Red
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2015
- Messages
- 2,536
- Reaction score
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- Points
- 113
- Location
- Chesterfield
- Supports
- Opposing the pedestrianisation of Norwich city centre!!!!
There’s a number of possible reasons for reliance on food banks, some more sympathetic than others. At the more sympathetic end of the scale there are cases where some kind of administrative or IT cock-up had led to delayed payment of welfare. At the less sympathetic end there are cases of people having no money for food because of welfare sanctions or because they’re hopeless at budgeting. And of course there’s a load of other scenarios/causes somewhere between those extremes.
There’s definitely a need for them. Even in the worst imaginable cases of self-inflicted food poverty (e.g. someone having no money for food because they spent all their welfare on scratch cards or magic beans) there's still the basic problem that someone can't afford to eat, which is especially hard to ignore when blameless children are involved. I certainly don't think less of a social worker or health visitor for writing a food bank referral in those cases. The more contentious point, I think, is whether their increased usage is (as often claimed) a reliable indicator of increased poverty, insufficient welfare provision, etc.
Do you have any first hand experience of food banks? You do seem to have more of an insight than Alty and his theoretical bullshit that's for sure. Having worked on the frontline with unemployed people for 10 years my experience is that a small minority of them are taking the piss. Having been in this work for so long I can spot a glassback from a mile off and I will honestly say that while I have been doing outreach at a foodbank only a tiny percentage of the small minority of the glassbacks attend. Many of them are people with mental health problems who are struggling with stuff like finding it hard to manage the transition from a fortnightly payment of JSA to a monthly payment of Universal Creit. My role there is to try and register them on our project where we upskill them, compile a CV with them and teach them where and how to apply for jobs and believe it or not I get a lot of referrals from the foodbank.
I'm not saying that only people who use or or work at foodbanks can really understand the societal and political causes that give rise to them, however, it really pisses me off when people like your protege Alty whose understanding of all this is a million miles away from reality pontificate about it.