Note: After some responders indicated that they thought the economy was just "peachy keen," I felt the need to add the following here: "A recession is when your neighbor loses his job. A depression is when you lose your job." Of course, another attitude is: "Why should I worry? What can I do?" After all, "God will provide." End of Note.
With the
economic recession, there has been a sudden leap in the number of people on
emergency food assistance. In Ohio, some of the food lines look like something
from the Great Depression, reports Scott Pelley.
It’s not just
the unemployed. Plenty of people working full time are still not able to earn
enough to keep hunger out of the house. If you think you have a good idea of
who’s hungry in America today, you may be wrong.
Take for example, one
long food line forming outside Marietta, Ohio. The people in front came at dawn.
Sometimes the food runs out before the line does. So it’s best to get in early.
They’ve come with empty boxes and baskets and little red wagons and if
they wait up to five hours, they carry away groceries that will last a few days.
Lately, the food’s been coming once every few weeks. And each time the crowd’s
getting larger.
A few weeks before Thanksgiving, the line was the
longest it had been. 60 Minutes II counted 896 people on line.
Usually, Marslyn Clark and her husband both work. But Marslyn is taking
time off now for her newborn—a girl named Autumn. “My husband really doesn’t
make enough for all of our groceries,” she says. Her husband works full time.
Jean Haybron and Edna Swiers worked at the Goodyear plant for 33 years.
They were laid off when the plant closed at the end of 1999. Neither imagined
they’d ever be standing in a food line.
Karen Coe’s husband David served
in the Air Force and the Air National Guard for 30 years. But a stroke disabled
him while he was on a mission to help flood victims three years ago. For them,
it is the difference between eating and not eating.
“He can’t read, he
cannot find his engineering degrees. He was blinded. The VA takes care of him on
those issues,” she says. But she cannot afford to feed him without the food
line. Also in the line is Robert Lent, a veteran too, of World War II and the
Great Depression. He waited in food lines as a boy.
“We’re doing things
that we did before food stamps. Before we had various programs and quite frankly
it’s a little bit hard to watch sometimes,” says Bob Garbo, head of the local
affiliate of the non-profit group America’s Second Harvest. The food being
distributed in his line comes mostly from government programs and from private
donations.
On that day the line grew so long that they brought in an
extra truck—they hadn’t done that before. But since 1999, the number of people
getting emergency food aid in Ohio alone has grown from 2 million to 4.5
million. There are a lot of reasons: housing and medical costs are up.
Unemployment is up, and many jobs that are available are minimum wage.
Says Garbo: “Our jobs are not high paying jobs. In rural America most of
these jobs folks are getting when they come off of public assistance are $6 and
$7 and hour jobs -- with no benefits, by the way.”
The key issue is the
working poor. Forty percent of the families in these lines have one parent
working. Rick Payne is working full time in one of those big home improvement
stores. But he’s supporting a wife and four kids on $7.50 an hour. When we sat
down with Payne, his wife Alexis and 12-year-old, Brandon, they had $17 to their
name.
Payne says he needs gas, diapers, milk and bread. For other
expenses, he has little money.
The Paynes get food stamps - $300 a
month. That much lasts about three weeks. But at the end of the month they’re
living on potato soup.
“It’s funny I sit and watch these news programs
and they tell you to have six months of your income saved. And I just have to
laugh at that because you know I can’t put $5 away per paycheck. I can’t imagine
somebody having six months of their salary put away. That’s just completely
unobtainable for us,” Payne says.
Almost half the people fed by these
lines are kids. The Agriculture Department figures that one in six children in
America face hunger. That’s more than 12 million kids. Nationwide, children have
the highest poverty rate.
Crystal Theobold needs food for two sons. Her
boyfriend Toby Pederson recently lost his job as a heavy equipment operator. He
gets unemployment, $100 a week, and food stamps come to $200 a month. So they
stretch. They buy whole milk and cut it with an equal amount of water.
“It makes milk last longer. Because the baby right now, he needs milk.
He don't know the difference yet,” she says.
Most of the people in line
don’t look like they are starving. We noticed some were even overweight. But
hunger in America isn’t starvation, it’s malnutrition - children too hungry to
concentrate in school, and the pain of skipped meals. There may be some in line
who are taking unfair advantage of a free food program even if they have to wait
for hours. But it is also true that many in these lines are new to hunger:
losing jobs or getting hit with medical bills, for example, just months or weeks
ago.
At another line, in McArthur, Ohio the holidays were closing in and
so was the weather. The line is 40 percent longer than it was just three years
ago. Nationwide, the problem is not just in rural scenes like this. The U.S.
Conference on Mayors says the need for emergency food aid in major cities jumped
19 percent in 2002 year alone.
Billie Joe Smith and her children live
outside McArthur, Ohio. They’re new to hunger. Her husband was the sole
breadwinner but the marriage broke up a few months ago, and now the money’s
gone. The kids are on a free school lunch program and, often, 12-year-old Shane
brings part of that meal home.
Shane, Billy Jo, Joey, and Jenny are
living on $700 a month in welfare and food stamps. Sometimes Jenny doesn’t eat
at all between lunches.
Says Garbo: “I’ll tell you in all honesty I
sense a fear. It’s a fear. We talk about terror nowadays. The real terror is
fear. And if you really get to visit with families who are really up against it,
there’s a fear.”
For now, the Paynes are earning a little extra money
cleaning up their church. “That’s the difference between making it you know, if
we was to lose that portion of our income that would be $65 a week-- don’t sound
like a lot of money but it is,” says Rick Payne.
Billy Joe Smith is
banking on a good education to lift her children out of poverty. The kids are
good at math but, still, school is a struggle. Jenny says hunger makes her fall
asleep sometimes at school.
Crystal Theobold is starting school herself,
trying to become a nurse. She wants more kids, but she will not. “I had my tubes
tied. It was get your tubes tied or worry about another mouth to feed. So we did
it."
Looking at the food line, Bob Garbo says, "This is it, and you’ll
see this pretty well all over the country probably.”
“We’ve gone
backwards,” he continues. “This is what I heard from my mom and dad. This is
what it was during the Depression era. That people stood in line to get
government commodities. We haven’t come very far, have we?”


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"Brother, Can You Spare A Dime?" Notes: The unemployment is higher than 25% in some parts of AMERICA. Signs say that it's going to get worse. The following news this December 6, 2002 is also bad. The economy is not getting better. There are indications that the downhill slide of the economy is greater than President Bush wants to tell Americans. A telecast on the 7th showed men in business suits who have been marching for some days with placards asking: "Please give me a job." These men and others may have prompted President Bush to act. End of Notes. ALCOA announces layoff of 8,000 workers. How many workers can you add since then? Also, how many companies have gone out of business? Some of them after 20, 30, and more years? And how many more companies will be out of business by February, 2009? ![]() Depression Lessons from My Family by S.J. Linsley The above picture reminds of a comment made by a relative to my father. "The Linsleys will always have a job because we work for the government." After 19 1/2 years in the U.S. Air Force, my father worked for the Cities of St. Paul and Minneapolis governements. However, Dad did not trust our economic times because he was a son of the Great Depression. So, he took a correspondence course on how to build and maintain TV equipment. The results were a 19 inch TV that was perfect and Dad's confidence that he could go into TV repair if worse came to worse and he lost his job. Mom always worked at a hospital and had been a home nurse because she knew healthcare would always need workers. Eventually both of them retired and moved to Aberdeen, Washington to get away from the harsh Minnesota winters. One of the great lessons they both taught their children was by the examples of helping those less fortunate than we were. We learned to be happy with a pair of socks under the Christmas tree because the fact that we had a great family meal on Christmas day with many of our relatives was what made it Christmas for all of us. I have always been proud of them and miss them very much. |