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18

Apr 2020

Last Updated: 18/04/2020
Ripon
Ripon

Food deliveries reveal rapidly increasing poverty in Ripon area

by Tim

| 18 Apr, 2020
Comment

0

Butcher Phil Marley is giving free meat to those in need and says the number of people struggling financially increases on a daily basis.

ripon-17th-april-2020-phil-marley-centre-with-colleagues-pietro-lamesta-right-and-sam-wolloms

Family butcher Phil Marley (pictured above, centre, with colleagues Pietro Lamesta, right and Sam Wolloms) believes that the number of people trapped in poverty in Ripon and the surrounding areas, is increasing on a daily basis.

His reasons for concern can be measured in the number of free meat packs that Marley's is delivering on a weekly basis to 40 households in desperate need.

Mr Marley, who owns and runs the shop in North Street Ripon with support from suppliers and a customer, put an item on Facebook to say that he would help people in dire need and quickly found people in Ripon and across the neighbouring rural areas calling for help to feed their families.

He told The Stray Ferret:

"A lot of these people were in a bad way financially before the coronavirus crisis and now they are in an even worse situation."


The 40 households receive a weekly pack consisting of items such as a lamb, pork or beef joint, chicken, sausages and mince, which would normally cost around £25.



Mr Marley pointed out:

"With mortgages and high rental costs to pay, some people are up to their necks in debt and there appears to be no way out for them, as they attempt to pay their way, with little or no money coming in. This includes single parents, families where the main bread winner has been layed-off or furloughed, elderly people stuck in social isolation and disabled."


With more and more calls for assistance coming in, Mr Marley added:

"The number of people trapped in poverty is going to increase and we are facing months and months ahead in which we all have to help each other in whatever ways we can. I cannot bear the thought of a family with young children going hungry."


In November - months before coronavirus reached the UK - North Yorkshire's Director of Public Health, Dr Lincoln Sargeant, published a report titled 'Life in times of change - health and hardship in North Yorkshire' which estimated that 92,000 people (15 percent) living in the county fall within the government's definition of poverty.

Dr Sargeant said in the report that he noted a re-emergence of destitution:

"There is still a striking similarity between poverty in the past and poverty today. They are still largely due to unemployment and low household income."


He added:

"It can be hidden from view; where people live with the challenges of poverty among less disadvantaged neighbours."