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House readies vote on $739B Manchin-Schumer bill as progressive holdouts remain silent

August 11, 2022 by www.foxnews.com Leave a Comment

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House members will return to Washington Friday to vote on the $739 billion tax, climate and health care bill — a top priority for President Biden’s domestic agenda — but all eyes are on the Democratic Party’s most far-left lawmakers.

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is expected to push the legislation through despite widespread GOP opposition. Given a narrow Democratic majority, Pelosi can only afford four defections from her caucus on any vote before having to rely on GOP support.

At the moment, it is uncertain if the legislation will clear that threshold given the silence of several high-profile progressive Democrats.

While most far-left lawmakers are expected to back the legislation, some have criticized it for being too friendly to the fossil fuel industry. Sen. Bernie Sanders , I-Vt., lambasted the bill last week during a marathon voting session as not going far enough to combat climate change.

HOUSE DEMOCRATS APPEAR UNITED, POISED TO PASS SCHUMER-MANCHIN SOCIAL SPENDING AND TAX INCREASE BILL

It's unclear if the legislation will clear the threshold given the silence of several high-profile progressive Democrats. 

It’s unclear if the legislation will clear the threshold given the silence of several high-profile progressive Democrats. (Getty Images)

“This bill, as currently written, includes a huge giveaway to the fossil fuel industry,” said Sanders. “It’s a slap in the face to the communities fighting to protect themselves from filthy fossil fuels .”

Sanders eventually wound up voting for the bill after his attempts to have it amended to prevent subsidies from going to energy companies were defeated. Support from his top allies in the House, a cadre of six far-left lawmakers known as the “Squad,” is less certain.

So far, only three members of the “Squad” — representatives Jamaal Bowman of New York, Ilhan Omar of Minnestoa and Ayanna Pressley of Massachusetts — have endorsed the legislation. The others have remained mum on the bill.

MANCHIN SAYS TRUMP CAMPAIGNING AGAINST HIM MAY ‘HELP ME’ AFTER FORMER PRESIDENT MAKES 2024 THREAT

Last year, the Squad nearly tanked Biden’s bipartisan infrastructure bill over climate concerns. The bill would have failed in the House if not for the support of 13 moderate Republicans.

Many Democrats worry that if members of the Squad join with at least one or two moderate Democrats they will sink the bill.

Such fears hang over Friday’s vote. Failure is not assured by any means, especially after a leading moderate Democrat threw his weight behind the bill Thursday.

“No bill is perfect,” said Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas. “However, compromise, commonsense and rising above partisan politics to make meaningful and balanced change is our duty as legislators.”

Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, speaks on southern border security and illegal immigration during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol July 30, 2021.

Rep. Henry Cuellar, D-Texas, speaks on southern border security and illegal immigration during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol July 30, 2021. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Cuellar and another Texas Democrat had previously raised concerns about the bill’s inclusion of a fee on methane emissions . His decision to back on the eve of the vote comes after other high-profile holdouts began to fall in line.

Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Ore., announced his support for the bill on Monday along with several other leaders of the moderate Blue Dog Coalition. Schrader, who lost his bid for re-election this year to a more progressive primary challenger, was viewed as a potential no vote by health care lobbyists.

The Oregon lawmaker previously voiced concerns about allowing Medicare to negotiate the price of prescription drugs, a key provision in the Manchin-Schumer bill. He’s also broken with Pelosi recently on gun control measures, like banning assault weapons.

“We remain laser-focused on solving our nation’s major economic, energy and climate problems for future generations and will move swiftly to send this bill to the president’s desk,” Schrader said in a joint statement with other Blue Dog leaders.

Given widespread GOP opposition, Democrats cannot bank on any House Republicans to help them pass the bill. 

Given widespread GOP opposition, Democrats cannot bank on any House Republicans to help them pass the bill. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)

Given widespread GOP opposition, Democrats cannot bank on any House Republicans helping them pass the bill.

Republicans say the bill’s proposed 15% minimum corporate tax hike, which will raise an estimated $739 billion over the next decade, is detrimental to businesses at a time the economy is in a recession .

“The Democrats’ partisan spending plan is a direct attack on Main Street America and appeals to far-left climate activists at the expense of entrepreneurs and job creators,” said Rep. Roger Williams, R-Texas.

HOUSE REPUBLICANS, HEALTH CARE GROUPS WHIPPING AGAINST $739B MANCHIN-SCHUMER BILL

“Every taxpayer should be outraged at this partisan process and reckless government spending that will accelerate the inflation crisis and hurt the pocketbooks of every American household.”

Republicans have also slammed the bill’s $339 billion investment in climate change subsides, which the White House says will cut U.S. greenhouse gas emissions 40% by 2030.

“It is a power grab in the name of climate change,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C . “It is a tax-and-spend bill at a time we can least afford it.”

President Biden, already the oldest president to hold the office, turns 80 in November and would be 86 years old at the end of a second term. 

President Biden, already the oldest president to hold the office, turns 80 in November and would be 86 years old at the end of a second term. (Ting Shen/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Much of the GOP criticism in recent days has centered around the bill’s $124 billion investment in the IRS. Republicans say the money will go toward hiring 87,000 new IRS agents.

“The IRS already disproportionately goes after rural areas, farmers, red states and low-income earners,” said Georgia Rep. Drew Ferguson, who, as GOP chief deputy whip, is working to ensure every House Republican opposes the bill.

“Supercharging the agency by doubling the size of employees … is a direct attack on hard-working Americans.”

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The Schumer-Manchin bill passed the Senate last week along party lines. The move came after months of back-and-forth negotiations between Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia and Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York.

An initial version of the bill, dubbed Build Back Better, stalled last year amid Manchin’s fears it would exacerbate inflation. The West Virginia Democrat reversed course this year after getting sufficient concession from Schumer and whittling the bill down from its initial $3.5 trillion price tag.

If successful in the House, the legislation will be a major win for Biden. Not only does the legislation help the president meet his climate goals, it also allows Medicare to negotiate the cost of some live-saving prescription drugs and expands Obamacare subsidies.

Haris Alic covers Congress and politics for Fox News Digital. You can contact him at [email protected] or follow him on Twitter at @realharisalic.

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Daisy Lowe stuns in a leopard print swimsuit designed by her ‘incredible’ fashion designer mother Pearl as she poses poolside

August 10, 2022 by www.dailymail.co.uk Leave a Comment

She doesn’t shy away from showcasing her incredible physique on social media.

And Daisy Lowe exhibited her sensational body once again as she slipped her figure into a leopard print swimsuit shared to her Instagram account on Wednesday.

The model, 33, stunned in the one piece which was designed by her ‘incredible’ fashion designer mother Pearl Lowe.

Gorgeous: Daisy Lowe showcased her sensational body once again as she slipped her figure into a leopard print swimsuit shared to her Instagram account on Wednesday

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Daisy Lowe clearly agrees as she was spotted soaking up the sun in an animal print one-piece by… well, her own mum!

That’s right. Daisy’s mum, Pearl Lowe, has her own eponymous line of clothing, accessories and swimwear and as you can see from this cool cossie, it’s well worth checking out.

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Posing poolside, the cover girl paid tribute to her mum’s talents and captioned the grid post: ‘Some of my best memories are made in swimsuits… this leopard dream is by my incredible mumma @pearllowe.’

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Soaking up the sun at the unknown destination, Daisy wore a pair of matching oversized sunglasses while she layered two silver necklaces to accessorise her fresh summer-time look.

Looking relaxed and carefree, the fashion industry personality let her voluminous locks fall over her face in a fuss-free tousled style.

Praise: Daisy paid tribute to her mum’s talents and wrote: ‘Some of my best memories are made in swimsuits… this leopard dream is by my incredible mumma @pearllowe’

The snap comes after Daisy and her father Gavin Rossdale looked the picture of happiness as they posed for a family snap with the rocker’s three sons Kingston, 16, Zuma, 13, and Apollo, eight last month.

They had a famously ‘rocky start’ to their father-daughter relationship after Daisy only discovered he was her biological parent at the age of 15.

Posting the cheery group image to her Instagram, the fashionista simply captioned the gallery ‘July’.

Happy family: Daisy and Gavin Rossdale looked the picture of happiness as they posed for a family snap with the rocker’s three sons Kingston, 16, Zuma, 13, and Apollo, eight

Daisy also uploaded a sweet selfie with her youngest half-brother Apollo as they grinned away in the back of a car.

Gavin, 56, posted the sweet family shot last week, describing his four children as ‘better versions of me’.

He wrote: ‘ Welcome to my world .the best few weeks at home with my better versions of me. Oh the joy they bring. And yes there’s chewy bottom left. And our super hero Apollo. My love is indeed ocean sized.’

The family’s history is somewhat complicated, with Daisy and Gavin only finding out he was her father when a paternity test uncovered the truth in 2004 following a one-night stand with Daisy’s mother Pearl years previously.

Model family: The model, 33, also uploaded a sweet selfie with her youngest half-brother Apollo as they grinned away in the back of a car

Daisy’s formative years spun a convoluted tale after Pearl enjoyed a short-lived marriage with Bronner Handwerger, who she met in Israel in 1988.

During her marriage, Pearl became embroiled in a one night stand with ‘best friend’ musician Gavin, singer and guitarist with rock band Bush at the time.

When Daisy was 14 she followed up on undergoing a paternity test based on her mother’s suspicions that Bronner wasn’t the father, although Gavin vowed to never speak to Pearl again if Daisy had the DNA test.

In her memoir All That Glitters, Pearl wrote that Gavin, who had been Daisy’s godfather, had a cold response to the request for a paternity test.

Doting dad: Bush rocker Gavin, 56, posted the sweet family shot last week, describing his four children as ‘better versions of me’

Pearl said: ‘I received a letter from him implying that I was trying to ruin his life and pointedly accusing me of messing up my own.’

She added that after the paternity test ‘Daisy persevered with Gavin, determined to forge some kind of relationship, and things did get better. From time to time, he would ask her round to his house.’

A few years later in 2010, Daisy told the London Evening Standard: ‘I now have a really good relationship with my father.

‘It’s been blossoming for the past year but it really happened over Christmas. We got to spend time together. He’s got two beautiful kids who I really adore and his wife is gorgeous.’

At the time Gavin was married to No Doubt lead singer Gwen Stefani, 52, a relationship that ended in divorce in 2016.

Convoluted: The family’s history is somewhat complicated, with Daisy (pictured last month) and Gavin only finding out he was her father when a paternity test uncovered the truth in 2004

Daisy recently said there is ‘no handbook’ for finding out ‘your godfather is your father’, admitting she had a difficult start with Gavin, but they now have a good relationship.

Speaking on the That Gaby Roslin Podcast in March, she said: ‘It was intense. There is no handbook for finding out that your goddaughter is really your daughter or that your godfather is your father.

‘I think we dealt with it the best that we could. It meant that we did have a really rocky start, but we figured it out and I’m really grateful that we kind of figured it out as and when we did.’

Daisy said she and Gavin share the ‘same mannerisms’ and said it made ‘perfect sense’ when she discovered that he was actually her biological father.

She explained: ‘The funny thing was, the moment that I found out that he could be my dad, I was like, “Oh this makes perfect sense”. We think in the same way and we have so many quite frightening similarities.

‘And the guy who I thought was my dad, I didn’t really know, and when I met him I came home and I said to my mum, “I feel no connection with this man”.

‘But I didn’t question it, because as a teenager I wasn’t like, “So mum, is there anyone else that might be my dad?” That’s just not something that comes into anyone’s head, ever.’

Daisy also spoke about her close relationship with her brothers, adding: ‘I love them all so dearly. I Facetime with my brothers over in LA at least once a week.

‘Whenever I go to LA I always have the best time with those boys. They’re such brilliant kids.’

Daisy also has three younger half-siblings from her mother’s marriage to Supergrass drummer Danny Goffey, 48; Alfie, 25, Frankie, 24, and Betty, 17.

Close: Daisy recently said there is ‘no handbook’ for finding out ‘your godfather is your father’, admitting she had a difficult start with Gavin

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House to vote on Inflation Reduction Act, preparing bill for Biden

August 12, 2022 by www.chron.com Leave a Comment

WASHINGTON – House Democrats on Friday are expected to approve a sweeping package to lower health-care costs, combat climate change, raise taxes on some large companies and reduce the deficit, sending the once-imperiled proposal to President Joe Biden’s desk.

With debate set to begin in the morning, and a vote on passage likely later in the afternoon, the chamber is on track to deliver for Democrats a major legislative victory – one that party lawmakers already have touted on the campaign trail in a bid to protect and expand their majorities in this year’s midterm elections.

“This is a fabulous bill we’re going to pass,” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., told The Washington Post in an interview Thursday before the vote. “It’s not anything that anybody, three months ago, would have said is a possibility. But it is, and we’ll have a good strong vote, send it to the president . . . and the clock will start ticking.”

The bill, known as the Inflation Reduction Act, includes the largest-ever single investment in combating climate change. Democrats say the roughly $370 billion burst in spending will allow the United States to lower emissions 40% below 2005 levels by the end of the decade. The proposal also includes new programs to cap and lower seniors’ drug costs while sparing about 13 million low- and middle-income Americans from increases in their insurance premiums that otherwise would take effect next year.

“We’ve been fighting for decades – for decades – for the ability for the [government] to negotiate for lower prices,” Pelosi said, referring to the efforts to make seniors’ medicines more affordable.

“We cannot undervalue what this legislation does [over] what it does not do, and families will be very affected. The kitchen table issues are about the cost of health care.”

Democrats hope to fund the package through changes to tax laws, including a new minimum tax on some billion-dollar corporations that currently pay nothing to the federal government. They also seek taxes on companies that buy back their own stock, and money to help the Internal Revenue Service pursue tax cheats. Party lawmakers say the measures are enough to cover the costs of their bill and reduce the deficit by about $300 billion, though they have yet to furnish a final fiscal analysis.

Democrats need only band together in the House to overcome fierce and likely unanimous Republican opposition, having prevailed in a successful, party-line Senate vote on Sunday. The bill itself was forged in that chamber, after Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., brokered a long-elusive deal with Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., last month.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., the leader of the House Appropriations Committee, described the economic package ahead of the House vote as “historic legislation that really deals with issues that haven’t been dealt with for years.”

But House Republicans have sought to mount a stiff, united front against it anyway. They have attacked it as a tax increase on families, even though the bill does not raise individuals’ rates. And they have said it will worsen inflation while resulting in intrusive IRS audits, even though some of the money is focused on improving the agency’s well-known deficiencies.

Some Republicans have suggested they could weaponize the House’s procedural rules to slow the debate on Friday. GOP lawmakers did that in November, when Democrats considered their larger package known as the Build Back Better Act. While the House ultimately adopted the bill, the vote came after Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., seized on the speaking privileges afforded to party leaders – and held up the chamber floor for more than eight hours.

“Right now, we’re trying to defeat the bill,” said Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La., the House minority whip, in an interview before debate began. “If they vote for it, they know good and well it’s going to hurt low- and middle-income families.”

Reacting to the GOP opposition, Pelosi said the looming vote would offer Democrats a “big contrast” with their political foes entering this year’s midterm elections. She later added: “This is the path we’re on. The Republicans want to take us off this path.”

The House vote Friday marks the culmination of a long and winding debate that began last spring with the release of Biden’s blueprint, dubbed the “American Families Plan,” which marked the start of a broader Democratic effort to rewire the economy in the wake of the pandemic. The party’s proposal eventually would become known as the Build Back Better Act, borrowing from the president’s 2020 campaign slogan.

House Democrats adopted the roughly $2 trillion measure in November, despite months of warfare between the party’s own members. Liberals had sought a vast piece of spending legislation that greatly grew the role of government in Americans’ lives, while moderates urged more fiscal restraint. The tension at one point prompted Biden himself to intervene in October with a rare appearance on Capitol Hill, during which he urged unity around his economic agenda.

Yet their bill would never even see a vote in the Senate, where Manchin said last winter that he could not support spending so much given economic and geopolitical uncertainty. The moderate West Virginian’s opposition infuriated liberal lawmakers, who felt the party’s agenda – and in many ways its political prospects – had been hijacked by a single member who did not reflect the party’s broader views.

Even in its more scaled-back, renamed form, Democrats this week have hailed the Inflation Reduction Act as urgently needed and immediately beneficial to families in financial need. Pelosi said in the interview Thursday that she had emphasized to members that they should “respect the bill for what it does” rather than “make judgments about it for what it does not.”

The House speaker said the bill belonged to a longer line of recent legislative accomplishments, including the passage of a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package last year, the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure law approved months later, and action to deliver new restrictions on guns approved after the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, in May.

“There’s been a stranglehold of the gun industry, the pharmaceutical industry and the fossil fuel industry on Congress,” Pelosi said. “And right now, we have changed that dynamic. The leverage is now with the people’s interest, not the special interest.”

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How to keep your house cool without using fan as UK temperatures soar again

August 9, 2022 by www.mirror.co.uk Leave a Comment

The UK is set to experience soaring temperatures yet again in the coming days, just three weeks after seeing record-breaking 40 degree weather during the last heatwave. While the Met Office has noted that this week’s weather won’t reach the dramatic heights we saw in July, this heatwave is shaping up to be a 10-day scorcher, with conditions moving into the low to mid 30s from Thursday and potentially reaching a whopping 35C on Saturday.

The searing temperatures have forced the government to declare heat health alerts across every region in England, paired with danger to life warnings and wildfire fears. Thames Water is also set to bring in restrictions on water use in the coming weeks.

As the cost of living continues to soar in Britain, many people will be looking for tips on how to keep cool on a budget. The cost of running an electric fan has been a hot topic as of late as energy prices have skyrocketed in recent months, with another dramatic spike set to hit the country in October. According to Uswitch, the typical 120w pedestal fan costs around 3.4p an hour to run on average. This soon racks up if you’re running a fan throughout a 10-day heatwave and may not be an option for those looking to reduce their electricity bills in any way they can.

To help combat these costs, we’ve rounded up a range of fan-free heatwave hacks to try during this week’s scorching temperatures.

Hot water bottle hack

Pop your hot water bottle in the freezer for two hours (

Image:

Getty Images/Science Photo Library RF)

It may be the last place you’d expect to find relief from the heat, but the hot water bottle tucked away in the back of your cupboard is surprisingly just as useful during the summer months as it is in the winter.

A hack that went viral on TikTok during the July heatwave, simply fill your hot water bottle to around ¾ full with cold water and make sure it’s sealed securely. Pop the trusty bottie in the freezer for two hours and you’ll have a cooling companion come bedtime or to use while working from home. You can also add ice cubes inside the bottle as it starts to thaw, to keep it cool.

According to the Hot Water Bottle Shop website, “It is advisable to wrap your water bottle in a towel if it doesn’t already have a cover to prevent overexposure to the cold and to have a continuous supply of ice cubes by refilling empty moulds.”

Tinfoil

Make sure the shiny side of the foil is facing outwards (

Image:

Jay Virdee / SWNS)

This hack will set you back just 68p, or nothing at all if you’ve already got a roll of tinfoil to hand. It involves covering windows that get direct sunlight in foil to prevent the heat turning your home into a furnace. When the sun shines through a window it is magnified, thus exacerbating the heat in your home.

Using a few sheets of tinfoil on your windows will reflect the heat back outside before it enters your home. Make sure the shiny side is facing outwards to ensure the heat reflects effectively. This handy hack has been dubbed as a game-changer for keeping your house cool during scorching temperatures, so much so that Google searches for tinfoil reportedly soared in the UK during the July heatwave.

Peppermint tea

The menthol in peppermint will cool you down (

Image:

Getty Images)

Reaching for a cuppa might be the last thing on your mind when battling the heat, but this herbal remedy is worth considering. Peppermint tea is known for its anti-inflammatory properties, but it can also help you keep cool too.

Simone Thomas, a nutritionist and wellness coach, tells The Mirror: “Easy to grow in the garden or in pots, and cheap to pick up in the supermarket, peppermint is the perfect pick me and up and offers a natural way to cool down as the herb’s menthol stimulates your body’s cooling receptors.”

When it comes to choosing a hot or cold brew, Simone says she “prefers it cool when it’s warm outside as it’s so refreshing”.

“I also love to make peppermint tea and then freeze it into ice cubes to use later in the day as a further way to keep cool and remain hydrated,” she adds.

“You can also add mint and water to a jug of water and call on this natural cocktail all day long when you are feeling the heat and don’t want to hit fizzy drinks”.

Freezing your bed sheets

If the stifling heat is resulting in sleepless nights, this cost-free hack might be your saviour. Putting your bed sheets in the freezer acts as an alternative to running an electric fan, as it will keep your bed and body cool as you go to sleep.

Many people have taken to Twitter to share their success with this hack, with one user commenting that they experienced a “nice cool feeling” when they got into bed after putting them in the freezer shortly before they hit the hay. Another said that the trick “truly does help in the crazy heat.”

Keeping windows shut and closing blinds

Keep rooms dark in the daytime to reduce heat (

Image:

Getty Images/iStockphoto)

The age-old heatwave debate is whether to open your windows during the day or leave them closed. Many people struggling in the heatwave swear by keeping their windows closed with their curtains or blinds shut, as this helps to keep the heat out of your home.

While opening windows can provide a welcome breeze, the direct sunlight beaming in from your window will heat your home in the long-term. In the evening when the sun has stopped beaming down, you can open your windows to create air-flow.

Praising the heatwave hack, one Twitter user said: “I have to keep reminding the house that right now it is cooler inside than outside so keep the windows closed. It feels colder outside because of the breeze, but that is a lie.”

Do you have a story to sell? Get in touch with me at [email protected]

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Cost of living: ‘I’ve had to rummage in bins for food to eat’

July 15, 2022 by www.bbc.co.uk Leave a Comment

By Charlie Jones

  • Published
    15 July

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Colin Walker is on his way home after being discharged from hospital but there’s one place he needs to visit first – his local food bank.

The 60-year-old arrives at the Colchester branch with a nurse, who is taking him back to his flat after he had a stroke.

If he hadn’t stopped by to collect some food, he would be returning to an empty fridge, he says.

“I had to rummage in the bins to find food to eat before I started coming here,” he says. “This food bank has kept me alive.”

Colin is one of thousands of people who regularly access the food bank, which is the busiest in the east of England.

It is run by the Trussell Trust and is one of nearly 400 across the UK, with 1,300 places in its network where people can collect food.

Manager Mike Beckett says he is seeing a huge increase in demand at the same time as donations are dropping.

Many families are no longer able to afford to buy extra items to drop off at the site or in supermarkets for collection, with the rising cost of food.

On the day Colin visited, the food bank – which provided 16,500 people with meals last year – had run out of shampoo, washing powder, washing up liquid, toothbrushes and deodorant. It had extremely low stocks of pasta sauce, tea bags and squash and put out an emergency appeal online.

“We used to have busy days maybe once a week, but now they are all the time. The summer used to be quiet and we would spend the time preparing for winter and building our reserves but we are eating into those reserves that we were saving,” Mike says.

Some of the people who use the food bank have no access to cooking facilities, and they can only be given food like noodles that can be prepared with a kettle.

Many are in full-time employment but are struggling to make ends meet, with nurses, teachers and police officers all having recently visited the branch.

Last year, 43% of people fed were children and Mike worries for their future with the cost of living crisis set to get worse over the winter.

“I’m concerned about what is coming down the road. December is always our busiest time anyway, and I don’t know how people will cope with the energy price rises in the autumn, especially if we have a cold winter,” he says.

Mike says the food bank helps stop children from being taken into care, helps them stay in school and helps adults keep jobs. But the service is so stretched that these prevention strategies are at risk.

Amanda Bonner, a community housing officer, agrees. She is visiting the food bank to collect items for a family of three, where the parents work part-time but can’t afford a bus fare to the unit.

“This has become a big part of my job now,” she says. “I have to make sure people are paying their rent and unless I come here to get food for them there is a danger they will stop paying that because they need to spend that money on food. This place is crucial,” she says.

Most people only use the food bank a few times and then they get back on their feet, Mike says. But others need extra support, and not just in the form of food.

“Anyone can throw food at the problem but we are trying to look at this from all angles,” he says.

‘She was living on sugar water’

He recalls an elderly lady who was brought in by paramedics because she had collapsed in the street. When they took her home her cupboards were completely empty.

“She was waiting on her pension and could not afford to buy food and was surviving on glasses of water with a teaspoon of sugar in them.

“We fed her biscuits and porridge and gave her a food parcel, but we were also able to refer her to Citizens Advice, who have a base here, so she could get the support that she needed,” he adds.

The food bank relies on more than 250 volunteers including Eunice Moore, who runs a baby bank in the unit.

“People are struggling so much, it is heartbreaking,” she says. “They can’t afford to feed or clothe their babies and children so we have all sorts of clothes and school uniform here.”

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Colchester Borough Council recently pledged £10,000 to prop up the food bank, which Mike says he is “extremely grateful” for.

His long-term ambition is to close it entirely by 2030 and he dreams of living in a country where nobody needs to visit one.

In the short-term, he would like to see waiting times reduced for universal credit, an end to the two-child limit for welfare benefits and a benefit uplift to tackle inflation.

The government says all UK households will get a grant which will reduce energy bills by £400 from October and a £650 payment will be made to more than eight million low-income households who receive benefits.

“If someone is drowning, if someone is in a hole, we will be there. But I really hope one day we won’t need to be and people will never need to visit a food bank again,” Mike adds.

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More on this story

  • Council to support city’s food bank

    • 8 July

Related Internet Links

  • Colchester Foodbank – Helping Local People in Crisis

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Related Topics

  • Colchester
  • Food banks

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