 | 2条评论

安省金斯敦(Kingston)是加拿大最新宣布进入粮食不安全紧急状态的城市。

该地区公共卫生官员表示,大约三分之一的家庭负担不起餐费。

该市的议员们在市议会会议上一致批准了 Coun.Brandon Tozzo 宣布金斯敦进入粮食不安全紧急状态的动议,该动议呼吁安大略省和联邦政府采取更多措施为该市和整个安大略省的人们提供帮助。

 

Tozzo 的动议指出,金斯敦、Frontenac、Lennox 和 Addington 公共卫生局估计,金斯敦三分之一的家庭粮食不安全。

动议说:“粮食不安全被定义为由于经济拮据而无法获得足够的或不安全的粮食,这是普遍的物质匮乏(贫困)的标志,并构成严重的公共卫生问题,因为它与多种疾病和慢性健康状况的发病率较高以及过早死亡的风险较高有关”。

这位议员说,生活费用危机、不稳定的工作以及 "COVID-19、疾病或驱逐等严重冲击,使人们更难负担生活的基本需求和摆脱贫困"。

“目前的社会援助率严重不足,导致无法负担健康饮食”。

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据CTV报道,Tozzo 说:“不知道你的下一顿饭从哪里来,或者必须在支付房租、支付水电费和食物之间做出选择”。

“这是非常强烈的措辞。我们这样做的原因是,我们试图倡导省和联邦政府的上层政府采取重大行动,解决粮食不安全问题”。

粮食不安全的加剧给当地食品银行带来了前所未有的压力,例如金斯敦的 Partners in Mission Food Bank。

执行董事 Dan Irwin表示,2024 年,他们向金斯敦地区的 9,131 人分发了 20,355 个礼篮,比 2023 年增加了 10.2%。礼篮提供 7 天的食物。

Irwin说,总共有 2,800 多名儿童,比上一年增加了近 1,000 名。

皇后大学运动机能学与健康研究学院的伊莱恩·鲍威尔 (Elaine Power) 表示,加拿大有近 900 万人面临粮食不安全。

鲍威尔说:“我们知道,最有可能成为穷人的人也最有可能粮食不安全。种族化群体,尤其是黑人和原住民、靠社会援助或 EI 生活的人、儿童、单亲父母,尤其是母亲、独居者以及租房的人”。

多伦多和密西沙加也宣布进入粮食不安全紧急状态。他们和金斯顿一起向上级政府寻求帮助。

去年11 月,密西沙加市议会宣布粮食不安全为紧急状态。该动议呼吁安大略省改善社会援助计划,并投资于“负担得起的、支持性的公共住房”。

去年多伦多市议会于 2024 年 12 月 17 日和 18 日未经修改通过议案,宣布多伦多市出现粮食短缺紧急状况。

Ref: https://secure.toronto.ca/council/agenda-item.do?item=2024.MM24.42

https://www.mississauga.ca/city-of-mississauga-news/news/mississauga-city-council-declares-food-insecurity-an-emergency/

Member Motion
City Council
MM24.42 ACTION Ward: All
Declaring Food Insecurity an Emergency - by Mayor Olivia Chow,
seconded by Councillor Rachel Chernos Lin
* This Motion has been deemed urgent by the Chair.
* This Motion is not subject to a vote to waive referral. This Motion has been added to the agenda and is before Council for debate.
Recommendations
Mayor Olivia Chow, seconded by Councillor Rachel Chernos Lin, recommends that:
1. City Council declare food insecurity an emergency in the City of Toronto.
2. City Council direct the City Manager to consider this emergency declaration in ongoing and future work related to food insecurity such as the City of Toronto’s Poverty Reduction Strategy, Food Charter, and School Food Program.
3. City Council request the Provincial Government to immediately increase its base funding to existing school food programs and increase its financial commitment to enable the expansion of school food programs to additional schools to build a universal school food program.
4. City Council request the Provincial and Federal Governments to act to address the causes of food insecurity by:
a. enhancing and indexing to inflation income security programs such as Employment Insurance, Old Age Security, Canada Child Benefit, Canada Disability Benefit, Ontario Works, and Ontario Disability Support Program;
b. promoting decent work through secure, quality jobs, living wages, and workplace benefits; and c. joining the City of Toronto in further investing in building and maintaining deeply affordable housing.
5. City Council forward this item to all Members of Parliament and Members of Provincial Parliament who represent Toronto ridings, as well as the Federation of Canadian Municipalities, the Association of Municipalities of Ontario, the Ontario Public School Boards Association, and the National School Board Association for information.
Summary
When I was a Child Advocate of Toronto, many years ago, I asked the children of Toronto what would be one thing they would do if they were mayor. Lots of them suggested parks and playgrounds. But Sylvia, a 5-year-old, said she would “ask god for more money to buy groceries.” Sylvia experienced hunger and watched her mom run out of grocery money. She knew what it was like to go to school on an empty stomach. Every day she was more focused on her hunger, than her teachers.
In a city as prosperous as ours, these stories are far too common. Things are tough. And as the cost of living soars, this is increasingly impacting our kids. Food bank visits in the Greater Toronto Area are up 51 percent from last year. One out of three of these users are children.
The City of Toronto steps up every day to help feed over 230,000 kids through the school food program. I’m proud of my own work in getting that program off the ground and continuing to improve it. At this meeting alone, we voted to ensure 8,000 more kids will be fed at school starting in January. That means fewer hungry kids, and badly needed savings for parents.
Yet we must recognize how serious the problem is today and commit ourselves to doing even more to confront it. That is why City Council has committed to a phased-in approach to a universal school food program, including a universal mid-morning meal by the 2026 to 2027 school year and a universal school lunch program no later than 2030.
This matter is urgent as action is needed from all orders of government, particularly as the 2025 to 2026 budgets are prepared at the Federal and Provincial levels.
Background Information (City Council) Member Motion MM24.42

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