Hunger Is Not a Disease

Do you work at a pantry? Do you shop at a pantry? Do you donate to a pantry? – Part 6

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THERE’S NO WAY TO GET AROUND IT.

Efforts by pantries and soup kitchens to connect with hungry people  make them inefficient.

A person may spend several hours on the phone just trying to find  a pantry  open on a specific day that s/he has transportation.  And, calling ahead is important.  Often the list a person is working with  is inaccurate/out of date.

MOST IMPORTANT:   PANTRY SHOPPERS NEED TO DETERMINE IN ADVANCE IF THEY’RE GOING TO BE ADMITTED TO THE PANTRY THEY’RE TRYING TO SHOP AT.

On the Food Bank front, no one can call the Food Bank of Northeastern New York or the Food Bank of the Hudson Valley disorganized or inefficient.  The delivery systems, quality management, efficient consumer response, and sensitivity to the needs of the different agencies is above reproach.

How the employees at these 2 Food Banks can soldier on year after year is beyond me.  I visit a Food Bank weekly.

I PLACE, ON AVERAGE,  2-3 ORDERS MONTHLY.   A Reservoir Food Pantry volunteer is  in the produce area of the food bank every Monday.  The employees are always courteous, friendly, professional.  Never has an order been botched.  This is an amazing record when one considers there are only 80 employees (some part time) for 1028 agencies.

Inefficiencies are seen in the enormous labor involved in a food drive.  And…the Food Banks thrive on food drives.

FOOD DRIVES TAKE AN ENORMOUS AMOUNT OF WORK ON THE PART OF MANY PEOPLE.   An “army” is needed to advertise the food drive, determine and monitor the collection points, motivate people to give the food to the hungry and then take it to the collection points.

Once that happens, the food is assembled at a central point for sorting.  Finally, after much handling, this food ends up on its way to a food pantry.  Many  people involved in a food drive project are volunteers.

Fortunately the HPNAP people in New York State  instituted client choice guidelines  in 2008  so  volunteers  no longer spend hours filling bags of food to be distributed to the shoppers.

When food bags were distributed,  people would be given bags of food:

which they possibly could/could not cook based on their kitchen facilities.

and which they possibly could/could not eat based on their health issues.

With client choice, the food collected is much more efficiently distributed. ( Shoppers take home the food they can use.

ON THE SUPERMARKET FRONT, THERE ARE COMMUNITIES, NEIGHBORHOODS, AND RURAL AREAS THROUGHOUT OUR COUNTRY WITHOUT GROCERY STORES.  We call these areas “food deserts”.  Food pantries and soup kitchens  replace  disappearing supermarkets in inner-city and rural locations.

In a different system:

one where adequate food stamps are distributed to hungry people,

one where an adequate minimum wage meets the housing, transportation, and food needs of a household,

many people now lined up at food pantries and soup kitchens could shop at the store of their choice and purchase the food they want and can eat.  There would be profit making businesses in these inner city and rural areas.

But, then, what would happen to all of us who spend our lives volunteering and working so that others might eat?

How could we continue to reduce landfill clutter?  How could we reduce  dumpster and composter costs?

How could we continue to recycle all the wonderful produce if there is no place for it to go?

FOOD PANTRIES AND SOUP KITCHENS FUNCTION SUCCESSFULLY BECAUSE COSTS ARE MINIMAL.  Everything is donated:

Volunteer time

Recycled food which has been diverted from a landfill

Pantry Space.

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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 4

 

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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

 

 

Do you work at a pantry? Do you shop at a pantry? Do you donate to a pantry? – Part 1

 

IMG_2647-150x150HOW MUCH IS ENOUGH?

That question lives in the brain of every conscientious coordinator.  It’s impossible to plan for pantry needs with confidence.

Much depends on a coordinator’s attitude.  Some feel that all they need to do is get food on the shelves and if the food runs out, well, the food runs out and who cares anyway?

I NEVER BOUGHT THAT LINE.

The building committee of the Woodstock Reformed Church as well as some people in Woodstock felt it was my job to turn people away.  They didn’t want too many people in the building and they didn’t want them getting too much food.

“How dare you serve this kind of food to these people?”

“How dare you serve this much food to these people?”

Some people felt shoppers should be limited in how often they could visit the pantry.  Once weekly was considered  too often.  The idea was to prevent people from getting used to the idea of getting food at a pantry.

NO ONE SEEMED TO KNOW WHAT IT’S LIKE TO NOT HAVE ENOUGH MONEY FOR FOOD.

Fortunately for me and for the hungry, the Hunger Prevention Nutrition Assistance Program people stepped in with clear guidelines  which appeared gradually over several years:

2005 – We were expected to offer 1% milk.

2008 – Pantries were expected to operate the client choice program.

2009 – Whole grain breads and cereals are to be served.

New York State requires that food pantries serve a minimum 3-day-supply of food for everyone in the household.  This supply  includes food for 3 meals each day for the 3 days.  50% of the food is to be fruits and vegetables.  Each meal is to be composed of 3 of the 5 food groups.

Where pantries come up short in this scenario is the 3-day-supply deal.  If we offer a 3-day-supply of food weekly to a family who is home bound or who is totally out of food money, the  household will be taking a 3-day-supply of food and stretching it to 7.

If a person lives in an area with several pantries, it’s possible to visit 2 pantries for  a week’s worth of food.  This is  difficult for a family with no funds because it costs more gas to get to 2 pantries.  It’s also  time consuming.  A person doesn’t just run in to a pantry and pick up a few items.  Lines are long.  Waits are even longer.  At Reservoir Food Pantry, we try to keep waits to a minimum by opening as soon as the pantry is set up.  (This is usually about 1:00, even though the pantry opens at 2:00)

And what about the households in areas where the pantry only allows them to visit monthly?

“We don’t want these people depending on us for their food.”

“Pantries should only be available for occasional use.”

It’s extremely difficult to offer foods appropriate for everyone in a pantry.  This week in the Reservoir Food Pantry, we offered  the following choices:

1 cereal

raisins

instant mashed potatoes

canned beans

crackers

rice cakes

tomato base cooking sauce

canned fruit

canned vegetables

spaghetti

On the fresh side, we had eggplants, lemons, potatoes, kale, salad mix, papayas, bananas, onions. apples,  pears, squash.

Produce came from Migliorelli’s, Shandaken Gardens, Ulster Corps gleaning, and the Food Bank of Northeastern New York.

Bread came from Bread Alone.  Pies came from Meredith’s.

PANTRIES ARE CONCERNED WITH NUTRITION IN TERMS OF SALT, SUGAR, AND FAT.

Whether or not a pantry serves nutritious food depends on whether  the coordinator of the pantry knows anything about nutrition.  In a pantry, it’s often about choices.  If the coordinator doesn’t know or care about nutrition, the food can help keep an unhealthy person sick.

FOR EXAMPLE, MANY SHOPPERS AT RESERVOIR FOOD PANTRY ARE OVER 65.   Current statistics show that 1 in 7 seniors don’t even get enough food to eat.  When a senior doesn’t get enough to eat, s/he may get sick causing problems for the children and grandchildren.

Reservoir Food Pantry volunteers make an ongoing herculean effort to offer only the best produce to our shoppers.   Prasida and Francine drive to Latham every Monday morning and return with about 900-1000 lbs of fresh food – much of which is organic.

AN IMPORTANT FACT:  Reservoir Food Pantry is stocked with foods donated to the Food Bank and offered to us rather than foods that we selected.  100% of that food has been diverted from a landfill.  The code is expired.  Cans are dented. Labels are torn or missing.  It’s all been rejected at a grocery store somewhere.

When we can’t get something we need, we rely on fresh produce to fill the gap.  We’ll continue to do this as long as we have gas money to get to Latham.

SO WE HAVE A PROBLEM SIMILAR TO THAT OF OUR SHOPPERS.  .

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

 

 

 

 

But…are they hungry enough?

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The “Are They Hungry Enough” issue looms large in food pantry conflicts.  The fears boil down to this:

People are going to shop at the pantry when they actually have the $$$ to go to the grocery store.

Riffraff are going to take the pantry food and sell it.

These people wouldn’t need to come here if they managed their $$$ better.

VERY FEW PEOPLE ARE COMFORTABLE WITH THE CONCEPT THAT WE JUST GIVE THE FOOD AWAY…NO STRINGS ATTACHED.  The unspoken text is that the hungry, the struggling class, individually and as a group should be punished for being the downtrodden.

Sometimes when I try to sort the issues out in my head, I remember the chicken yard my grandmother had during World War II.  Occasionally, when a chicken would become sick, the other chickens would begin to peck at it.  If the chicken didn’t get well, it would be pecked to death.

WHEN WE ATTACK THE HUNGRY FOR NEEDING THE PANTRY, WE’RE LIKE THE CHICKENS PECKING THE WEAKEST ONE TO DEATH.

I welcome all shoppers.  They don’t have to be destitute although I see many destitute people nowadays.

Pantry shoppers routinely endure:

long lines

uncomfortable waiting conditions

lack of choice

WAITS OUTSIDE PANTRIES ARE USUALLY AN HOUR OR LONGER.   At the Reservoir Food Pantry, we advertise our hours as 2:00 to 5:30.  The doors actually open a little after 1:00 to a long line of people already waiting.

Shoppers  wait outside the tiny pantry whether it’s raining, snowing, or if there are broiling summer temperatures.  There is no shade outside our pantry…no protection from the elements.

They wait in this line for access to about 30 different food products.  Compare that to a trip to a super market with 10,000 or so items to choose from.

THE PANTRY EXPERIENCE IS THE END OF THE ROAD.   People  are out of $$$ and need something to eat. period.

And, finally, if I ever could take the attitude that hungry people must have done something wrong and don’t need that kind of food…I remember the first time I naively asked a child in line about Christmas.

SANTA DOESN’T COME TO FAMILIES THAT STAND IN A PANTRY LINE.

THAT IS PUNISHMENT ENOUGH.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

 

 

Why are they hungry?

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RECENTLY UNEMPLOYED

They showed up in the pantry one Wednesday evening.   A man, his wife, her mother, two children.  A closely knit group,  it was this family against the world.   It was obvious to anyone in the room who looked that he loved his daughter.

“Welcome.  Come on in.  Go around the room…..” I gave them the usual spiel.  The whole family helped choose food.

As they were leaving, I handed them a flyer about the soup kitchen.  Off they went, flyer in hand, to have supper.

Wednesdays  became a ritual for them.  First, they came to the pantry and then they went to the soup kitchen for supper.

UNDEREMPLOYED/UNDERPAID

For me, she wins the medal for being the most underemployed/underpaid  person in Woodstock.

Capable.

Well educated.

Creative.

Industrious.

Beautiful.

Goal oriented.

Excellent people skills.

Talented.

Stuck in Woodstock and almost starving to death, she was evicted at one point and moved in with a friend.  She barely  makes it from day to day.

DEATH OF A SPOUSE

“I’m so grateful to be here today.  I have someplace to go – the pantry.  Fred died one year ago today ” she said.

“Thanks for coming by.”

“I just never knew how hard it would be to live alone.  I don’t want to go to my children.  The food I get here really helps my budget.”

FOOD STAMP CUTS

“Thurman, my stamps have been cut again.   I don’t know how I’m going to make it.

I have absolutely no money this month.  My car died and  I don’t know where I’m going to get the $$$ to fix it.  If I can’t get the $$$ to fix it,  I can’t buy a a new one.”

ILLNESS

“How are you doing today?”

“Well, I’m here.”  The man speaking was dying of a brain tumor.  The pain clearly marked his face.  “The tumor seemed to be getting larger this week.  I go down to the hospital  every week for the chemo and they check it out.”

“If you’re ever too tired to come to the pantry, call and we’ll deliver the food to you.”

“No” he said.  “I’m going to come to the pantry as long as I can – for the social interaction if nothing else.”

TO SUM THINGS UP, THEY (WE) ARE HUNGRY BECAUSE THEIR (OUR) INCOME, FROM WHATEVER SOURCE, IS NOT ENOUGH TO MEET THE HIGH COST OF LIVING AS A POOR OR DESTITUTE PERSON.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

 

 

Walmart – November, 2014

 

This is our last tour at Walmart for the year.  We won’t be returning until the new year.

Friday was quite a day:  cold, damp, very light traffic.

When we sit at the table on the sidewalk in front of the store entrance, we make eye contact with every person coming in the door.  “Hi, we’re with the Reservoir Food Pantry, just asking for a donation of either money or food to feed the hungry.”

With 2 or more of us at the table, it’s hard to miss anyone.  People either give a donation, tell us they’ll give when they come out, or decline.

So, this was the scene as we greeted  donors Friday afternoon about 4:00.  Somehow, we missed one.   We didn’t even see her until she was upon us as she was leaving.  A slight young woman with shimmery blond hair which hung about shoulder length, she wore a flowing coat, almost a cape…a deeply red cape.

She surprised us as she came out the “in” door with a cart overflowing with food.  All of it had been carefully packed so that there were about 5 cans or boxes of food in each bag.

She parked her shopping cart at the side of our table as she quietly said “I hope you can use this food.”

Then, quickly…almost too quickly…she removed her hands from the cart, looked at us with a beautiful smile, and walked away.  She seemed to be almost floating.  Then, about 50 feet away from our table, she seemed to disappear in a mist that was surrounding her.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

Who are the hungry?

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She arrived at the pantry to shop  one Wednesday evening just as we were closing.  “Thanks for being here.  I’m completely out of food and I’ve got 3 jobs.  It’s really hard to get to the pantry.  For all my jobs, I have absolutely no money and I have no time to eat if I do have food.”

Several states passed minimum wage legislation on November 4.  But there is still much more work which needs to be done.

OUR POLITICIANS ARE  DOING NO ONE A FAVOR BY NOT RAISING THE MINIMUM WAGE.

Minimum wage workers don’t make enough money even to buy food.  It takes 2 minimum wage jobs just to pay the rent.

HOMELESS PEOPLE ARE NOT ALL UNEMPLOYED.  It’s estimated that 10% of the homeless people are employed – they just don’t make enough money to pay rent.

When a person works at the minimum wage level s/he is not making a real contribution to society because there isn’t any money for healthcare.  When a minimum wage person becomes ill, the symptoms are ignored until things become so bad that a trip to the e.r. becomes necessary.

As few as 20  years ago, hourly workers made enough money to pay rent, buy food, get to work, pay taxes.

The value of the minimum wage has eroded and economic security has declined  to the point where economic inequality has increased.   People are no longer poor.  They are destitute.

Our country needs people who can make a contribution to our community, our state, our great nation.

Our country needs workers who make a wage high enough to buy food, pay rent, get clothing, and pay for medicine/medical bills, transportation, taxes.

So, here we all are at pantries all over this country – feeding people while politicians in Washington cut programs, causing poverty, and, in general, making things worse.

THERE IS NO EXCUSE FOR ANYONE IN OUR GREAT NATION TO GO HUNGRY.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

Thank you to Pieta and the Ulster County Board of Realtors Community Service Committee.

Pantry HND 3This letter is to  everyone at the Ulster County Board of Realtors Community Services Committee who offer ongoing support our food pantry throughout the year.

Specifically, thank you to:

Jean Semilof – Westwood Metes and Bounds

Pieta Williams – Halter Associates Realty

Mitch Rapaport, Margo O’Bourne, and Victoria Hoyt – Win Morrison

Grace Bowne, Dorcinda Knauth – Weichert Realtors, The Spiesman Group

Steve Hubbard – Steve Hubbard Real Estate

Gillian Harper – Wells Fargo Mortgage

Elizabeth Dolly Decker – Hello Dolly Real Estate

Michele Rizzi – Hudson Valley Federal Credit Union

Nan Potter – Potter Realty.

Pieta, you always make my day better when I came down the stairs to my home  and see a bag of goodies:  razors, shampoo, feminine hygiene products, tooth paste.  These are basics –  things  most of us  take for granted.

But, when a person shops at a pantry, nothing can be taken for granted.  People coming to the Reservoir Food Pantry have little and  need much.

At the Reservoir Food Pantry, we know  items of dignity are important to our shoppers, because these items are simply beyond the financial reach for many.    People sometimes go to a pantry when there is absolutely no money in the household.

This is true of all categories:

seniors

homeless

ill

unemployed.

Members of the Ulster County Board of Realtors Community Services Committee, you  have an ongoing awareness of the issues confronting poor and destitute people in Ulster County.  You demonstrate this throughout the year, as you generously give items of dignity for our pantry shoppers.

As Boiceville’s only pantry, we see a level of need  not obvious in a more urban setting.

Thank you to everyone at the Ulster County Board of Realtors.

Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

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November, 2014

GNP45

“Say goodbye to the landlord for me;

Sons of bitches always bored me.” – Guy Clark

Yet another round of food stamp cuts went into effect just a year ago this month.  This national event with far reaching repercussions didn’t negatively affect everyone.  After all, a person not receiving SNAP card funds wasn’t even affected unless s/he was politically conservative.  In that case, November 5, 2013 was a glorious day.

FOR THOSE RECEIVING SNAP CARD FUNDS, THE IMPACT WAS SERIOUS.

Diane, a pantry shopper has been a widow now for a little over 2 years.  She depends totally on her low social security check.  Her SNAP card allotment was reduced to $45.  This $45 is her total food budget.  After Diane pays her rent and utilities, she has no $$$ left for food.  All the food she eats comes from the SNAP card and a pantry.  She purchases her clothes at the Family of Woodstock free store.

Diane’s old car recently needed repairs and she tried to borrow the needed $$$.  That never happened so she wisely gave up and moved to Saugerties to be on a bus line.  Honestly, I don’t know how she managed to pull off a move.  They are very expensive endeavors.

FOR PANTRY VOLUNTEERS, THE NOVEMBER 5TH CUTS BROUGHT DREAD.    We know  reducing SNAP card benefits isn’t the answer.   When people shop for groceries with SNAP funds, they not only offer nourishment to themselves and their families, they bring much needed outside $$$ to the area, which is often depressed.

Many people have financial problems today which they are never going to overcome without a serious change in our country’s attitude toward poverty.  People have no $$$ for food because of:

lack of viable employment

high housing costs

high medical costs

Pantry shoppers lack resources to get beyond a chronic condition of lack in their lives.  A few people today are rich at the expense of the poor.  According to Couleecap, the richest 1% increased their share of total income by 10%, while, on average, the remaining 99% saw their piece of the pie shrink by 1-2%.

As food benefits were gutted on that fateful day in November, pantry volunteers had valid concerns:

THEY FEARED A NEW WAVE OF OVERWHELMINGLY LONG LINES OF HUNGRY PEOPLE.

They feared we would all run out of food for the people and be unable to get enough  to feed the ever increasing number.

There was a realization that few understand:   it’s been a long time since we really were emergency food providers.

MANY FEARS BECAME REALITY.  Pantry shopping has definitely become more popular.   Every week Prasida and Francine bring back more and more food and every bit of it is distributed.  Sean Bigler records our weekly journey on a chart on the Reservoir Food Pantry Facebook page and on our website.

The Food Banks of Northeastern New York and the Hudson Valley mustered forces to provide enough food every week.  They send trucks to farms, grocers, food manufacturers and bring food back for pantries to take to their shoppers.  If the hungry can make it to a pantry, they are fed.

POOR AND STRUGGLING PEOPLE HAVE SLIPPED YET ANOTHER NOTCH AWAY FROM THE RICH.   I am convinced, every time I open the pantry doors, that there are now 2 Americas:  the haves and the have nots.

We recently received a request for statistics:

How many have we turned away?

How long is our waiting list?

THE QUESTIONS WERE ENDLESS, IT SEEMED.   Well, we don’t have those statistics in the Reservoir Food Pantry because we feed the people.  The weekly trip to Latham continues rain,  shine or snow.  The monthly food drives at the Kingston Walmart are important for pantry volunteers.

Most weeks we run out of food about the same time we run out of people so we don’t turn anyone away.  We offer a heartfelt “thank you” to everyone who donates food to food banks and food pantries.

At the pantry’s close last Monday, there were 4 carrots left over in a small box, and another small box 1/2 filled with green beans.

We cannot do our job week after week without the continued support of:

Migliorelli Farm,

Ulster Corp gleaners,

Shandaken Community Gardens,

Kingston Walmart,

Boiceville IGA.

Father Nicholas at Holy Ascension Monastery shares donated yogurt with our pantry.

Pieta Williams brings items of dignity.

Lisa Library sends new books for the children.

Beecher Smith and John Parete at Boiceville Inn are the reason we have a pantry with shelves now.

LAST MONTH WE SERVED 856 PEOPLE.  In September the number was 834.   We expect November’s number to be higher.  It has never gone down yet.  Why should the trend be different this month?

THE ACTUAL NUMBER DOESN’T MATTER.   We don’t plan to turn anyone away.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco

Chris

GNP3

“Do you need volunteers?”  The young man speaking to me was a living, breathing dream for any pantry coordinator:

His hair wasn’t gray.  That meant he could probably lift.

He had a car.  That meant he could probably haul cardboard to the dump.

I wanted to pinch myself.  Was I dreaming?

“Sure, What do you have in mind?” I asked.

“Well, I can probably work one evening a week.  I’m ready to get started.  What needs to be done?”

After that, Chris showed up every Wednesday and did anything and everything that needed to be done:

mopping the floors.

folding down empty boxes and stuffing them in his jeep until he couldn’t get even one more in the vehicle.

Bringing case after case of canned goods from the storeroom to the pantry room.

Organizing  the storeroom.

CHRIS DIDN’T TALK TOO MUCH ABOUT HIS SITUATION.  Our culture has this $$$ taboo making it difficult for people in his situation to explain what the real problem is.  We’re all ready to bare our souls when discussing sex, crime, illness.  But we zip our lips over $$$.

Employers play the taboo card to the max.  If the average person in our country only knew how difficult it is for a person to live on a minimum wage, maybe the wages would increase.   Meanwhile, the $$$ taboo keeps people from knowing whether Walmart pays better than Target which may or may not pay better than McDonald’s.

MINIMUM WAGE WORKERS HAVE DIFFICULTY GETTING BENEFITS.   Overtime, retirement and health insurance are simply not available to most in the struggling class.

Housing poses the biggest obstacle for low wage workers.  Many simply cannot afford anything beyond housing and transportation.

Slowly, his story sort of revealed itself over the next few weeks.  His job in a big box store in Kingston was an hourly position with  neither enough hours or enough wages to buy both rent and food.

HE WAS EVERY WOMAN’S GRANDSON.  Peggy assembled his package for take out each week.

We all cheered when he came and were totally grateful for everything he did.  We loved Chris.  And, as with all things that are too good to be true, he left after a few months to work in another big box store offering more hours and a few more pennies each hour for pay.

Goodbye Chris, we love you – wherever you are.

SEVERAL MONTHS AGO, I WROTE IN A BLOG POST THAT I see the sidewalks of whatever town or city I’m in as nothing more than wards for the untreated mentally ill.

TODAY I WRITE THIS:  When I go in a big box store or chain restaurant, I  don’t see a person behind the vest or the colorful.  What is see, instead, is the collective low wage American worker living in a perpetual state of emergency.  Lunch consists of chips or a piece of bread.  Home is a car, van, or a sofa somewhere.  The loss of a day’s work means no groceries for the next…if  there is any money for food after paying the rent and transportation.

POVERTY IN AMERICA IS NOT A SUSTAINABLE CONDITION.

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Peace and food for all.

Thurman Greco