Hunger Is Not a Disease

Do you shop at a pantry? Do you work at a pantry? Do you donate to a Pantry? – Part 4

 

Pantry HND 3

PANTRIES OPERATE ON WHAT’S AVAILABLE, NOT WHAT WE NEED.

When  I think of the monthly food order…three words come to mind:

Donations

Surpluses

Leftovers

THAT’S WHAT WE GET.   The items are lined up on the form emailed to us twice weekly.  The form lists available foods in fine print.  If the email has fewer than 20 pages, I know I’m in  trouble.

For me, the most important section of the list is the USDA section.  This category usually takes less than a page.  No matter.  This is the free food  I can order each month.

At the Reservoir Food Pantry, we’re allowed 2 cases of whatever items they have on hand.  And, I go for it all.  This is what I order first.

Right now, USDA staples include small boxes of raisins, canned cranberry sauce, and canned beans.  We’ve had these items for about 3 months running.  The volunteers who haven’t been working in the pantry long wonder out loud why I keep ordering these items over and over.  What they don’t see, because they haven’t been doing this long enough, is that these items will soon be absent from the list and may  never reappear.

IN CONTRAST TO  GROCERY STORE ITEMS, WHEN STOCK GETS LOW, A PERSON SIMPLY ORDERS MORE.

SURPLUS FOOD IS AVAILABLE UNTIL IT’S NOT.  Surplus food, by its very nature, is only temporary.  Nothing is permanent in a pantry.  It’s not even long-term.  The moral of this story is that, in the pantry world, all good things come to a final end.

Even though I know all good things come to an end, what I cannot say is “when”.  The stuff will just, one day, no longer be available.

THIS GIVES THE WHOLE SYSTEM A FRAGILE TONE.

THIS ALSO HOLDS TRUE FOR THE GOVERNMENT FUNDING WE RECEIVE.   The numbers of hungry shoppers keep rising.  The unemployment funds and food stamps available to the hungry keep shrinking.  I  expect to wake up one day and read in the New York Times that some senators and congressmen just cut off all the food money for the hungry and homeless.

WE OPERATE OUR PANTRY ON DONATIONS.  No salaries are paid at the Reservoir Food Pantry.  We ask for every penny we receive and  hold food drives monthly to supplement our HPNAP food grant.

There is no funding for overhead, supplies, equipment, gas and auto repairs, insurance. The fact that we’re all volunteers gives the pantry effort a temporary feel.  People show up and do the job they do until they don’t show up anymore.

I’m happy with an all-volunteer army although some regular volunteers have questioned my feelings over the years.  Everyone working at the pantry is there for a reason.  Some don’t even know why they’re doing the job they are doing until later when they look back on that part of their lives.

WE ALL SEEK HEALING AND A PANTRY IS A WONDERFUL PLACE TO HEAL.    Volunteers tell me this is an important part of their lives.   People shopping at the pantry help out as well.  We  receive a sense of satisfaction from giving something to others.  Reservoir Food Pantry is in a gorgeous area.  The food is the best we can find.  What more can we ask for?

I’m not threatened by unpredictable funding, precarious food supply, and increasing demand.

We don’t turn anyone away at the Reservoir Food Pantry.  We know what it’s like to be hungry.

Peace and food for all.

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Thurman Greco