From the BBC:
“Hunger
spikes, demand rises for US food banks”
Food banks
across the country are straining to meet rising demand during the pandemic,
even in some of the country's wealthier regions. Karla Candelario, 30, never
thought she and her husband would have to rely on a food bank to feed their
family. Before the pandemic, the couple, who live in Loudoun, Virginia, were
getting by with their combined salaries, Karla caring for the elderly and her
husband working in construction. But last June, Candelario lost her job.
"That's when everything changed," she says. The sudden loss of income
and an unexpected and necessary $3,000 (£2,250) dental procedure that
Candelario had to undergo put the family, which includes four children - an
11-year old, a nine-year-old, and four-year-old twins - under serious financial
strain. They have recently been so "high in debt", Candelario says,
that they have depended on Loudoun Hunger Relief, a food pantry in Leesburg,
Virginia, to put food on the table. The Candelarios are not alone in their
unforeseen struggles.
More Americans
are going hungry than at any point during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to
data by the Census Bureau. One in eight Americans reported they sometimes or
often did not have enough food in November, according to a recent census
survey. Nearly 26 million adults - 12% of all adults - reported in that their
household had food shortages in the past week, according to Household Pulse
Survey data collected in November. Overall, food insecurity has doubled since
last year, reaching the highest level since 1998, when data about US household
ability to get enough food was first collected. Although hunger is not new in
America, the pandemic has had a major impact. Food insecurity has become a
widespread national issue sparing not even some of the wealthier regions. Since
early November, not far from Trump National Golf Club in Virginia, in an area
that used to have some of the lowest hunger rates in the country, Loudoun
Hunger Relief fed between 750 and 1,100 households a week - a 225% average
increase from its pre-pandemic weekly average. "We saw folks who had just
never needed to access this type of resource before," says executive
director Jennifer Montgomery. "It was obvious that they were very much one
or two pay checks away from being in serious trouble." The San
Francisco-Marin Food Bank, which operates in some of the richest US counties -
San Francisco and Marin - has been serving about 60,000 households, double its
pre-Covid average, says its executive director, Paul Ash.
'I wake up
wondering if I still have a job' Before coronavirus, the elderly and the
underemployed accounted for the majority of the food bank's clients, but there
has been a recent influx of service workers who have been disproportionately
hit by the pandemic, Ash says. Economic conditions are the main causes
behind hunger, says Diane Whitmore Schanzenbach, an economist and the director
of Northwestern University's Institute for Policy Research. Food
insecurity rates spiked at the end of March, when pandemic lockdowns made the
US economy stumble. The situation slightly improved as businesses slowly
reopened. Another help was the $2.2tn federal relief package, passed by
Congress in late March, which included unemployment benefits, incentives for
businesses to keep workers on the payroll, and support for food programmes. But
the economic conditions "have softened again," says Prof
Schanzenbach, and benefits for millions of Americans are due to expire. Unless
Congress, which has been deadlocked on the issue since the summer, soon agrees
on a new coronavirus stimulus package, some 12 million workers will see aid
benefits, including certain jobless benefits, end on 31 December.
Families with
children have been the most affected, for a variety of reasons. As schools
closed, many parents had to hire babysitters or decide whether one parent would
stop working to stay home and care for the children - choices often resulting
in less income, says Montgomery, from Loudoun Hunger Relief. Children
staying home also means higher utility bills and extra meals to prepare. Millions
of children get free or reduced-price meals at school, says Prof Schanzenbach,
"and losing access to that really hurts" for families already on the
brink. Throughout the pandemic, food banks and pantries have provided
millions of Americans with much needed food. "They give us a
lot," says Candelario. "Chicken, beef, vegetables, beans, eggs,
cheese, bread, cereal, coffee, cream… I always hope to get chicken so that I
can make arroz con pollo, my kids' favourite." Loudoun Hunger
Relief gives the family enough to make three healthy meals a day for as many as
14 days, she says. She goes grocery shopping only when the food pantry
cannot provide other miscellaneous items, like paper towels, shampoo and dish
soap. The food pantry packs everything in regular grocery bags to
protect families' privacy and to remove as many barriers as possible to the
service. "We are cognisant that it's not easy to show up here and
to ask for help," says Montgomery. Prior to the pandemic, families
could drop by the food pantry at any time and choose between a variety of
products, alongside the basics. Due to Covid-19, it now strictly operates on a
curbside pickup model and requires advance appointments, made online or by
phone. The online appointment system was created because the influx of
calls "was so high that we just couldn't get to the phone fast enough to
take them all", says Montgomery. The only requirement to receive
food is to be a resident of the county and, so far, the pantry has managed to
never turn a client away - but this might not be sustainable for much longer.
They are "very concerned" about what the new demand is going to
be and whether they can continue to meet it, says its executive director. With
benefits about to expire and Christmas holidays around the corner, "which
are always financially stressful", says Ash, it is very likely that more
people will need help. This makes it crucial for Congress to quickly
pass another Covid-19 aid package, says Prof Schanzenbach, as food banks cannot
keep operating at this rate, which is "impressive but certainly not
sustainable". "There's real urgency to get more relief at the
hands of families," she says. Candelario is about to start a
part-time job at a gas station and hopes that this will help her family's
finances get back on track. But in the meantime, the family has no
choice but to keep going to the food pantry, she says. "We have to
go in order to feed the kids. We do it for them."
^ This is a
really sad state of reality. Before Covid-19 I often donated food and money to both
my local food bank as well as dog food, treats, toys and money to my local
Humane Society (who has a Pet Food Pantry.) Since Covid-19, I have tried to do
as much more as I can. I even saw a Facebook Post from my Town’s Police
Department saying that they are accepting Gift Cards to the local Market and
other places to give to local families that need some help. I donated 4 Gift
Cards (2 at the beginning of December) and 2 yesterday. I know what I am doing
is not that much, but hope it will at least help a few people (and pets.) ^
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