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Montreal2023 Charity Drive

This Quebec City food bank can hardly keep up with demand, as clientele nearly doubles

For La Bouche Gnreuse in Quebec City, finding enough food to fill over 1,000 baskets this season is a challenge as management says the need is exploding.

'I don't know what we're going to do,' says head of La Bouche Gnreuse

A man holds food in his hand as he puts his grocery bags on a table.
Benoit Baribeau has been coming to La Bouche Gnreuse for food for 15 years. In recent weeks, demand at the food bank has exceeded 1,000 baskets per week. (Marika Wheeler/Radio-Canada)

It's the day they distribute food baskets at LaBouche Gnreusein Quebec City, and more than a hundred people have lined up to wait under tents outside.

Every week, the line gets longer.

"This ishow I'm able to eat," explains Benot Baribeau, patiently waiting to fill his empty grocery bags.

He's been coming here for 15 years, and has witnessed the growing demand.

"When I look at the little children who come, and see that their parents [standing outside] in -30C, -40 C so they can eat Sometimes it just breaks my heart,"said Baribeau.

Inside, a dozen volunteers and a few employees weave their way between piles of boxes of food, filling them with fruits and vegetables, dairy products, meat, bread and sweets in the organization's cramped warehouse.

In recent weeks, demand at the organization has exceeded 1,000 baskets per week. But on this last distribution in November, a new peakwas reached 1,105 baskets.

"That's as high as we can go. I don't know what we're going to do," said Pierre Gravel, general manager of La Bouche Gnreuse, which roughly translates to a generous mouthful.

He addswith a slight smile, "but every time it goes up, we find a way to have something for people."

Two years ago, the organization was giving away 600 baskets a week, said Gravel. With that nearly doubled,securingenough food to fill these baskets is becoming increasingly difficult.

A man looks at the camera as he stands outside wearing a jacket
Pierre Gravel says his team stops at 15 grocery stories, wholesalers or farms to collect enough food for the baskets (Marika Wheeler/Radio-Canada)

The daily 'milk run'

On a snowy morning, just as dawn breaks, Gravel and three other men push a wooden pallet loaded with sacks of potatoes toward the door of their food bank'swarehouse in the Limoilou district of Quebec City.

A farmer from Neuville, about 30 kilometres away, had donated the potatoes the day before.

Then they had to empty the truck used to collect the potatoesin preparation for what the food bank workers call the "milk run" a slow journeythe general manager and three others embark on seven days a week to collect food.

Two of the organization's trucks stop at some 15 grocery stores, wholesalers or farms to collect food for the Thursday food baskets.

"Like the milkman, we stop at every door," says Gravel.

"That's what it takes. We know that some businesses don't have warehouses. If we don't go there, they'll throw [the food] away."

One of the most important stops of the week is at Moisson Qubec a food bank supplier which provides the produce that makes up half of what Gravel's organization donates on Thursdays.

boxes of food piled high
Before the pandemic, Ct says 35,000 people needed food assistance but today there are 80,000 in need. (Marika Wheeler/Radio-Canada)

'Face of poverty has changed,' says head of Moisson Qubec

In the past year alone, Moisson Qubec, which supplies 130 food banks in the greater Quebec City area, has seendemand increase by 27 per cent.

"The face of poverty has changed," saidlaine Ct, Moisson Qubec general manager.

She says 30 per cent of the region's food bank clientele are employed. Organizations in the area are reporting an increase in requestsfrom students, new arrivals, workers and seniors.

At the same time, she says the effort to reduce food waste has meant some suppliers have less to donate.

"It's not that suppliers are less generous. On the contrary, more and more companies want to join us in our mission, but as everyone becomes more efficient, we get less and less food from everyone, which means we have to spend much more to get [enough] food," said Ct.

"But with the same quantity, we can't respond to twice as many people, can we?"

She notes that before the pandemic, 35,000 people needed food assistance. Today there are 80,000 in need.

'The need is exploding'

This summer, in just three months, Quebec's food banks spent the six million dollars granted by the CAQ government to Food Banks of Quebec, a network ofmore than 1,000community organizations.

Since then, the provincehas committed to providingan additional$18 million that the food banks requested. Chantal Rouleau, Quebec's minister responsible for social solidarity and community action, announced earlier this month that Food Banks of Quebecwill receive $8 million. This follows the $10 million that was granted by the provincial government as part of the economic update in November.

Blue plastic tents cover people waiting in line outside of a foodbank
During the last distribution in November 2023 La Bouche Gnreuse handed out a record 1,105 food baskets in one day. (Marika Wheeler/Radio-Canada)

"We know very well that our model of only collecting food donations needs to be questioned," said Ct.

"We're working on that, but right now we're in a transition period where the need is exploding and we can't get enough food."

WATCH | How Quebec food banks in the Laurentians are responding to demand:

Following the food: How Quebec food banks are feeding a growing number of people

9 months ago
Duration 4:17
For CBC's Charity Drive series, we followed the food chain of a food bank network in the Laurentians to see all the work that goes into getting food to those who need it. Organizations say more and more people do.

Gravel's daughter and the assistant director of La Bouche Gnreuse, Marie-Pierre Gravel, says their team of seven employees needs to do more, with less.

"It's really tough," said Marie-Pierre, breaking down.

"Honestly it's put a lot of pressure on us We see people, we see the need but we are not able to help like we would like to."

She says planning for the future is difficult but they hope to be able to renovate their building so they can receive more people.

The day after distribution, Gravel says it starts all over again.

"There's nothing left in the freezers," said Gravel.

"It's a lot of work, but we succeed every week. Miracles don't just happen in Sainte-Anne [basilica], they happen here every Thursday

A woman carrying a baby hands another child a bag of food. They are all bundled up in winter clothes.
Families at La Bouche Gnreuse pick up their weekly food baskets on Thursday. (Marika Wheeler/Radio-Canada)

Translated by CBC's Rachel Watts, with files from Glenn Wanamaker