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Hungry
in America
By MARGOT PATTERSON
“It has long been an article of faith among the American people that no
one in a land so blessed with plenty should go hungry.”
These words, taken from the President’s Task Force on Food Assistance in
1984, continue to describe how most Americans think about hunger in their
country.
And yet a painful paradox of contemporary America is that in an affluent
society many of its most vulnerable members sometimes go hungry. One in
every four people in a soup kitchen line is a child, reports America’s
Second Harvest, which serves 23.3 million people annually and is the
nation’s largest organization of emergency food providers.
The U.S. Census Bureau estimates 12 million children under the age of 18,
about 16 percent, live in poverty, defined by the government as an income
below $17,650 for a family of four. The Catholic Campaign for Human
Development, the anti-poverty program of the U.S. Catholic bishops, is
conducting a two-year campaign to educate Americans about poverty at home.
Barbara Stephenson, director of communications for the Catholic Campaign for
Human Development, said focus groups indicate that many Americans
incorrectly believe the highest incidence of poverty occurs among the
elderly.
In fact, children make up the largest poor population in the United
States, and overall about 31 million Americans live in poverty. “With more
than 31 million residents, Poverty, USA, is the second-largest state in
America,” reports the Catholic Campaign for Human Development.
Among the rich nations of the world, only Mexico has a higher child
poverty rate than the United States. Comparing international child poverty,
UNICEF found a far higher rate of child poverty in the United States than in
Japan, Germany, France, Belgium, or any of the Scandinavian countries. The
United States also has a greater percentage of its children living in
poverty than do Turkey, Greece, Poland and the Czech Republic.
Deborah Weinstein of the Children’s Defense Fund said, “Other countries
definitely do a better job of protecting their children than the United
States does. We don’t do as much as other countries do in terms of
children’s allowances or family allowances through the tax system or social
services system, and we don’t offer the kind of income supplements or wage
supplements that are offered in other countries. We offer something, but we
don’t offer as much.” Weinstein is director of the family income division of
the fund, which is a private, nonprofit organization that lobbies on behalf
of children.
That America’s children are among its poorest citizens is worrisome.
Hunger is a concomitant of poverty, and children who do not receive an
adequate diet risk permanent damage. Undernourished children may suffer
cognitive and psychological impairment that can be irreversible. They are
more likely to suffer illnesses that force them to be absent from school. At
school, they are more likely to have trouble concentrating on their studies
and bonding with teachers and classmates. They perform more poorly on
standardized tests and experience higher dropout rates later in school,
which in turn affect job and income mobility.
America’s Second Harvest recently published a comprehensive study of
hunger in the United States based on interviews with 32,000 clients and
surveys of 24,000 charitable hunger-relief agencies in its network.
Hunger in America 2001 reports that 18.4 percent of clients said their
child or children had skipped meals within the last 12 months because there
wasn’t enough money for food. Slightly more than 26 percent of all client
households stated that their child/children were sometimes or often not
eating enough during the previous 12 months because they couldn’t afford
more food.
Though it’s often believed that hunger is a problem of the homeless, the
chronically unemployed and the inner cities, the study found that 45 percent
of clients at the pantries, kitchens and shelters America’s Second Harvest
serves are white and 47 percent of all emergency food recipients live in
rural or suburban areas. Women represent nearly two-thirds of adults seeking
food assistance. Thirty-nine percent of households seeking food assistance
include at least one employed adult and 39 percent of the members of
households served by America’s Second Harvest are children under the age of
18. The organization feeds 9 million children annually.
The economic boom times of the ’90s helped reduce the number of American
children living below the poverty line to the lowest level in 20 years, but
experts fear the recession of the last year is reversing that trend.
In December 2001, the U.S. Conference of Mayors reported a sharp increase
in hunger. In 25 of 27 major cities surveyed, requests for emergency food
assistance rose an average of 23 percent. Resources available to respond to
that request increased just 12 percent. Eighty-five percent of the cities
surveyed said emergency food assistance facilities have had to decrease the
amount of food they provide or the number of times a family or individual
can receive food.
“We’re seeing more and more people and we’re having to turn people away,”
said Maurice Weaver, spokesman for America’s Second Harvest. Because of the
shortfall in food, America’s Second Harvest has declared a national call to
action for Feb. 27. A news conference and testimonial on Capitol Hill in
Washington will bring together leaders in the food industry, government and
labor unions to discuss the hunger crisis in America. The goal of America’s
Second Harvest campaign is to raise 365 million pounds of food to feed
hungry Americans.
“The nature of hunger has changed over the last 50 years,” explained Doug
O’Brien, the director of public policy and research of America’s Second
Harvest. “What we’re seeing in soup kitchens is that hunger is not a problem
of the homeless. You’re now as nearly likely to see a single mother with
kids as a homeless male in soup kitchens.”
O’Brien and others note that it is the working poor who are increasingly
served by emergency food aid. Though the last decade saw a tremendous
expansion of economic growth, much of that growth occurred in high-tech
fields that require a higher-educated, more skilled workforce. People at the
bottom end of the wage scale saw very little growth in real wages. That was
just beginning to change when the economic downturn hit, said Beatrice
Rogers, the dean of academic affairs at the Gerald J. and Dorothy R.
Friedman School of Nutrition, Science and Policy at Tufts University and
acting director of Tufts’ Center on Hunger, Poverty and Nutrition Policy.
According to the Children’s Defense Fund, the proportion of poor children
who live in families with a working adult rose to 37 percent in 2000, up
from 33 percent in 1999, and more than double the proportion in 1991 of 18
percent. From 1995 to 2000, the number of unemployed parents dropped almost
by 700,000, Weinstein said, a reduction that was largely erased in just one
year, from 2000 to 2001.
“The lesson of the prosperity we’ve just been through is that the huge
majority of parents work, but their earnings alone are not enough to lift
themselves out of poverty,” Weinstein said.
Hunger experts report that growing numbers of Americans are turning to
private charity for food assistance rather than the Food Stamp Program,
which is considered the first line of defense in America’s nutrition safety
net. America’s Second Harvest reports that the organization has seen a 9
percent increase in demand since 1997, while participation in the Food Stamp
program is down sharply, even among those who are eligible for the program.
During the Fiscal Year 2000, the Food Stamp program served an average of
17.2 million people each month, over half of whom were children under the
age of 18. In 1994, the number of people enrolled in the program peaked at
28 million.
“Food Stamps are the safety net program,” said Rogers. “The reason
is that Food Stamps constitute the only program in the food safety net for
which people are eligible simply because they are poor. Food stamps give you
purchasing power for food based not on your sex, not on your age, not on
family status, but simply on being poor. It’s the first line of defense.
Anyone is eligible for Food Stamps who needs them,” said Rogers.
A July 2001 report to Congress on the decline in Food Stamp participation
since 1994 notes that 44 percent of the decline occurred because fewer
people were eligible to participate in the Food Stamp Program due to either
rising income and assets that placed them above eligibility limits (35
percent) or the effect of welfare reform on Food Stamp eligibility rules (8
percent). But 56 percent of the decline occurred because fewer eligible
individuals participated in the program. Officials at the United States
Department of Agriculture, which administers the Food Stamp program, say
it’s unclear why fewer people are taking advantage of the program, but
speculate some of it may be public confusion arising from welfare reform,
with people cut from the welfare rolls then believing they are no longer
eligible for Food Stamps.
Writing in the journal Policy & Practice, Eric M. Bost, USDA
undersecretary for Food, Nutrition and Consumer Services, also noted that
the complexity of program rules may deter participation, especially for the
working families that comprise an increasing number of Food Stamp
recipients. An average applicant spends two trips and nearly five hours
filing an initial application and will spend more than two hours in each
recertification, said Bost, who called for a simplification of program
rules.
Observing that only 30 percent of the people seeking emergency food aid
from food banks are enrolled in the Food Stamps program, Doug O’Brien noted
that many working families simply cannot afford to take the time off from
work to apply for Food Stamps. “If you don’t have a job, you can spend five
hours in the welfare office,” said O’Brien, who described the United States
as driving a 1970s program to meet 21st-century needs. With rent and
utilities largely fixed, O’Brien said food is one of the few places where
people can economize on their expenses.
Efforts are afoot both in Congress and within the USDA to streamline Food
Stamp application procedures. The USDA is also about to initiate a campaign
to increase awareness of the summer food program for children, which it
believes is underutilized. While the National School Lunch Program and the
National School Breakfast Program reach millions of poor and low-income
children, far fewer children are enrolled in the summer food program, which
makes lunch available to poor and low-income children through sponsoring
community centers, Parks and Recreation departments, YMCAs, schools, and
churches during the summer.
These along with measures to increase access to Food Stamps are important
steps to reduce child hunger, said Weinstein of the Children’s Defense Fund.
“More broadly, helping families get out of poverty is critical,” Weinstein
said. “We ought to be changing our welfare program so that its goal is to
get families out of poverty, to enable them to move from welfare to work, to
earn as much as possible and when their wages are low to offer them support
so that parents can raise their children out of poverty.”
| Related Web sites |
America’s Second Harvest
www.secondharvest.org
Catholic Campaign for Human Development
www.nccbuscc.org/cchd
Center on Hunger, Poverty and Nutrition Policy
hunger.tufts.edu
Children’s Defense Fund
www.childrensdefense.org
U.S. Department of Agriculture
www.usda.gov |
Margot Patterson is NCR senior writer. Her e-mail address is
mpatterson@natcath.org
National Catholic Reporter, February 15, 2002 |