How Foodbank shored up pantry staples in the time of panic buying

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Australia’s largest food charity has a solution for panic buying that empties supermarket shelves - its own range of pantry staples. covid19 coronavirus panicbuying

Long before pandemic panic-buying stripped supermarket shelves of pantry staples, Foodbank Australia realised it would not always be able to rely on donors for in-demand products such as pasta sauce.

“To meet these salt-of-the-earth blokes who work in the factory and to have them break down into tears when they hear about the families that this pasta sauce has gone to is so powerful,” says Foodbank CEO Brianna Casey.“It reminds me how lucky we are in this country to have people who are so kind and so generous.”

Foodbank teams in New South Wales alone are packing between 2500 and 3500 emergency relief hampers every day due to the increase in demand – pre-lockdown it was 2500 to 3000 a week. “In 2019, 15 per cent of Australians experiencing food insecurity were seeking food relief at least once a week,” the report said. “In 2020, this has more than doubled to 31 per cent.”

But these charities are often reliant on volunteers, particularly older Australians, who have needed to isolate during the pandemic.

 

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