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- Latest Updates
- Demographic Insights on Poverty Trends and Food Insecurity in Surrey
- Reflections on the 2024 Annual Applied Public Health Chair Meeting
- FHS researchers engage Surrey residents on 15 minute neighbourhoods
- Tessa Williams on how cities can progress from equity rhetoric to action
- Aayush Sharma on building 15-minute neighbourhoods for inclusive and healthy communities
- Zarah Monfaredi on dismantling stereotypes through kitchen table talks
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Examining poverty in Surrey
Food Insecurity in Surrey: A Snapshot
We created this resoource to support the ongoing advocacy efforts of local organizations like in addressing food insecurity and promoting food justice within the city.
Key Insights:
In 2022, 21.6% (107,000) of Surrey residents reported experiencing food insecurity, up from 15.1% in 2018.
Racialized residents face higher food insecurity rates (25%, or 79,000 people) compared to non-racialized and non-indigenous residents (16%, or 27,000 people).
Young adults are more affected by food insecurity compared to other age groups.
Single-parent households report significantly higher rates of food insecurity (41%) compared to two-parent families (18%).
Demographic trends in poverty for Surrey residents
In April 2024, the City of Surrey’s Housing and Social Development team reached out to the ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV REACH-Cities team to develop data visualizations that present poverty rates across different demographic groups in Surrey, with a specific emphasis on racialized poverty trends across generations.
In consultation with city staff, we used the Market Basket Measure (MBM) poverty measure and drew on data from the 2021 Canada Census of Population available through the Community Data Program, and the Canadian Income Survey (released in April 2024), which provides low-income statistics from tax filer data up to 2023 (tax year 2022) and Market Basket Measure component thresholds up to 2024 (tax year 2023). Additionally, we requested custom cross-tabulated data from Statistics Canada from the 2021 Canada Census of Population to analyze the prevalence of racialized poverty across generations.
Examining Poverty in Surrey - A Series of Fact Sheets
In partnership with , we conducted an analysis in May 2023 to examine demographic changes in Surrey’s neighbourhoods. Our goal was to identify groups requiring attention, such as low-income seniors, visible minorities, and single-parent families. Based on our findings, we developed comprehensive fact sheets for (SPRC) - a multi-sectoral, non-partisan coalition of representatives from a range of organizations and government agencies in Surrey.
Latest updates
-
Demographic Insights on Poverty Trends and Food Insecurity in Surrey
-
Reflections on the 2024 Annual Applied Public Health Chair Meeting
-
FHS researchers engage Surrey residents on 15 minute neighbourhoods
-
Tessa Williams on how cities can progress from equity rhetoric to action
-
Aayush Sharma on building 15-minute neighbourhoods for inclusive and healthy communities
-
Zarah Monfaredi on dismantling stereotypes through kitchen table talks