Welcome to Random Acts

Postings on this blog will inspire you to serve others in small ways. By sharing stories of kindness and compassion, we can all be part of the random acts of kindness--pay it forward--revolution.

Thursday, October 1, 2009

CALL TO ACTION: PORTRAITS OF HUNGER 2009

Dear Friends:

My friend Sandy and I went to Maitland last night to attend the PORTRAITS OF HUNGER 2009 event put on by the Second Harvest Food Bank of Orlando. Each year Second Harvest sponsors a photo contest to help raise awareness about the issue of hunger in our community. Congratulations to GK Sherman for having this year's winning photo. As most of you know, Second Harvest has food banks all over the world and serves as a collection and distribution center for food items that filter down to feeding programs and food pantries at the local level. I encourage you to check out their website at www.centralfloridafoodbank.com.

Check out their calendar of events and get involved in any of their ongoing community awareness efforts throughout the year. If you live in the Orlando area, you might want to check out the Canstruction project taking place at the Florida Mall starting October 18, 2009. Teams from around the community will build sculptures out of canned food items. The can-struction sculptures will be on display all week at the Florida Mall (October 18-25).

Today I'd like to write about the issue of hunger here in America. I did a little reseach and this is what I found on www.worldvision.org:

  1. 35.5 million people - including 12.6 million children - live in households that experience hunger or the risk of hunger. This represents more than one in ten households in the United States (10.9 percent).
  2. 4.0 percent of U.S. households experience hunger. Some people in these households frequently skip meals or eat too little, sometimes going without food for a whole day. 11.1 million people, including 430 thousand children, live in these homes.
  3. 6.9 percent of U.S. households are at risk of hunger. Members of these households have lower quality diets or must resort to seeking emergency food because they cannot always afford the food they need. 24.4 million people - including 12.2 million children - live in these homes.
  4. Preschool and school-aged children who experience severe hunger have higher levels of chronic illness, anxiety and depression, and behavior problems than children with no hunger, according to a recent study.
    (Sources: Bread for the World, Hunger Basics, 2008; World Bank World Development Report, 2008; UNICEF, 2008; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 2009)

These are some pretty staggering statistics. Anyone who has a food program or who works with agencies helping citizens cope with our current economic crisis will quickly tell you that the problem of hunger in America is getting worse by the day. Anyone currently unemployed--with or without a family to support also understands the issue first hand. It wasn't that long ago when $30 or $40 filled the entire shopping cart. Today its just a drop in the bucket -- a couple of plastic bags worth that will not get a typical family through the week.

I attend Zion Christian Church in Palm Bay, FL where our own food pantry is now serving over 200 families every Monday morning. According to Walt, who oversees the food program, this is a drastic increase from just a couple of months ago and every week the numbers are growing. Each Sunday afternoon, Pastor Terry feeds the homeless at His Place on the corner of US1 and Strawbridge Avenue in Melbourne and you can see by the large gathering in the parking lot that more people are coming out for that weekly meal. The food pantry at the Tabernacle Community Church on Aurora Road in Melbourne also is seeing a sharp increase and now distributes food on Thursday and Friday mornings rather than once a week.

These are examples of how items donated to Second Harvest Food Bank in Orlando trickle down to serve our own food programs in Brevard County. You can donate time or food items to the food bank in Orlando or to these and other feeding programs in your city direct. It doesn't take much to make a difference. Imagine if everyone reading this blog gave three cans and asked at least three others to do the same and so on. Remember the movie "Play it Forward'? I f you have not seen it, rent it today. If you have seen it, pass this on. Do the math. This is the essence of the entire Random Acts Movement.

As long as the economy is bleak, there will be a growing hunger problem in our own backyard. The question is, what will we do to resolve it?

The U.S. Census Bureau released its latest figures on poverty for September 2009. It is at an 11th year high of 13.2%, or 39.8 million people. The poverty rate for children is at 19%. According to the director of the Orlando's Second Harvest Food Bank, this equates to just over 100,000 kids in Central Florida. To get a better picture of the magnitude, you could fill up the Amway Arena five times over with children living in poverty, said Dave Krepcho, director and CEO of Orlando's Second Harvest Food Bank. In his online blog, Krepcho reports that local schools are also seeing large increases this year in the number of children that are attending and are homeless. The same is true on the Space Coast and all across America. This is not just a big city or a rural problem. This issue hits suburbia. It effects you and me.


According to Krepcho, the U.S. government’s definition of poverty is based on a 50 year old formula of three times the typical food bill and doesn’t take into account the rising costs of medical care, transportation, child care and housing expenses. The U.S. poverty rate for a family of four, equates into approximately $21,000 per year. Personally, I don't know any family that could make ends meet on that small salary.

According to the latest U.S. Census figures, the typical American household made less money last year than it made a decade ago. There are now more than 2.1 million people in the State of Florida receiving Food Stamp benefits as opposed to just over a little over 1 million two years ago. And that does not help the unemployed. The average individual collecting unemployment in Florida collects about $250 per week - just enough to tip them over the amount that would make them eligible for food stamps.

Dan Walker, heads up a para-church organization here in Brevard County called Love, INC. Volunteers are desperately needed to work phone lines in the clearinghouse to help meet the demand of the increased number of calls for help. Phone lines are open on Tuesday's and Thursdays for citizens in need of assistance. The great thing about Love, Inc is that it does not operate like other charitable groups that hand out funds. Instead the ministry offers long-term assistance and self-sufficiency plans to callers needing help coping with various stressors often related to our current economic climate. Churches in our community partner with Love, Inc. to provide sustainable solutions and multi-faceted assistance such as parenting and budgeting classes, work teams to do home repairs, mentors and spiritual help.

The top three requests for emergency help at Love, Inc and at 211 agencies throughout Central Florida are utilities assistance, rent, and food. As I see it, there are three ways you can get involved. Donate time or money, spread the word about these and other valuable resource in our region and, finally, encourage your church to partner with agencies such as Love, Inc. and the Second Harvest Food Bank.

I am currently writing a magazine article on ways churches and faith-based community groups are coping with the changing face and higher demands of hunger in America. I am looking to interview pastors, agency directors and community leaders who are thinking and working out of the box to find community-based solutions. I am especially interested in gleaning projects, community gardens, partnerships between churches and local businesses, and other projects that are unique and cutting edge. If you, or anyone you know, has pilot or operational programs like this anywhere in the United States. please have them contact me via this blog ASAP.

You can find me at several social networks these days, try creativeconcepts123@blogspot.com, at cindicourbat@changeagents.org on facebook with cindicourbat@facebook.org and now, even on twitter, under the name Ezekiel's pen. The article needs to profile far beyond Central Florida and I need to gather the data by mid-October. Please pass this call for action on to everyone you know.

More importantly, please find ways to help stop hunger in your own community.

Blessings,

Cindi (aka. Poetic Justice)

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