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2023-12-31-accounts

BURGESS HILL COMMUNITY FOOD BANK

Annual Report 2023

The analysis below of our activities, prepared by our Records Keeper, gives a full analysis of the work done by Burgess Hill Community Food Bank Volunteers in our last financial year. I hesitate to add to it, so would simply add my thanks to my fellow Trustees for all the work done, unpaid, in the past year, and our thanks to the Volunteers who, week by week, support the people in our area who need it. And we would all like to thank the many members of our community that supply us with the food and the money needed to keep the operation going.

The demand for our services has increased again in the past year, as may be seen from the analysis below. This has resulted in a reduction in our financial reserves, which remain very healthy nevertheless. We look forward to another busy year, but hope that the numbers of people needing help, especially those needing continued support, will diminish, since Food Banks are not a long-term solution to Poverty. That is a role for Government.

Joe Wilkinson

Chair of Trustees, Burgess Hill Community Food Bank

1

ANALYSIS OF BURGESS HILL COMMUNITY FOOD BANK ACTIVITIES

2023

Summary

2

ANALYSIS OF BURGESS HILL COMMUNITY FOOD BANK ACTIVITIES

2023

1 The nature and extent of BHCFB activities

Burgess Hill Community Food Bank (BHCFB) distributes basic food items to needy households in Burgess Hill, Hassocks, Hurstpierpoint and surrounding villages.

The Food Bank’s main outlet is in Burgess Hill town centre, with a second outlet in Hassocks. The Burgess Hill outlet opens for two hours on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays and that in Hassocks for two hours on Mondays and Fridays. In early 2023, after several years during which distributions in and around Hurstpierpoint were all delivered to the client, a third BHCFB outlet was opened experimentally in the village. Distributions in the area reverted to delivery-only in the second half of the year in response to low usage of this outlet.

Distributions are normally made to clients against BHCFB vouchers issued by local organisations, such as Burgess Hill Town Council and Mid Sussex Early Help. The amount of food distributed is based on a standard ‘box’ sufficient to feed two adults/teenagers for three days. The amount for which clients qualify is based on the size of the household, with pre-teens counting as half an adult/teenager. Since it is difficult for Food Bank volunteers to split standard boxes, when a client’s household size results in the client qualifying for an amount of boxes that is not a whole number, the amount distributed is rounded up to the next whole number.

Each standard box contains only non-perishable food. Clients can opt to receive additional small amounts of frozen foodstuffs and toiletries.

During 2023, BHCFB supplied a total of 591 clients with 4,313 boxes of food plus supplements. This involved 2,947 distributions, of which 88% were collected from an outlet and 12% delivered. Basic information on BHCFB’s operations is shown in Table 1 overleaf.

Other than for the data on costs, all the data in this report are drawn from the Food Bank’s records of each distribution made to clients. The key data variables employed are the date of each distribution, the point of distribution (Burgess Hill, Hassocks, Hurstpierpoint), whether distributions were collected or delivered, the name of the client, and the size and composition of the client’s household and therefore the number of boxes received.

3

TABLE 1 BHCFB DISTRIBUTIONS IN 2023 ANAYSED BY OUTLET, BENEFICIARY, NUMBER OF BOXES AND DISTRIBUTION METHOD

Outlet/Distribution
method
Number of
Distributions
Number of beneficiaries* Number of beneficiaries* Number of beneficiaries* Number of
Boxes
Adults & Teens Pre-teens Total
Burgess Hill 2,227 4,112 1,479 5,591 3,235
Collected 1,995 3,631 1,264 4,895 2,850
Delivered 232 481 215 696 385
Hassocks 613 988 618 1,606 905
Collected 608 975 611 1,586 893
Delivered 5 13 7 20 12
Hurstpierpoint 107 208 155 363 173
Collected 33 73 67 140 64
Delivered 74 135 88 223 109
Total 2,947 5,308 2,252 7,560 4,313
Collected 2,636 4,679 1,942 6,621 3,807
Delivered 311 629 310 939 506

2 Growth in BHCFB’s activities in 2023 and its financial impact

2023 saw a further large increase in BHCFB’s throughput. Distributions were 45% above those in 2022, driven by a 43% increase in Burgess Hill, a 36% increase in Hassocks, and a more than tripling in Hurstpierpoint albeit from a small 2022 base. A more detailed analysis of these increases in the number of distributions is presented in Annex Table 1.

The sharp increase in distributions in 2023 followed an approximate doubling in 2022 (see chart below). Distributions in 2021, in turn, were above those in 2020 and massively above those in the years prior to the Covid lockdown. Thus, BHCFB’s 2023 operations were on a completely different scale from those in the early years of its operation.

4

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----- Start of picture text -----
2023
BHCFB Weekly Number of Distribtions
90
80
2021 mean of 19.6
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Number of distributions
----- End of picture text -----

Source: Table 1 and BHCFB’s 2021 and 2022 Reports.

Part of the food distributed by BHCFB is donated in kind by individuals and local firms and organisations. The Food Bank also receives cash donations that enable it to buy additional food.

The increase in the number of distributions has meant that BHCFB has needed to buy increasing amounts of food to supplement donations in kind. Together with inflation in the prices of foodstuffs, this has led to the cost of purchases of food and other items for delivery to clients rising from less than £2,000 in 2019 to almost £50,000 in 2023.

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----- Start of picture text -----
Annual Expenditure on Food and Toiletries Purchased for
Distribution to Clients
£60,000
£50,000
£40,000
Toiletries
Food
£30,000
£20,000
£10,000
£0
2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
----- End of picture text -----

Source: Annex Table 2.

5

3 Change in the composition of client households

The number of boxes received by clients in 2023 was 53% greater than in 2022. This was a larger increase between these two years than the 45% rise in the number of distributions. This reflected an increase in the mean number of boxes per distribution, which rose from 1.38 in 2022 to 1.46 in 2023. This increase for all BHCFB distributions resulted from a small increase in Burgess Hill and much larger percentage increases in Hassocks and Hurstpierpoint (Table 2).

TABLE 2 DERIVATION OF GROWTH IN THE MEAN NUMBER OF BOXES PER DISTRIBUTION

Distributions Boxes Mean number of boxes per
distribution
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
Ratio 2023
to 2022
Burgess Hill
Hassocks
Hurstpierpoint
1,552
2,227
451
613
32
107
2,181
3,236
585
906
47
173
1.41
1.45
1.03
1.30
1.48
1.14
1.47
1.62
1.10
Total 2,035
2,947
2,813
4,315
1.38
1.46
1.06

4 Voucher sources in 2023

Almost two-thirds of all distributions were covered by vouchers issued by Burgess Hill Town Council’s Help Point (Table 3). Approximately 4% of distributions in Burgess Hill, 91% in Hassocks and 44% in Hurstpierpoint were issued without a supporting voucher.

TABLE 3 SOURCES OF VOUCHERS

Sources of Vouchers
Number
Percent of total
distributions
Help Point
1,907
Manor Field Primary School
55
Meadows Surgery
40
Linwood Community Mental Health Team
38
Brighton Housing Trust
25
Peabody
23
Mid-Sussex Early Help
16
Hurstpierpoint & Sayers Common Parish Council
13
Hassocks Parish Council
11
Other issuing bodies
112
64.7
1.9
1.4
1.3
0.8
0.8
0.5
0.4
0.4
3.8
No voucher
707
24.0
Total distributions
2,947
100.0

5 Clients’ repeat use of the Food Bank

6

Data on the frequency with which clients used BHCFB in 2023 is presented in Table 4 and the accompanying chart. Annex 3 contains a more detailed analysis, including separate data for Burgess Hill, Hurstpierpoint and Hassocks.

TABLE 4 DATA ON THE FREQUENCY WITH WHICH CLIENTS USED THE FOOD BANK

Distributi
ons per
client
Number
ofclients
% of
clients
Cumulativ
e % of
clients
Number of
distributio
ns
% of all
distributio
ns
Cumulativ
e % of
distributi
ons
1
2
3
4
5
6-10
11-20
21-30
31-40
41-50
235
39.8
39.8
74
12.5
52.3
57
9.6
61.9
47
8.0
69.9
23
3.9
73.8
69
11.7
85.4
62
10.5
95.9
20
3.4
99.3
2
0.3
99.7
2
0.3
100.0
235
8.0
8.0
148
5.0
13.0
171
5.8
18.8
188
6.4
25.2
115
3.9
29.1
513
17.4
46.5
922
31.3
77.8
492
16.7
94.5
67
2.3
96.7
96
3.3
100.0
Total 591
100.0
2,947
100.0

==> picture [406 x 235] intentionally omitted <==

----- Start of picture text -----
Repeat Use of the Food Bank in 2023
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1 2-5 6-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50
Number of times the client used the Food Bank in 2023
Percent
----- End of picture text -----

% of clients % of distributions

7

During 2023, 591 separate clients received distributions. Of these, nearly 40% used the Food Bank only once and nearly three-quarters used it five times or less.

Almost half of all distributions went to the 131 clients who used the Food Bank between six and twenty times. Twenty heavy users - who used the Food Bank between 21 and 30 times - accounted for 16.7% of all distributions, receiving more than twice as many distributions as the 235 clients who used it on one occasion only. There were four very heavy users, who between them received 163 distributions.

6 Client household size and composition and their implications

During 2023, 37% of distributions went to client households with only a single person. A further 13% went to households with a single adult and one or more pre-teens (Table 5). Thus, half of all the Food Bank’s distributions went to households comprising just a single adult or a single adult plus one or more pre-teens. A further but unknown number of client households comprised a single adult with one or more teens. Thus, it is likely that substantially over 50% of all distributions went to households with only one adult.

TABLE 5 THE IMPORTANCE OF SINGLE-ADULT HOUSEHOLDS

Household compositon (number) Household compositon (number) Household compositon (number) Household compositon (number)
Single
adults
Single
adults
with pre-
teens
All single
adult
household
s
All other
Total
Burgess Hill
Hassocks
Hurstpierpoin
t
Total
852
226
1,078
1,149
220
135
355
258
27
13
40
67
1,099
374
1,473
1,474
2,227
613
107
2,947
Household compositon (%)
Single
adults
Single
adults
with pre-
teens
All single
adult
household
s
All other
Total
Burgess Hill
Hassocks
Hurstpierpoin
t
Total
38%
36%
25%
37%
10%
22%
12%
13%
48%
58%
37%
50%
52%
42%
63%
50%
100%
100%
100%
100%

Some 58% of all distributions were to one or two-person households, with households with 3-5 members accounting for a further 37%. Large households with 6 or more members were relatively rare, accounting for less than 6% of distributions (Table 6).

TABLE 6 CLIENT HOUSEHOLD SIZE

8

Size of
household
(persons*)
Percentage of distributons
Burgess Hill
Hassocks
Hurstpierpoint
Total
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
38.3
35.9
25.2
37.3
19.8
21.4
25.2
20.3
14.5
15.3
11.2
14.6
15.4
13.1
11.2
14.8
6.8
9.3
7.5
7.3
3.8
1.6
1.9
3.3
0.6
0.3
10.3
0.9
0.5
1.8
2.8
0.8
0.4
1.1
4.7
0.7
0.0
0.2
0.0
0.0
Total 100.0
100.0
100.0
100.0

For operational purposes BHCFB assumes that the food needs of adults and teenagers are identical. One consequence of this is that the Food Bank’s records contain data for just two categories of household member: (a) adults/teens and (b) pre-teens. This, in turn, constrains the scope for analysis of household composition. However, if single-person households are assumed to comprise adults only, a limited amount of analysis is possible.

The household composition of the majority of the Food Bank’s clients results in the number of boxes they receive being rounded up to a whole number, as described in section 1. This means that all clients receive at least sufficient food to meet BHCFB’s three-day sustenance target and that the majority of clients receive more than this.

During 2023, clients received a total of 34% more food than the than the amount necessary to sustain two adults for three days. This percentage is broken down in Table 7 for each of the Food Bank’s three outlets and by single and multi-person household.

9

TABLE 7 AMOUNTS OF FOOD DISTRIBUTED TO CLIENTS IN EXCESS OF THE BHCFB TARGET

Hurstpierpoin
Burgess Hill Hassocks t All BHCFB
Single person households 100% 100% 100% 100%
Mult-Person households 19% 27% 13% 20%
All Households 33% 40% 21% 34%

7 Growth in the mean size of distributions

The number of boxes received by clients in 2023 was 53% greater than in 2022. This was a larger rise than the 45% increase in the number of distributions. This reflected an increase between the two years in the mean number of boxes per distribution, which rose from 1.38 to 1.46. This increase for all BHCFB distributions resulted from a small percentage increase in Burgess Hill but much larger increases in Hassocks and Hurstpierpoint (Table 8).

TABLE 8 GROWTH IN THE MEAN SIZE OF DISTRIBUTIONS

Burgess Hill
Hassocks
Hurstpierpoint
Distributions Boxes Mean number of boxes per
distribution
2022
2023
2022
2023
2022
2023
Ratio 2023 to
2022
1,552
2,227
451
613
32
107
2,181
3,236
585
906
47
173
1.41
1.45
1.03
1.30
1.48
1.14
1.47
1.62
1.10
Total 2,035
2,947
2,813
4,315
1.38
1.46
1.06

10

ANNEX TABLE 1 BHCFB PERFORMANCE IN 2023 COMPARED WITH 2022

(% increase)

Outlet
Distributons
Benefciaries
Boxes
Adults &Teens
Pre-teens
Total
Burgess Hill
43
Collected
44
Delivered
36
52
41
49
48
53
36
48
49
45
78
54
46
Hassocks
36
Collected
36
Delivered
0
46
58
50
55
46
59
50
55
30
17
25
50
Hurstpierpoin
t
234
Collected
*
Delivered
131**
271
400
317
268
*



*141

184
156
132
Total
45
Collected
44
Delivered
50
54
53
54
53
54
48
52
53
58
96
69
59

ANNEX TABLE 2

ANNUAL COST OF ITEMS PURCHASED BY BHCFB FOR DISTRIBUTION TO CLIENTS

(£)
2019 2020 2021 2022 2023
Food 1,832 3,549 6,931 23,214 44,837
Toiletries 0 0 1,099 2,569 4,171
Total 1,832 3,549 8,030 25,783 49,008

Source: BHCFB audited accounts.

11

ANNEX TABLE 3A

BURGESS HILL ANALYSIS OF DISTRIBUTIONS PER CLIENT

Distributio
ns per
client
Number
of
clients
Aggregate
number of
distributio
ns
Distributio
ns per
client
Number
of
clients
% of
clients
Cumulati
ve % of
clients
Aggregate
number of
distributio
ns
1
170
170
2
57
114
3
49
147
4
40
160
5
20
100
6
22
132
7
12
84
8
10
80
9
3
27
10
8
80
11
3
33
12
7
84
13
9
117
14
2
28
15
3
45
16
2
32
17
6
102
18
4
72
19
4
76
20
2
40
21
6
126
22
1
22
26
2
52
27
2
54
28
1
28
29
1
29
30
1
30
33
1
33
34
1
34
46
1
46
50
1
50
1
170
37.7
37.7
170
2
57
12.6
50.3
114
3
49
10.9
61.2
147
4
40
8.9
70.1
160
5
20
4.4
74.5
100
6-10
55
12.2
86.7
403
11-20
42
9.3
96.0
629
21-30
14
3.1
99.1
341
31-40
2
0.4
99.6
67
41-50
2
0.4
100.0
96
Total
451
100.0
2,227
Total
451
2,227

12

ANNEX TABLE 3B

HASSOCKS ANALYSIS OF DISTRIBUTIONS PER CLIENT

Distributio
ns per
client
Number
of clients
Aggregate
number of
distributio
ns
Distributio
ns per
client
Numb
er of
clients
% of
clients
Cumulati
ve % of
clients
Aggregate
number of
distributio
ns
1
44
44
2
9
18
3
6
18
4
3
12
5
2
10
6
3
18
7
2
14
9
4
36
10
1
10
11
3
33
12
3
36
13
2
26
14
2
28
16
1
16
17
4
68
18
1
18
19
3
57
21
1
21
22
1
22
23
1
23
27
1
27
29
2
58
1
44
44.4
44.4
44
2
9
9.1
53.5
18
3
6
6.1
59.6
18
4
3
3.0
62.6
12
5
2
2.0
64.6
10
6-10
10
10.1
74.7
78
11-20
19
19.2
93.9
282
21-30
6
6.1
100.0
151
31-40
0
0.0
100.0
0
41-50
0
0.0
100.0
0
Total
99
100.0
613
Total
99
613

13

ANNEX TABLE 3C

HURSTPIERPOINT ANALYSIS OF DISTRIBUTIONS PER CLIENT

Distributio
ns per
client
Numb
er of
clients
Aggregate
number of
distributio
Distributio
ns per
client
Numb
er of
clients
% of
clients
Cumulati
ve % of
clients
Aggregate
number of
distributio
ns ns
1 21 21 1 21 51.2 51.2 21
2 8 16 2 8 19.5 70.7 16
3 2 6 3 2 4.9 75.6 6
4 4 16 4 4 9.8 85.4 16
5 1 5 5 1 2.4 87.8 5
6 1 6 6-10 4 9.8 97.6 32
8 2 16 11-20 1 2.4 100.0 11
10 1 10 21-30 0 0.0 100.0 0
11 1 11 31-40 0 0.0 100.0 0
Total 41 107 41-50 0 0.0 100.0 0
Total 41 100.0 107

14

Illllllllllllll

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS REPORT 2023 BOARD OF TRUSTEES I have audited the 2023 accounts for Burgess Hill Community Food Bank (a charitable organisation) and in my opinion the financial records and statements are a true and fair reflection of the financial position of Burgess Hill st Community Food Bank for the period January I to December 31 . 2023. Jonathan Bird FMAAT January 29, 2024