Banking

SAS soldiers are relying on food banks to feed families in cost of living crisis


Other military personnel are also taking second jobs alongside their military duties to help them pay bills, working as delivery drivers and in McDonald’s at weekends

Soldiers are using food banks(PA)

Hundreds of troops are using food banks to feed their families – and even the SAS are hit by the crisis.

Some military personnel are also taking second jobs alongside their military duties to help them pay bills during the current cost of living crisis. Personnel are working as delivery drivers and some young soldiers are known to have worked in McDonald’s at weekends and in the evenings.




One former senior officer has described the revelation as a “failure of leadership” and said the situation for many service families was “shocking”. Unofficial food banks are known to be operating inside RAF Benson in Oxfordshire and RAF Coningsby in Lincoln, one of the most important military bases in the country and home to two frontline jet squadrons.

Hundreds of other troops or their spouses are all known to be using food banks around the UK. There are food banks in every major garrison town, including Catterick, North Yorks, Colchester, Essex, and Bulford and Tidworth, in Wilshire used by military personnel. Personnel based at large Royal Navy bases in Portsmouth and Plymouth are also having to turn to charities to feed their families.

Serving members of the Elite SAS regiment(Getty Images)

Even troops at the SAS’s base in Hereford are understood to be using food banks in the local town so they can put a meal on the table. A member of the SAS said that personnel at the elite regiment’s headquarters in Hereford said personnel were known to have used food banks.

The source said: “Special forces troops get extra pay which helps but there are soldiers on the base who need that extra help. Some are members of the regiment, others are attached to the regiment. I know a lot of people who struggle financially.” Junior ranked troops or the equivalent such as privates, lance corporals and corporals – and the equivalent in the Royal Navy and RAF – who have young families are suffering most.

A private soldier in the army earns around £23,500 which increases to almost £31,000 for a lance corporal. But one food bank volunteer at an RAF base said both senior ranks and officers have also asked for food parcels because of financial problems caused by the cost of living crisis. Our investigation has found that up to 30 families visit at a food bank inside an RAF base in Oxfordshire every week.



Source link

Leave a Response