Hungry is at an all-time high according to the New York Times.
The number of Americans who lived in households that lacked consistent access to adequate food soared to 49 million last year, the highest since the Department of Agriculture began tracking "food insecurity" fourteen years ago, the newspaper recently reported.
According to the Times, the increase of 13 million Americans was much larger than even the most pessimistic observers of hunger trends had expected and cast a light on the daily hardships caused by the recession. About a third of the struggling households are experiencing "very low food security," which means that a lack of money has forced members to skip meals, cut portions, or otherwise forgo food at some point during the year. The other two-thirds typically had enough to eat as long as they ate cheaper, less varied foods, relied on government aid such as food stamps, or visited food pantries and soup kitchens.
Drawing officials' attention was the 506,000 households in which children faced "very low food security," up from 323,000 year-over-year.
About 37 percent of households with children headed by single mothers reported some form of food insecurity compared with 14 percent of married households with children. Serious problems were most prevalent in the South, followed equally by the West and Midwest.
Some conservatives have attacked the survey's methodology, saying that it is hard to define what it measures; indeed, the phrase "food insecurity" stems from years of political and academic wrangling over how to measure adequate access to food. James Weill, director of the Food Research and Action Center, which pioneered the report, called the study a careful look at an underappreciated condition. "Many people are outright hungry, skipping meals," Weill told the Times. "Others say they have enough to eat but only because they're going to food pantries or using food stamps. We describe it as 'households struggling with hunger.'"
The problem is not confined to large cities.
Michelle Baldwin executive director of Volunteers in Service to Others (VISTO) said sometimes the shelves are bare at the food pantry organization which also provides some other forms of assistance to needy people.
The organization often relies on donations from residents and food drives sponsored area organizations.
In addition to helping provide food for qualifying clients and their families, VISTO staff members and volunteers are also devoted to feeding hungry children.
One of VISTO’s most successful endeavors is its Backpack Buddy program, but sometimes even the popular backpack program could use a hand.
“We always need food for the backpack program,” she said.
“Vienna sausages, Beanie Weenies, spaghetti lunch cups, instant oatmeal, three ounce foil packages of tuna or Spam lunch meat, Kraft brand Easy Mac (a small cup of microwave macaroni and cheese) and individual fruit cups or raisin packs,” she said.
For information on VISTO and its programs call 668-6403.
VISTO is open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to noon and is located at 1401 Southland Dr. in Gainesville.
Reporter Delania Trigg contributed to this report.
Local News
Local food pantry faces shortfalls
- Local News
-
-
Morton Museum hosts Art on Tap Saturday
The Morton Museum of Cooke County is hosting “Art on Tap,” a beer- and-food pairing event featuring the art of Cooke County and portraits from the past from 6:30 to 9 p.m. Saturday inside the Santa Fe Depot in downtown Gainesville.
-
Property, mineral values a mixed bag
A reported boost in statewide property values, which had suffered a slight drop in 2010, suggests ongoing recession recovery
-
Old School Comes Down
Sections of the deserted Gainesville Junior High School building came down Wednesday, with developers planning to demolish the old school and develop a new Cooke County Boys & Girls Club facility for youth in the region.
-
City Council moves rezoning request ahead
The Gainesville City Council voted to schedule a third reading for a rezoning request made by a property owner in the 3000 block of Harris Street.
-
Workers move ahead on interchange upgrade
Work continues on Interstate 35 frontage roads near West California Street, and officials said a closing of the nearby Star Street Bridge was expected to conclude late Tuesday.
-
Energetic fox trio settle in at zoo
A group of juvenile red foxes are in their new habitat and have apparently taken to their surroundings at the Frank Buck Zoo in Leonard Park.
-
Land owner fights Oncor to save centuries-old tree
A beloved Bois D’ Arc tree, estimated to be around 150 years old, has become the object of dispute between one Cooke County land owner and Oncor Corp., a regional electrical delivery company.
-
As deadline approaches, election day unclear
As the Texas primary election approaches, a muddle continues locally and statewide as to exactly when election day arrives.
-
Gainesville native fights for justice
IDABEL, Okla. — An Idabel, Okla. police officer — reeling from the death of his friend and fellow officer — is trying to beef up his state’s negligent homicide laws.
-
Gainesville woman hit by car
THACKERVILLE, OKLA. — A road collision early Sunday morning near Thackerville injured one female pedestrian, a Gainesville resident whose identification has not been released by officials.
- More Local News Headlines
-






