Religion and Ethics Newsweekly: U.S. Hunger on the Rise

Posted by Kendall Harmon

KIM LAWTON, anchor: Joining me with more on all of this is Candy Hill, a senior vice president at Catholic Charities USA. Candy, it seems like this time of year, every year, we hear appeals from groups saying “Oh people are hungry, you need to give.” What makes this year different?

CANDY HILL, Catholic Charities: Well, we certainly are seeing such an increase, and new people that have never come to Catholic Charities for services before, some of them are even our donors, and some of them are our former board members, so we see a real crisis in the number of people coming, and who need assistance this year over the other years we’ve been in business.

LAWTON: And there’s been some talk of food insecurity, I mean we’re not talking about starving in the streets, but we’re talking about people who are just having a harder time feeding their families?

HILL: Yes, and I think when we talk about food insecurity we’re really talking about people not having food for three meals a day, so we find parents who are scrimping or not having a meal themselves in order to feed their children, and seniors who are making choices between whether they buy medicine or feed themselves, and a country as great as this country, we shouldn’t have people doing that.

Read or watch it all.

Filed under: * Culture-WatchDieting/Food/NutritionPoverty* Economics, PoliticsEconomyThe Credit Freeze Crisis of Fall 2008/The Recession of 2007--

2 Comments
Posted November 29, 2009 at 3:05 pm [Printer Friendly] [Print w/ comments]



1. libraryjim wrote:

In my dad’s neighborhood, Catholic Charities provides food for many of his Hispanic neighbors (most of whom are known to be illegal—his is a ‘sanctuary city’).  Every garbage day, he sees bags of canned food, unopened, and frozen chicken in the trash cans.  He doesn’t venture an opinion of WHY they just throw out the food, but expressed disgust that they DO just throw it out.

Frankly, I’d be interested in why, myself.

November 29, 6:28 pm | [comment link]
2. John Wilkins wrote:

Often people donate food that is past the expiration date.  They donate food to hispanics that they don’t eat.  And frozen “food” is barely food.  Once someone donated to my soup kitchen some vile weightloss frozen food.  I tried a package and it was truly awful. 

Cheap beans, peanut butter, broth.  Somethings make sense.

Always easier to blame the ungrateful poor, though.

November 30, 8:00 am | [comment link]
Registered members must log in to comment.




Next entry (above): The Economist--Curbs on the Fed’s independence are advancing through Congress

Previous entry (below): Australia's Catholic Bishops Conference welcomes Apostolic Constitution "Anglicanorum Coetibus"

Return to blog homepage

Return to Mobile view (headlines)