What to do with next years over abundance from my garden.

Ladyhawke1

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I was lucky enough to have too much this year. I confess that I am not skilled enough in the ways of food preservation to do my garden justice. However, I am learning and doing more every day. Even with trying to share my bounty with friends and my chickens, a lot of my surplus went to waste.
However, now I feel I have a purpose. Next year, if I am still here, I will endeavor to donate my surplus to food pantries, local churches and other non-profit organizations that will help me feed people who are hungry. I will make sure they will receive my donations and can eat with no strings attached, and no means testing to prove how hungry they are or how worthy they are to eat the food that I have grown. That is my wish.

AND NOW THE STORY:

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/12/09-2

Published on Friday, December 9, 2011 by The Guardian/UK

Land of the Free, Home of the Hungry

by Gary Younge

Nowhere is the chasm between America's political class and its working poor more vast than in the demand to cut food stamps

On Monday afternoon this week, Rachelle Grimmer went into a Department of Health and Human Services in Texas with her two children, Timothy, aged 10, and Ramie, aged 12, and asked for a new case worker who could assist her application for food stamps. She had first applied in July but had been told she hadn't provided enough information and, by most accounts, had been struggling to get by and get help since she moved from Ohio.
US food stamps: Republican lawmakers want to cut the Department of Agriculture's budget for food stamps by 20%
She was taken to a small room, where she pulled a gun, sparking a seven-hour standoff with police. Shortly before midnight, three shots were heard. Rachelle had shot both herself and her kids. Police rushed in to find the mother dead and Ramie and Timothy in critical condition. Earlier that morning, Ramie had posted a Facebook message, saying: "may die 2day". She actually hung on until Wednesday. Timothy's condition remains critical.

The tragic unravelling of this particular episode is hardly typical. But the desperation that underpins it is. For, in this period between Thanksgiving and Christmas (when many Americans are worrying about what overindulging will do to their waistline), a significant number is wracked with an entirely different concern: not having enough to eat.

This is no marginal group, no handful of unfortunates and ne'er-do-wells in a time of crisis. Indeed, in one of the wealthiest countries in the world, food insecurity is a common, growing and enduring problem. According to Gallup polling, one in five Americans reported not having enough money to buy food in the past 12 months the highest level since the month Barack Obama was elected. Around the country, food banks are feeling the pinch of market forces: as poverty climbs, demand is rising and supply is falling as people who would have donated have less left to spare.

An analysis by the New York Times revealed a 17% increase in the number of school students receiving free and reduced lunches across the country between 2006/07 and now. In Rockdale County, east of Atlanta, 63% of students now have subsidised food up from 46% four years ago.

Between 2008 and 2011, the number of those living on food stamps, assistance to those who lack sufficient money to feed themselves and their families, soared by 50%, putting one American in seven in the programme. Catholic Charities recently revealed that requests for the working poor were up 80% over the second quarter, and up 59% for the middle class.

Similarly, Operation Homefront, a national organisation that feeds the families of military personnel, has seen demand for help double over the last two years. The Washington Post reported that in Fort Hood, Texas, military families stayed up after midnight to register for a free turkey online for Thanksgiving. The 450 birds were gone within an hour. Even as soldiers fight for empire abroad, their families struggle for food at home.

You would think this would be a national disgrace. The land of the free and the home of the hungry. The sheer scale and intensity of the problem refutes any suggestions of the undeserving poor.

But want has become a term of political abuse, with Newt Gingrich launching his campaign earlier this year by branding Obama "the food stamp president" and continues to berate him as such. Indeed, behind the partisan posturing over deficit reduction, it is rarely noted that rather than impose taxes on millionaires, Republicans are eager to balance the budget on the stomachs of the hungry.

As editor of the Left Business Observer, Doug Henwood, points out in a recent blog posting, these benefits are not particularly generous. "The average [food stamp] recipient gets $134 a month in assistance, which works out to $4.40 a day. That's 10% less than the US Department of Agriculture's "thrifty" meal budget, and about half its "moderate" budget. For your average well-fed American, living on a daily ration of less than $5 for food prepared at home would be hard to imagine. But without SNAP benefits, 46 million people would be in a state of anguish rather than just scraping by."

Yet, this is one area the Republicans are keen to target for cuts. They want to reduce spending on food stamps by around 20%, and in June, voted to slash a different health and nutrition scheme (WIC) for poor pregnant women and children by 10%, which would have denied assistance to around a quarter of a million people.

This will be the primary terrain on which the forthcoming elections will be fought: the needs and aspirations of the working poor. Not so much the destitute America is always forgetting about them but the working poor and those who fear descending among them. But for the Democrats to capitalise on these anxieties, they will have to shift the country's sense of what it takes to be poor and convince them that government has a role in alleviating that condition before desperation kicks in.

You'd think that would be straightforward. But illusions of meritocracy, equal opportunity, class fluidity and social mobility die hard. This a country where, according to a Pew survey in 2008, 91% believe they are either middle-class, upper middle-class or lower middle-class, and a Gallup poll in 2005 showed that while only 2% of Americans described themselves as "rich", 31% thought it very likely or somewhat likely they would "ever be rich". Sooner or later, though, reality tends to intrude.

As thousands of people gathered at New Orleans convention centre following Hurricane Katrina, Michael Brown, the hapless head of the disaster relief agency, Fema, was asked why he was not tending to them with shelter and water.

"We're seeing people that we didn't know exist," he said. This has been the official policy of America's political class for some time. "This is a special interest group that not many people talk about because they don't have the wealth to lift a candidate to be president of the United States," explained D Jermaine Husser, the former executive director of South Carolina's Low Country Food Bank.

But there is only so long you can pretend that such a large group of people doesn't exist, and as the poverty rates grow, more and more people who are likely to vote become ensnared in it. Gallup's Basic Access Index, which tracks access to basic needs like food, shelter and healthcare or medicines, is at the lowest it's been since its inception in January 2008. A new measurement of poverty by the Census Bureau, which takes regional cost of living, medical payments and other expenses that do not intrude on the official poverty count, found a third of Americans are either in poverty or desperately close to it.

"These numbers are higher than we anticipated," Trudi Renwick, the bureau's head poverty statistician, told the New York Times recently. "There are more people struggling than the official numbers show."

Poverty may be relative but hunger is absolute. The third world is alive and struggling in the heart of the first. No one can deny it exists. And those who claim they can't see it, either refuse to see it for what it is or simply do not want to look.
 

Ridgerunner

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Our church provides "beans and rice" to needy people once a month. I've been able to give them surplus a few times, things that last a while like sweet potatoes. Perishables mostly go to my chickens or compost heap because of logistics. I know some people are taking advantage of the system, they occasionally catch them, but I'd rather that happen than deny someone that needs it because of the misbehavior of a few people.
 

Kassaundra

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Just be sure to ask if the food bank you are providing to can actually use the garden surplus, sometimes b/c of where they get funding there are many regulations that limit the food they can take to packaged. Otherwise your kind gift may just have to be thrown away.
 

Ladyhawke1

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I really feel bad that there is so much disinformation on the subject of poverty in this country. The myth is kept going to keep people divided, and for a long time it has worked. But when the 99% get together and they share their stories, a pattern starts to emerge and it cannot be denied.

I have been involved and educating myself on the subject of the systemic causes of poverty in this country since least 1995.

If someone tells me they are hungry, I do not care if they are taking advantage of me or not. The "myth" of people taking advantage of the system is just that a myth. If they are hungry, they should be fed. They should not have to pass a means test to see just how hungry they are or if they deserving enough to be given food.

Look around at this country. We have people that are working, with children living in cars because they have lost their homes because of the dealings of Wall Street.

Dont get me started. We are asked not to get political here, and I will try to honor that. However, it does not matter what side you take, we are all responsible for allowing a system of social neglect to flourish because we thought it did not affect us. Well that is all about to change.

We are all responsible for this because we did not demand from our government that our taxes go to taking care of us and not into the pockets of the moneyed interests. These are the very same wealthy that do not want to pay their fair share to help take care of this country. If they do not want to pay their fair share , then they need to leave. They need to leave and then let the rest of us who do care about this country take care of it and how it is run and that means taking care of all of us.
 

Ridgerunner

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My comment on those working the system was about people that were fraudently taking the stuff and reselling it. People that were not hungry were taking what was meant for people that are hungry and making a profit off it. You are always going to get some of those, but you can't let a few bad apples spoil it for those that need it. You just do the best you can and keep going.
 

StupidBird

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This is interesting. The next town over was home to the Angel Food Ministries - the ones under federal indictment for pocketing lots...so now there is a big, enormous hole in the charity food services around here. Everyone is shying away from donating because of this scandal. I'll be calling around and asking what's going on.
 

Stubbornhillfarm

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The situation with Angel Food Ministries is an unfortunate one to say the least. Our church up here in Maine was one that took orders and had monthly deliveries from Angel Food. There were many people who took advantage of this program and it really helped fill their freezers and pantrys. We even had some local organizations that would pay for "packages" and then they were given to those who needed a hand. Too bad that this program had to come to an end. About 50-100 families were affected in our area.
 

897tgigvib

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When I go into town for supplies I actually see colonies of homeless and hungry people. More all the time.

I also see a lot of vacant lots in town, and vacant hillsides just out of town.

2 n 2 together time...

What if every vacant lot was a garden tended by the homeless? What if they had at least a shed to live in?

I may be old, but I don't think I'm naive.
 

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