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Dad-of-three turns to Worcester food bank after job loss

September 28, 2025
in Business
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Dad-of-three turns to Worcester food bank after job loss
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BBC A man wearing a light green tracksuit top and a blue baseball cap stands outside a red brick building. He has a ginger beard. BBC

Luke Harborne praised staff at Worcester Foodbank and described them as “absolutely brilliant”

A single dad-of-three said he was forced to move in with his parents and rely on a food bank when “things just went downhill quick” after losing his job.

Luke Harborne worked as a roofer up until December but admitted he did not know what he would do if he had no access to Worcester’s food bank.

“I don’t know what would happen, I really don’t,” the 30-year-old said.

“The people here are absolutely brilliant, they’re such lovely people and all of them have a heart of gold to do what they do.”

Mr Harborne had been in shared accommodation in Kingstanding, Birmingham, but when he became unemployed, he fell behind with his rent payments and lived on the streets before his parents in Worcester took him in.

“My mum and dad agreed to let me live back there but I’m just struggling at the minute,” he said.

“It’s very, very tough [providing for three children]. It’s hard to survive off benefits, it really is.”

Blue shelves with tins of food and trays of food, such as ginger nut biscuits. There is also a green tray on the bottom shelf with bags of crisps.

Mr Harborne said he had struggled to live off benefits even after moving in with his parents

Mr Harborne said he was even struggling while he was employed.

“I managed to cope with the wages I had coming in but all my money was going on rent and bills,” he said.

“The rest went on food but that didn’t last me until my next payday.

“I need to get myself back in employment and I am actively looking but it’s tough because I have to work around child arrangements so it’s hard to commit to a full-time job.

“You need a really good job, that pays really well just to get a one-bedroom flat. But I will get there. It’s just hard to survive.”

A bald man wearing a green jumper and a green fleece stands on a platform overlooking a warehouse with shelves and parcels behind him.

Grahame Lucas said Worcester Foodbank currently provided 250,000 meals annually

At the food bank, Grahame Lucas said he worked to “turn frowns upside down”.

“It’s a bit corny, I know, but people come here perhaps not feeling the most positive but they walk away with a smile on their face,” he added.

Mr Lucas has been manager of Worcester Foodbank since 2014 and said in that time the charity has “grown out of all recognition”.

“We started out feeding about 3,000 people a year and prior to Covid up to about 9,000 people and now we’re up to 18,000 people,” he said.

“We’re now braced for the autumn rush, when people start getting their energy bills on the doormat. This is by far the busiest period.”

Mr Lucas and his team provide about 250,000 meals annually, at a cost of £500,000.

The service also provides “cooking parcels”, which include herbs and spices, as well as a toiletries hamper too.

“Clients have said to us that we’re lifesavers and without us people have admitted they would be forced to shoplift just to survive,” Mr Lucas said.

A woman with short grey hair sits outside a red brick building wearing a green sweatshirt.

Susan Campbell said the number of people using the food bank had got “much, much worse”

Mr Lucas said the charity had served “all age groups” which “goes right through to people who are retired”.

“That group is much less because, what we find, the state pension system works well – whereas the benefits system is still deficient,” he said.

“I think the system is broken.”

The food bank manager said he sympathised with government and described changing the system as an “oil tanker moment” that would be a “long-term project”.

Volunteers sort out food packages next to shelves of food in a large warehouse.

Run Worcester Foodbank cost £500,000 each year, staff said

Susan Campbell, deputy warehouse manager at Worcester Foodbank, is responsible for greeting clients.

“The stories are really sad and you want to do more than just give them food,” she said.

“You hear all sorts and you just try to make them feel better about the whole thing.”

She added the numbers coming to them have “got much, much worse” and they were seeing more and more families.

“People tend to assume we’re serving the homeless but it’s just not true,” Ms Campbell said.

“Lots of people that come here are working and they just can’t afford to live.”

Image taken in the aisle of the warehouse with shelves either side with boxes of cereal in some boxes.

A government spokesperson said it was “unacceptable” that more people were using food banks

A Department for Work and Pensions spokesperson told the BBC it was “determined to tackle the unacceptable rise in food bank dependence”.

They added: “Our child poverty taskforce will publish an ambitious strategy later this year.

“We are also overhauling job centres and reforming the broken welfare system to support people into good, secure jobs, while always protecting those who need it most.”

Credit: Source link

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