Soaring food costs making it tougher for Illinois food pantries
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[November 07, 2022]
By Zeta Cross | The Center Square contributor
(The Center Square) – Soaring food costs
have hit Illinois food pantries very hard. Significantly more people are
showing up for emergency food assistance. At the same time, food
donations are harder to get and costs have quadrupled.
Carrie Schumacher is the director of Willow Creek Care Center in South
Barrington. Food providers like Willow Care and people who need food are
facing the same pressures, she said.
“Our guests’ money is not going nearly as far as it did last year. It’s
harder than ever to stretch dollars to pay bills and put food on the
table,” Schumacher told The Center Square.
The food pantry and other services that Willow Creek provides are part
of the ministry of the Willow Creek Community Church. The church started
the food pantry 30 years ago when one church member bought a bag of
groceries for another church member. The Care Center has expanded over
the years into a modern facility that provides clothing, dental and
vision care and an auto repair ministry, in addition to food.
Schumacher said food pantries all across the state are reporting higher
numbers of needy people than they saw last year.
Ninety percent of food banks across Illinois are reporting increased
demand for food.
At Willow Creek Care Center, Schumacher said they have had a 54%
increase in the number of people who are coming to them for food this
year as compared to last year. At the same time, the cost of food has
quadrupled.
“Being able to provide the same level of food that we were able to
provide pre-COVID has been a significant challenge,” Schumacher said.
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Most of the food comes from the Greater Chicago Food Depository, a group
that has been sourcing good quality, nutritious food and supplying it to
food pantries and soup kitchens in the area for more than 40 years.
In addition to supplying food, the Food Depository has hooked Willow
Creek up with local stores that have food to give away. Willow Creek
sends trucks out most days to “glean” food that is nearing the end of
its shelf life so that they can provide it to the people they serve.
Unfortunately, inflation has made the process much more difficult,
Schumacher said.
“Their items are costing them more, so groceries are ordering less food.
That means they have less surplus to donate to us,” she said.
To provide even remotely near the types and amounts of food that Willow
Creek guests need, the Care Center has had to quadruple the amount of
money that they spend out of their budget.
“We are now purchasing items such as yogurt, milk, eggs and produce –
items that were regularly donated by partners before the pandemic,”
Schumacher said.
The guests who come to Willow Creek do not get to take home as many of
the more costly items such as meat that they had received in the past,
Schumacher said. Families used to be able to pick five to seven meat
items from the freezer, she said.
“Now we have to limit them to three meat choices,” she said.
Every week, Willow Creek Care Center gives 900 families enough groceries
to last for a week. Guests can get free food from the food pantry two
times a month. They leave with food that has a retail value of $150 to
$250 dollars. Because of partnerships and corporate sponsorships and
donations, Willow Creek is able to source food at huge discounts. Willow
Creek pays approximately one-eighth of the sticker prices that people
would pay if they bought the same food at a grocery store. |