High inflation leaves Hamilton parents with an expensive return to school - Action News
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Hamilton

High inflation leaves Hamilton parents with an expensive return to school

Parents of students returning to school this week are struggling to afford supplies, food, clothing, and to pay bills due to inflation. Many local organizations are ramping up backpack programs to help families in need.

Families are struggling with costs as the new school year begins

A large gathering of volunteers are filling two thousand backpacks with back-to-school supplies. Held at the Hamilton Steelworkers Area Council, the tables are lined with multicoloured bags, clothes and schoolwork supplies.
Volunteers at the Hamilton Steelworkers Area Council filled 2,000 backpacks with school supplies last week, preparing them for distribution before the new school year. (Submitted by Hamilton Steelworkers Area Council)

For Hamilton parentJen Steeves, getting the kids back to school this week ismore expensive than ever.

She's got five kids attending Hess Street Elementary School and worries that related costs might bemore than she can afford.

"Groceries are going to be the big thing five kids in school and now with school lunches they need more it's just not always doable with the cost of everything now," Steeves told CBC Hamilton.

She's not alone.

"I know one friend who struggles, often needing a helping hand with clothes and food.Another friend of mine relies on food banks to get the family through," she said.

A woman stands on a bridge.
Jen Steeves is a mother of six children. Five are going back to elementary school this month. She worries about making ends meet with high inflation affecting the costs of food, clothing and school supplies. (Submitted by Jen Steeves)

In Thorold, Ont., in the Niagara region,Kizzie Williams is also seeing herdaughter back in school thisweek. She says that with the cost of food, housing and clothing rising, buying new school supplies hasn't been at the top of her list.

"I'm finding it hard to make ends meet, much less back-to-school necessities tossed in the mix literally just reusing last year's stuff," she said.

"I work for the Niagara school board and the students were struggling to the pointthey were starting to dislike school."

In July, Canada's inflation rate fellto 7.6 per cent, according to a report in August from Statistics Canada. That wasthe first time in 12 months that the rate haddecreased overthe previous month. InJune, inflation hit a 39-year high of 8.1 per cent.

But even with the decrease, "wage growth continues to lag inflation" andit will "be a while" until households can breathe a sigh of relief, economistTu Nguyen said last month.

As a result, inflation continues to affect families across the province, and back to school has been a struggle for some families when it comes to obtaining thefood, clothesand supplies needed.

Disposable income 'a thing of the past'

Food banks, community organizationsand other social services in the Hamilton area are doing what they can to help.

On Aug. 27, the Disability Justice Network of Ontario held a BBQand giveaway in Hamilton's Beasley Park, providing school supplies such as notebooks to community members.

Wesley Urban Ministries's Annual Knapsack Drive was expecting toprovide 450 backpacks for families in need this year.

A similar program run by theHamilton Regional Indian Centre on Ottawa Street was expecting togive 340 children backpacks filled with supplies last week.

Also last week, the Hamilton Steelworker'sannual Operation Backpackraised $64,000 to fill 2,000backpacks with supplies for children across Hamilton, London and Simcoe a big jump from the 92 backpacks the initiative filled in its first year 12 years ago.

"With the high interest and inflation rates, there's no disposable income anymore.That's a thing of the past for many people," said Darren Green, president of the Hamilton Steelworkers Area Council.

Volunteers with that initiative began packing backpacks at the United Steelworkers Centre on Barton Street last Wednesday.

"Every year that we go to a school the teachers and principals tell us that the need is there, there's just not enough bags and they need more," Green said.

With files from Jenna Benchetrit