Hunger Is Not a Disease

Monday, Feb. 16, 2015, noon, 16 degrees at the Reservoir Food Pantry

I drove up to the parking lot we use on pantry day.  It’s not our parking lot, really.  It belongs to the old Robert’s Auction building.  The snow plow guy had cleaned the space very well so I knew right away that we were going to have a good day.  Then, I noticed that the walkway from the parking lot to the shed entrance hadn’t been shoveled.

WOW.  The snow was knee deep along the walkway.  Oh well.  At least we could park our cars.

It didn’t matter anyway.  The sun was out.  People could park.  This was the closest to a decent day we’ve had in 3 weeks.  We were going to be busy today.

I slogged through the snow to the shed and found Cheryl. Minutes later Bob and Tony arrived. Things were improving! The pantry day began itself. As volunteers arrived, we tackled our jobs:
Fronting the shelves in the pantry.
Arranging produce in the greenhouse.
Preparing takeout bags.
Checking to see if the greenhouse door would close (it didn’t). We’d had trouble closing it last week and wondered how it would manage today (it didn’t).
Finding pens that work for the sign in book. This is always a challenge when the temperature drops below 30.

Jean, a new volunteer in her 80’s, found a shovel in her car and cleared the walkway the best she could.

When the pantry opened, shoppers made their way through the snow from the parking lot to the shed. A steady stream of people came all afternoon. Those who had cars brought those who did not. They were:
Hungry
Cold
Grateful.

Everything stopped about 4 so we packed up and headed out. Only then did I notice that there was no feeling in my fingers, toes, nose, ears. Cheryl and I had worked in the shed where there was some heat in spite of the door opening repeatedly. (The wall thermometer showed a steady 36 all afternoon.)

Bob and Susanne worked in the greenhouse where, in spite of the heater, there was only cold. The open door made the whole room feel like outside. 17 degrees.
Prasida worked in the greenhouse for awhile as she prepared to go on her takeout run. Sean and Bonnie came by and collected produce for their takeouts as well.

We are, as a pantry, people racing against all odds to feed the hungry. We do much to make sure everyone receives fresh produce every pantry day. Our new van, just yesterday christened “The Beast,” will be offering more and more produce as the shoppers increase.

Most of our volunteers are similar to other pantry volunteers. We’re cotton tops old enough to have our priorities straight. We agree that feeding the hungry is important. We make time in our remaining days to do the job.

What sets us apart at Reservoir Food Pantry is the number of volunteers. We have many and more show up every week.

The bottom line: As a group, we don’t care if the weather is hot, cold, wet, dry. We’re at the pantry to serve the people. So, as long as we can get the food, there are now options for everyone in the area who is hungry:
Elderly poor,
Employed poor,
Food insecure,
Generational poor,
Homeless (sheltered),
Homeless (unsheltered),
Ill poor,
Infant poor,
Malnourished,
Newly poor,
Persistent poor,
Resource poor,
Situational poor,
Struggling poor,
Underemployed poor,
Unemployed poor.
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Peace and food for all.
Thurman Greco

This Winter in the Pantry

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January, 2015,  is turning out to be such a marvelous time  in the pantry!  I just couldn’t let it go by without thanking you for all the support and contributions you made  as we began our project.

On September 9, 2013, as we began work to make the Reservoir Food Pantry a reality, none of us (Bonnie, Sean, Prasida, and I) had a clue about the real needs of people in the area.  Working in the pantry this month I’m coming to realize existentially what is really happening there.

Take our monthly delivery day for example.  January 12th  was dismal.  Nobody in his/her right mind would venture out of either house or home if it weren’t absolutely necessary.  Both volunteers and shoppers who could get out of their homes  proved  how valuable this little pantry in a shed has become.

Volunteers who could get out of their houses drove on icy roads to Kingston to pick up our monthly food shipment.  We loaded the food onto 4 vehicles, drove  it to the pantry, unloaded it and shelved it.

Meanwhile, Prasida and Francine drove to Latham and returned with 1300 pounds of beautiful produce.

All  this work was done during an icy rain, in unheated buildings, and on snow covered ground.

That was one level of motivation.  And, why not?  After all, we’re the volunteers…that’s what we’re expected to do.

Shoppers came to the pantry  as if the sun were out, the grounds were dry, and the breezes warm.  They stood in line outside the pantry and patiently, cheerfully waited for their turn to shop in the tiny little shed to get badly needed food for their households/families.

Oh me of little faith.  Shame on me.  Until delivery day I really didn’t know how the people in the reservoir area really felt about our pantry.

Well…as people tell me all the time “Now I know”.

I walk more confidently now.

Hunger as we know it in our country is both infuriating and shameful.  To fight this scourge…

We need schools that work.

We need communities that work.

We need support systems which offer people caught in poverty a fair chance to succeed.

Although safety nets in our society are almost gone, food pantries are flourishing in communities all over America.  Food pantries cannot fight poverty.  They can only alleviate hunger…a vitally important task in our community.

We looked everywhere along Route 28 for a home for the Reservoir Food Pantry. We finally created a jewel behind Robert’s Auction.

So, to everyone in the area…thank you.  With your support, the Reservoir Food Pantry is a success today.  We could never have done it without you.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

 

 

Round 2 in the Food Pantry World – Food, Sex, and Money

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ARE YOU OLD ENOUGH TO REMEMBER HOW WE ACTED IN HIGH SCHOOL?  Everyone in class knew  the which students were acting right, following the rules,  and those who were not.  There was no privacy, really, and no secrets.

WELL, GUESS WHAT.  The same mentality exists in food pantries.  Everyone knows which pantries play by the rules and which ones don’t.  There are no secrets.

FOR ONE THING, THE SHOPPERS CAN TELL BY WHAT KIND OF FOOD THEY’RE GETTING.  Is  the food on pantry day composed of bent cans, stale bread trimmed in green, and frozen food which has obviously been refrozen more than twice?  If the answer to that question is “yes”, then it’s pretty obvious someone besides the shoppers is getting the fabulous produce, the wonderfully fresh Bread Alone Bread, and the quick frozen meats and veggies.  It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out the volunteers are taking it all for themselves and their neighbors.

PANTRIES COME EQUIPPED WITH GUIDELINES, AND RULES SIGNED OFF BY EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS AND COORDINATORS.  The rules are clear.

PANTRIES COME EQUIPPED WITH COORDINATORS WHO ARE TAUGHT THE RULES .  These coordinators are trained by, supervised by, and evaluated by the Food Bank.  Boards,

Church Committees, and volunteers are often surprised to learn that Food Bank supervisors do expect certain levels of performance from coordinators.

Until now, the Food Bank was quiet about what was happening.  Well, that attitude has changed.

IF YOU WORK IN A PANTRY THAT FORGOT THE RULES, or if you know about about a pantry with volunteers who forgot the rules, be prepared to expect a surprise or two in the coming months.

THE FOOD BANK HAS RULES.  The rules have teeth.  The Food Bank is no longer interested in keeping secrets.  After all, our court system is pretty open.  Misdemeanors and felonies are part of the public record.

Over the past few months, the Food Bank has terminated a few agency memberships.  Why?

Volunteers:

sold Food Bank products for their own profit.

kept food for themselves or gave it to family and  friends or other volunteers.

used products for unapproved activities.

forgot there are health standards and that pantries and pantry storerooms should be kept clean.

THANK YOU FOOD BANK.  Those of us working in honest pantries have hoped this would happen.  Personally, I feel that there are very few pantries operated by people who make up their rules as they go along and have no respect for the Food Bank.  These people are, however, ruining the whole scene for all of us.

If you shop at or volunteer at a pantry where the rules are not followed, please call 1-518-786-3691 and report the issue.

On behalf of honest pantry volunteers and hungry shoppers everywhere, thank you for reading this blog/book.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

It Takes a Community

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ONE PERSON ALONE CANNOT KEEP A FOOD PANTRY GOING.  I’m always reminded of this in the winters when:

it’s cold in the pantry,

snowy outside,

life is tough for the homeless.

This time of year, there are always wonderful surprises which keep my heart going. Last week, I got a call:

“Is this the Reservoir Food Pantry?”

“Yes it is.  How can we help?”

“Well, can you send somebody over here to pick up a few things?  Our store employees  had a food drive over here  and I don’t think anyone told you about it.”

Wow! I thought.  “Sure, I’ll be down in an hour.  Where do I come?”

“HOME DEPOT IN KINGSTON.”

“Thanks!”

So, I got in the car and drove over to pick up a few things the employees had collected.  They underestimated their collection a little.  It filled up the car.  Food, cleaning supplies, items of dignity, clothes.  One of the employees had knitted 2 gorgeous afghans!  Another employee gave us a box of clean, very gently used baby clothing.

EVERY ITEM…FOOD, CLEANING SUPPLIES, APPEARED TO BE NEW.   When all the things were stuffed in the car, it seemed  every employee in the store had given  something.

I DROVE THEM OVER TO THE PANTRY.  EVERYTHING, AND I MEAN EVERYTHING, WAS DISTRIBUTED AT THE NEXT PANTRY DAY.

WE REALLY APPRECIATE THESE DONATIONS OF FOOD AND CLOTHING KS .  We  have many shoppers and there are few stores in Boiceville.  Most of the people shopping at our pantry have both money and transportation issues which make  trips to Kingston difficult.  Some shoppers have very limited finances so $$$ for a winter coat is a real challenge.

EVERYTHING COMING IN IS CLEAN, PRACTICAL, AND VERY MUCH NEEDED.

Lisa Libraries  donates new books for anyone who wants to read or who needs to give a gift.  These donated books are free and available to anyone wanting a book.

If you want to donate food, clothing, cleaning items, items of dignity, household items, please drop these items off at 12 noon on Mondays.  CHANCES ARE GOOD THAT WHAT YOU DROP OFF AT NOON WILL BE IN ITS NEW HOME BY  4:00.

We thank you in advance for your generosity.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

 

 

 

Stewart’s Shops and the Milk Coupons

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“Hi Bob.  How’s it going today?”

“It’s going good here.  There’s a long line outside here at the pantry.  This place is really growing.”

“Bob, do you ever make it over to Stewart’s on 28?”

“Yeah, why?”

“Well, I’ve got something nice for you today if you can get there.  I’ve got a milk coupon for you if you can use it.”

“Sure.”

This conversation was repeated many times in the pantry this week.  Sometimes the shopper had transportation to get to Stewart’s.  Sometimes the conversation didn’t go quite so well.  In that case s/he didn’t get a coupon.  The nearest Stewart’s Shop is on 28 near the Woodstock turnoff so those whose transportation is limited to bicycles and walking can’t make it that far down the road.

Solid gold, these coupons.  For one thing, we distribute cereal and it’s really nice if we can offer milk to put on the cereal.  This week we offered coupons to 100 families who visited our pantry!

Stewart’s Shops are located within a 150 mile radius of their headquarters in Saratoga Springs, NY which means that food pantries in Upstate New York are blessed with being near a company with a serious commitment to community support.  A family and employee owned business, Stewart’s donates 5% of its profits to charity.

This year, 2014, Stewart’s is giving away over $2.5 million  in monetary and product donations to non profit organizations in the 30 counties where they have stores.

Even though millionaires are fast becoming billionaires and the stock market is soaring, we really are living in difficult economic times…so much so that charitable donor organizations are as stressed as the non profits who solicit to them daily.

Stewart’s is well aware of the long term problems we face as we serve the hungry. Stewart’s  also knows about the stresses  non profits experience as we work to alleviate hunger in our area.  That makes Stewart’s a real angel to food pantries and soup kitchens.

Apart from offering a sincere “Thank You” from all of us in the industry, there are several things we can do to show our appreciation to a company which is committed to feeding the hungry.

We can shop at Stewart’s when we purchase gas, milk, and bread.

We can support Stewart’s on Social Media.

So, I ask you to:  Like Stewart’s on Facebook.  Follow Stewart’s on Twitter.

The next time you shop for food or gas at a Stewart’s shop, can you take a moment to thank the employees of the store where you shop?  A simple sentence recognizing the company and employees for their generosity is extremely important to all of us.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

 

Do you work at a pantry? Do you shop at a pantry? Do you donate to a pantry? Part 5

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UNREACHABLE

“Hi Chris!  How’s it going today?  Are you busy or what in here?  This place is jammed! ”

“Busy as always Thurman.  We’ve got  melons and a lot of tomatoes today.  We’re out of the special HPNAP produce.”

“Listen Chris, it doesn’t matter.  Prasida and Francine and I always find something wonderful and magical here every time we come to the Food Bank.”

Prasida and Francine  make it their life’s work to get the best possible produce from Latham to Boiceville every Monday morning.  These 2 women know food.  Each week is a food quest for them.

THIS IS EXACTLY THE SAME SITUATION FOR THOSE SEEKING FOOD FROM A FOOD PANTRY.

And, of course, fresh produce and bakery  goods are  only part of the picture…Much of what happens is unplanned, haphazard, erratic.  No one really complains.  After all, we’re getting food, aren’t we?  And, none of us has the authority, resources, responsibility, or ideas to improve the system.

IT BOILS DOWN TO THIS:  WE AT RESERVOIR FOOD PANTRY:

GET WHAT WE GET

WHEN WE GET IT

HOW WE GET IT.

OUR CLIENTS GET WHAT THEY GET WHEN THEY CAN MAKE IT TO THE PANTRY.

WHEN THEY CAN NO LONGER MAKE IT TO THE PANTRY, WE GET IT DELIVERED TO THEM SOMEHOW.

LARGE DIFFERENCES EXIST IN CLIENT ACCESS TO PANTRIES AND SOUP KITCHENS.    There are no soup kitchens  in the Reservoir Food Pantry  area.  If a person out here needs  to go to a soup kitchen, the best opportunity is to go to Woodstock on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 4:30 pm.  That’s when the Daily Bread Soup Kitchen in the back building of Christ Lutheran Church is open. Chances are good that if you don’t live in Woodstock and don’t have the wherewithal to put together a meal at your home (wherever and whatever that is), you aren’t going to have the wherewithal to make it over to Woodstock either.

AVAILABILITY HAS A LOT TO DO WITH ACCESS.  Our pantry distributes food 3 days weekly but it’s only open on Mondays in Boiceville.  If, for example, you live in West Shokan and have no transportation on Mondays, you aren’t going to make it to our pantry.  Unfortunately, this also holds true in urban settings as well.

KINGSTON HAS MANY PANTRIES AND SOUP KITCHENS.  There again, you need to be able to get to them when they’re open.  Some people simply can’t make it over.

Take, for example, Motel 19, a shelter located at the intersection of Routes 28, 209, and 87 on the edge of Kingston.  Without a bicycle or car, a person  is looking at a long hike.

Imagine being a young mother with an infant or child trying to get to a grocery store, doctor’s office, pantry or soup kitchen.  Imagine walking down a highway with this infant or child in your arms as cars  travel faster than 45 miles per hour.

What if there is rain,  freezing rain, or a snow storm?

Shoppers in rural areas routinely face transportation difficulties.  People travel significant distances.  Some walk, bicycle, take the bus, or hitch rides from friends and neighbors.

THE RULE IS THIS:  THOSE MOST IN NEED HAVE THE LEAST ACCESS TO TRANSPORTATION.

Reservoir Food Pantry has been designated a mobile food pantry.  We deliver food to half of our clients.  One stop is a low rent complex for seniors.  Another is an intergenerational low rent complex.  The remainder of the stops are at individual residences – apartments, homes, rooms, whatever.

As challenging as it is for shoppers to get to the pantry, it’s equally difficult for the pantry volunteers to get to the Food Bank.  At Reservoir Food Pantry, we’re fortunate to have dedicated volunteers and a reliable vehicle sold to me by Sawyer Motors at an excellent price.  Remove those 2 factors, and the result is a mess.

SOME FOOD PANTRIES HAVE LIMITED FINANCIAL DONORS AND VOLUNTEERS.   Some have transportation issues. They  may lack produce, baked goods, and other foods necessary for a balanced diet.

The structure of our Food Bank/Food Pantry system is unable to ensure those in the greatest need will have access to food.

The Food Banks of Northeastern New York and the Hudson Valley are focused  on developing innovative ways to get the food to the people.  A designated truck is driven on a regular route to grocery stores, farms, food manufacturers, and other locations to pick up food and take it to the Food Bank.  It is then sorted and made available to pantries.

THE FARM STANDS AT PEOPLES PLACE AND COMMUNITY IN KINGSTON ARE PRODUCTS OF THIS EFFORT.

The Food Bank of the Hudson Valley conducts daily mass food distributions throughout the area where a food bank driver in a  semi delivers 12 pallets of food to a central point predetermined by a schedule.  The food is then distributed to pantries, soup kitchens, shelters, individual households.  Communities receiving these food distributions regularly include communities such as Lake Katrine,  Gardiner, Kingston.

We have much needed food going to hungry people. I only wish more of it were going to the more rural locations.

Now that I’m writing a wish list, I wish more pantries would open on evenings and weekends.  This is difficult to do, I know.  Reservoir Food Pantry is not yet open  weekends.

I also wish pantries could give up some of the identification requirements.

JUST FEED THE PEOPLE, YOU KNOW?

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

Do you shop at a Pantry? Do you work at a Pantry? Do you donate to a Pantry? – Part 3

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THIS SOUP HAS NOTHING IN IT BUT SALT.

At first, when I was just learning to be a pantry coordinator, I didn’t understand what was wrong.  We got in some soup  which everyone looked at, read the label, and left on the shelf.  So, I asked Barry to visit the pantry.

“WHAT’S THE DEAL WITH THIS SOUP?  Most of the people are leaving it on the shelf.  There’s only 6 different things they can take home here.   Why are they leaving the soup behind?”

“Well, it’s the nutritional content” he said, reading the label.  There’s no nutrition.  And, everyone knows too much salt is not good.”

I began to watch the shoppers reading the labels and I asked questions.  I got an earful of important information from people trying to live on pantry food.  I learned several important things:

THOSE SHOPPING IN A PANTRY HAVE LITTLE OR NO MONEY FOR HEALTH CARE/MEDICAL EXPENSES.  FOOD IS THE FRONT LINE OF DEFENSE FOR THOSE ON A LIMITED BUDGET.   The pantry food is, sometimes, nutritionally inadequate because

there may not always be enough of it

there may not be  enough fresh vegetables

everything is canned resulting in high sodium products

there is no real choice.

At the time, there were fewer than 10 items in the pantry to choose from which didn’t offer a shopper enough options to deal with dietary restrictions (celiac disease, hypertension, diabetes), personal preference, and enough variety to offer good nutritional selection.

As a new coordinator, I still didn’t yet know all my options and wasn’t comfortable with the Food Bank system yet.  This much I knew:

The food supply I had to choose from was then and is now supply driven instead of need driven.  In other words, I can’t order everything the pantry needs at a given time because it’s not always available.  Foods available at the Food Bank are donations from grocery stores, farms, food manufacturers.

MUCH  FOOD BANK FOOD IS DIVERTED FROM A LANDFILL.    In other words, it’s salvage.  I order food donated from test marketing disasters, crop overproduction, Food Bank food drives.

MOST FOOD COMING INTO OUR PANTRY ARE NUTRITIONALLY SOUND BECAUSE I WON’T ORDER IT IF IT ISN’T.  There are some issues with sodium and fat…but not many.

Several things happened in those early years that I coordinated the pantry.  They really helped:

The HPNAP people took a stand against too much salt which I got all excited about.  They issued guidelines forbidding agencies to use HPNAP funds to purchase foods have too many grams of salt per serving.

Gradually, as the economy declined, the HPNAP people added other nutritional improvements:

1% milk

Whole grain breads

Lean meats

A minimum 3 -day-supply of food for everyone in the household.

Fresh produce.

THESE GUIDELINES COMPLETELY CHANGED HOW THE PANTRY OPERATED AND WHAT WAS AVAILABLE.  IT WAS GLORIOUS!

The pantry offered very little junk food even though there was certainly a lot of it at the Food Bank.  The Food Bank accepts donations  but that doesn’t  mean I have to put the junk food on my pantry’s shelf.

These guidelines and availability are still a reality in the pantry world as our calendar approaches 2015.  I  leave the junk food off my orders so other coordinators can have it.

And, I’m still grateful for:

crop overproduction

Food Bank food drives

HPNAP guidelines

food that can be diverted from the landfill

generous bakeries

the Farm Stand

the Food Bank truck that’s making the rounds of the grocery stores, farms, food manufacturers so we can have their overage at our food pantry.

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Peace and food for all.

Thank you for reading this blog/book.

Please refer this article to your preferred social media network.

Please send a comment.

Don’t forget to join the email list.

Thurman Greco

 

 

Don’t go Away. I need to talk to you.

“WE ALL KNOW ANGER.    We also know how it kills our inner peace.  And while most of us like the idea of forgiveness, it often seems a difficult thing to practice, especially when the source of our hurt is up close and personal.” – Mike George

“Don’t go away.  I need to talk to you” the man aid in an authoritative voice as he walked toward me in the basement hallway of the Woodstock Reformed Church.

As I heard his voice, the hair on my neck began to stand up.  I had just walked out of the pantry room for a moment.  Stocking shelves in the pantry, I was preparing for the hungry who would be shopping soon.  I’d been putting USDA canned green beans on the third shelf down from the top of a unit by a window.

“GOOD AFTERNOON, SIR.   What can I do for you?”

“Well, for starters you can stop feeding all those people.  Ever since you started working here, more and more people are standing in our halls.  You’re feeding the unworthy hungry and I want it to stop.  Right.  Now.”  he said with emphasis.

The man standing over me in the hall was fat, old, angry.  His toes pointed outward…a sure sign to me he suffered from a backache.  “I’m Ed Jabbs.  I’m head of the building committee for this church and I want to see your files on the people who use this pantry.”

“I’m sorry sir.  We don’t keep many  files on our shoppers.  We keep a journal where we record their names and number of people in each household.  That’s all.”

WE’RE A PANTRY, NOT THE POLICE, I THOUGHT TO MYSELF.

“Well, you should.  No one should be allowed in the pantry who isn’t on food stamps.  You’re feeding people who shouldn’t be coming here to get this food.  You’re feeding the unworthy hungry.”

“Just last week you gave food to a man who I know shouldn’t be fed.  He’s a writer.  He published a book a couple of years ago and he shouldn’t even be here.  Writers make a lot of money. ”

I’d heard about Ed Jabbs.  He was a story in Woodstock.  He was head of the building committee, was not a pantry supporter, and was definitely not a Thurman Greco supporter.  After all, I reported to the Food Bank, not him.  “This man is definitely a threat to the pantry” was the thought going through my mind as he stood over me.

Forever a mystery, I had heard gossip:  Some church members were afraid of him.  He had once belonged to a church in Saugerties but left after some event when a few members there had had enough.  He was reputed to drive an expensive car with Delaware plates, and lived in Saugerties.

Not a secret:  He very definitely did not like the way the pantry in the church was being managed now.

And, he had grounds.  Before 2008, the pantry served about 25 colorful characters on Thursday mornings and now with the economy in the tank, new hungry people showed up every week.  Lines were getting longer and longer.

The Hunger Prevention Nutrition Assistance Program changed our nutritional guidelines to include fresh produce, 1% milk, and whole grain breads.  Before the guidelines changed, shoppers  got a jar of peanut butter, a box of cereal, a can of tuna fish and maybe a can of soup.  Now, they received a 3-day-supply of food for everyone in the household.  Fresh produce lined the walls of the pantry.  Bread Alone sent over bread weekly and pet food was even available.

These changes brought not only hungry people but mountains of cardboard and, according to some church people, vermin.  Some felt we were being overrun with vermin.  No amount of reasoning convinced them of anything different.  It didn’t matter one whit that there was not even one bug or mouse to be found in the pantry.

Meanwhile, here was this angry man staring at me and demanding to see files the State didn’t even require.

“Well, Mr. Jabbs, I can call the Food Bank and find out what files we need.  However, the inspector was here only a few weeks ago, looked at all my paperwork and pronounced everything “excellent”.  We’ve never done anything like this before.  After all, we’re a food pantry…not the police.”

“Check into it NOW”! he said as he turned away, his toes still pointing outward.  Mr. Jabbs turned and smiled at me then, displaying a mouthful of large yellow teeth.

Thank you for reading this blog/book.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

What? You’re STILL Here!

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Can you believe it?  We’re STILL here!

Reservoir  Food Pantry celebrated its first anniversary yesterday with an open house at our pantry shed behind Robert’s Auction in Boiceville.  Even with the wet weather, we had more guests than I ever imagined would come by!  We celebrated our new shed and now will begin to distribute food from this place beginning Monday afternoon at 2:00.

On September 9, 2013, a band of four people who barely knew each other embarked on an adventure.  By the time we had our open house, we had fed 2810 households composed of 1874 adults, 2315 seniors, and 747 children.

THAT SAYS IT ALL.

But, wait!  Look at those numbers a bit.  We fed more seniors than we did the adults and children combined.

OKAY NOW, THAT SAYS IT ALL.

The 501(c)3 application was a joint effort with Sean putting in about 95% of the work.  This was a successful first project.  We received our approval!

I guided us through the Food Bank process.  We’ve been an agency for several months now and, on July 1, 2014, we became eligible for a HPNAP line of credit offering food for the growing number of hungry shoppers.

Prasida tracked the funds from the very beginning.

Bonnie became the writer for all our activities including taking meeting minutes and writing press releases.

Bonnie, Sean, and Prasida inspected every empty building along Route 28 in the Ashoken Reservoir area.  Many were perfect for our needs except for the rent.  We simply couldn’t afford what they asked.

FINALLY, TOWNSPEOPLE CAME TO OUR RESCUE:

John Parete is extremely generous with his restaurant.  Most of the people on our homebound list  are fed from stock kept in the “Bodega”.  We have  a freezer and refrigerator there also.  And, (very importantly), no one minds if we bring in food throughout the week.  John always greets us with a smile and is donating the space.  The only flaw in this scenario was that we didn’t ask him sooner.

The Wastewater Treatment Plant people in tandem with the Olive Town Board is supportive.  We drive up to the parking lot on Mondays as if we own the place.  And, for the short time we’re there, we really do own the parking lot.  It’s a squatter’s rights kind of thing.

Beecher Smith is generously sharing his property behind the Robert’s Auction so we can have our sheds.  We simply cannot distribute food from the parking lot through freezing temperatures and snowfalls.

FRESH FOODS COME FROM FAR AND WIDE:

Bread  Alone

Migliorelli Farm

Shandaken Gardens

Huguenot Street Farm

Food Bank of Northeastern New York

Prasida  and Francine  drive up to the Food Bank every Monday morning for food.  We distribute this food as if we’re at the entrance to the Versailles.  As far as I’m concerned, we are at the entrance to the Versailles.

Canned, dried, and boxed goods come from the Food Bank.  Volunteers have food drives at the Boiceville IGA one Saturday every other month.  Monthly food drives are held at the entrance to the Kingston Walmart.  Members of the Wesleyan Church had a food drive for us at Christmas.

Esotec beverages is generous with periodic donations of juices and other beverages.

Food from the Food Bank is recycled.  The produce, dairy, and bread given to us at Latham is all on its way to the landfill when it gets diverted and sent to the Food Bank, then on to  pantries, shelters, half way houses.  The canned goods are diverted at the grocery store from the landfill.  Cans are dented.  Many are outdated.  Some have no labels anymore.

As more people find us, 2015 promises to be more eventful than 2014.    Each week, people walk, ride bicycles, drive cars to get to our  pantry.  It’s time  to   focus on developing systems and procedures given to me by my superiors at the Food Bank.

Most people who shop at our pantry are Resource Poor.  They routinely choose between food and rent, food and medical expenses, food and transportation.  Resource poor are also food insecure.  They lack, at times, enough food for an active, healthy life for the household members.  Food insecurity comes in 2 categories:

Food Insecure

Very Low Food Security

When we talk very low food security, we know some have limited access to grocery stores.  Their food comes from gas station food markets, and convenience stores. I’m not running down gas stations and convenience stores.  But it’s hard to find food that really nourishes there.  Vegetables and fruits are scarce.  When they are available, they’re expensive.  Salt, grease, and sugar are in abundance.  Fat is cheap, available, and filling.

The area surrounding the Reservoir Food Pantry is just such a place.  A person, for example, living in Shokan is miles from the Boiceville IGA.  This trip becomes very challenging if there is no car or other means of transportation.

Lack of transportation in the area  makes for a very strong take out department.  Many  shoppers  are unable to get to us.   We’re seeking volunteers to pack and deliver food to yet more homebound households.

Disaster preparation looms large in our area – whether we’re ready or not.  We’re the strongest pantry in the Reservoir area and may be called upon in the event of a disaster.  The aftermath of  Hurricane Irene and Superstorm Sandy was difficult for this area.  Many lost everything:  home, job, car.

We are all grateful for the sponsorship of the Zen Mountain Monastery without which we would never have even gotten to first base.  The ripple effect of this generosity is traveling far and wide through both space and time.

So…we’re still here.  We hope to be here in the future.  We plan to be here in the future.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

Pea

 

We’re

 

Food Pantry Blog – Get Your Flu Shot

Flu shots are available in Woodstock now.  Those of us with enough money or with insurance can hike ourselves over to the CVS or Village Apothecary and get “shot”.  I’ve personally been getting flu shots for over 25 years.  And, because of the inoculations or because of the luck of the draw, I haven’t had the flu in years.

Have you gotten your flu shot yet?

When I ask people in Woodstock if they’ve gotten their flu shot yet, many of them respond with an enthusiastic “NO!” and then proudly explain that they don’t do inoculations.

Others, however, explain truthfully that they don’t have the money for such frivolities.  After all, if they don’t even have any money beyond the gas and rent, how are they going to scare up the funds for such things as health insurance or flu shots?

Thank you for reading this blog/book.

Please refer this article to your preferred social media network.

Don’t forget to send a comment.

Please send a comment.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco