Thank you for the opportunity to comment.
Yes, there are so many stories that have a sort of gut punch when you hear them, but there is also so much hope and beauty in stories as well. I'll share the story of a young lady who actually sits on my board of directors, who was a single mom of two kids and was working two jobs and still couldn't make ends meet. She would leave her job at lunchtime, tell her boss she was going for lunch, and then she would drive to Greener Village to get food assistance, because that's what she needed to do to survive.
As she did that, she also was going back to school and furthering her education. She was able to achieve a degree and upgrade her job significantly, and she was able to earn a second degree while she was at that new job. Now, she's in a job where she no longer needs the support of Greener Village. She doesn't need a food hamper from Greener Village in order to take care of her and her kids. Instead, what she's doing is telling her story.
You can see her story on our website and in our newsletters, saying that this is how the support that we give people.... It doesn't solve the problem for them, but it does keep them alive. It sustains them while we have an opportunity to seek deeper help for people so that they can get back up on their feet. In her case, she comes to an event where she speaks and tells her story, and there's not a dry eye in the room when she tells her story about how the food resources she received kept her going, how they kept her kids going and how that made sure they had the food they needed for school.
A funny thing we do with a local pizza company, one of those a hot-and-ready types of things, is that they give us their pizzas when they're done, and we're able to turn around, put them in the freezer and then give them out to clients. One story she tells is that after she had to go to the food bank, she had the pizza in the box from the store and she was able to heat it up and give it to her kids. Her kids never knew the difference. To them, it was pizza night, like any other pizza night. She tells that story and says, “Now, whenever I go to buy pizza for my kids, I buy it from that store.” She tells that story and the tears are running, because food and security are human. It is emotional. It's hard to speak in a committee like that. I don't want to get emotional here, but the reality is that it's people's lives.
We do boil it down to the statistics. It's important to know the statistics and understand the demographics. It's also critically important to see the humanity, to see the newcomer families who are in Canada for their first winter. They're not expecting the car to cost what it costs or what it costs to buy parkas or all of these things, because they didn't know what Canadian life was going to be as an experience for them. I would say, “I don't know how to make this all work, and I don't even know how to find the resources.” I agree with organizations across the country, like Greener Village, that come beside people at their darkest moments to give them a helping hand. We want to walk beside them for as long as they need us. That's what we're here for. I could spend the rest of this committee talking about the stories of people who are impacted, both by the food bank support and by the educational support.
How much time do I have?