One in four Lambton County households can’t afford enough to eat, a number that’s nearly doubled in just two years. Public health says it’s not about access to food—it’s about income and rent. A basic family grocery bill now tops eleven hundred dollars a month, while a “bachelor” apartment listed as affordable at nine‑seventy‑five costs more than a person on Ontario Works earns. That means policies defining what’s affordable may actually leave the poorest residents behind. In Sarnia and across Lambton, food insecurity is fast becoming a test of how well systems are really working.
Reporting for WGRT – JP bZet


