Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Great Needs Challenge to Help Raise Funds for Veteran Education Benefits
Columbus Foundation selects Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks as One of Seven Recipients to Receive Great Needs Challenge Funding
As can be felt throughout the state of Ohio, the lingering effects of the economic recession can't be ignored. In central Ohio, thousands of individuals and families continue the uphill battle to make ends meet. Whether unemployed, underemployed, or living with greatly reduced retirement income, our neighbors find they are unable to afford the necessities of life including food, prescriptions, and a roof over their heads.
It is with excitement that we announce that OASHF is one of seven eligible nonprofit organizations included in The Columbus Foundation's Great Needs Challenge. This means that you can make a gift to OASHF for this Critical Need Alert, and The Columbus Foundation will match your gift 50 cents for every dollar you give, while the matching funds last. Gifts can be designated to OASHF or to the Great Needs Challenge as a whole, in which case you gift would be allocated across all seven eligible nonprofits.
Funds raised through dollars given on behalf of OASHF will be utilized to begin the addition of educational benefits for Veterans onto The Ohio Benefit Bank.
"This is truly a great opportunity, not just for the Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks, but more importantly for the men and women of the Armed Services who defend our freedom each and every day," said Lisa Hamler-Fugitt.
Beginning at 2:00 p.m. on Wednesday, December 1, 2010, you are invited to make gifts online through PowerPhilanthropy.
Labels:
Ohio,
philanthropy,
policy and advocacy,
veterans
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Hungry Kids Cannot Wait
The Facts:
Ohio is third in the nation, behind Louisiana and North Carolina, for children under the age of five at risk for food insecurity. 54% percent of children in Ohio receive free or reduced price school meals. In the first and largest survey of its kind the Gallup Healthways Well-being Index reported that 27.2% of Ohio households with children reported they were at risk of food insecurity. Ohio had 3 cities in the top 25 of Metropolitan Statistical areas with the worst rates of food hardship in 2008-2009.
The Solution:
Child nutrition programs offer the healthiest and most nourishing meals that many children receive each week. For many poor children, these meals may be their only fully-balanced meals. While access to school meals is critically important teachers report that many children arrive at school on Monday morning with headaches, stomachaches, listless or agitated and because they didn’t have enough food over the weekend. Learning and the need for a stable source of nutritious food does not stop with the school day.
Food banks in Ohio have been operating “back pack” programs for several years but are limited in their ability to expand these critical programs to communities in need and schools on waiting lists. The Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks, in partnership with the Ohio Department of Education and OASHF regional foodbanks, submitted a waiver request to the United States Department of Agriculture requesting a waiver of the federal regulations that disallow reimbursements for food taken “off-site,” or home, to eat and to be able to operate a “weekend only” child nutrition program.
Please read more about the Back Pack waiver request we submitted and sign on to support children who are at risk for hunger in your community.
Labels:
policy and advocacy
Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Ohio Sees Steep Rise in Poverty and Income Loss
Decreases in Employment, Increases in Assistance Plague State’s Economy
It comes as no surprise for those who advocate for Ohio’s poor and working classes that Ohio was hit hard by the Great Recession in 2009. Data released today from the United States Census Bureau in the American Community Survey shows that more than 1.7 million Ohioans, representing 15.2 percent of the states population were living at or below the federal poverty level in 2009, an increase of over 217,000 Ohioans or 1.94 percent when compared to the same data in 2008.
The American Community Survey paints a bleak picture of Ohio for 2009 in many respects. The data shows there was a drastic increase in the number of Ohioans who were unemployed from 2008 to 2009, climbing an additional 4.1 percent or over 239,500 Ohioans when comparing the state’s civilian labor force. As the labor force decreased substantially, the average income for Ohio families decreased as well, showing that the recession is a multi-edged sword. In 2008 median household income was $47,428 annually, but in 2009 that annual income decreased to $45,395.
With the increase in the number of Ohioans who were unemployed along with the annual income of Ohioans decreasing, it comes as no surprise that the number of Ohioans who were receiving government assistance increased substantially. Over 7,800 additional Ohioans were in receipt of government cash assistance (Ohio Works First) in 2009, while the number of Ohioans in receipt of Food Assistance (formerly known as Food Stamps) climbed to over 1.4 million Ohioans in 2009, an increase of over 27.8 percent from the number in receipt of Food Assistance in 2008.
Through no fault of their own, Ohioans are being forced to make tough decisions each and every day. Data released by the Mathematica Policy Research Institute in their Hunger in Ohio 2010 study aligns with the stark picture of Ohio painted by the American Community Survey. The Hunger in Ohio 2010 study showed that more Ohioans than ever are being forced into the lines of the emergency food network due to lack of employment, wage stagnation and choices that no individual should be forced to make. In 2009 over 1.4 million Ohioans turned to the emergency food network for assistance with their nutritional needs, while at the same time, nearly 1 in 4 children in Ohio under the age of 5 were considered to live in a home with low food insecurity. This data is matched by the findings of the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, which shows that 21.9 percent of Ohio children are living in households that are at or below the federal poverty level.
Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director at the Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks, is alarmed, but not surprised by the data in the American Community Survey. “The data released today may catch some off guard, but for many, it comes as no surprise. We each know someone who has been affected by this recession and we must now stand up together for the betterment of Ohio and its citizens, especially those who are most vulnerable. It is both wrong and unaffordable to leave such a large number of Ohio families poor and threatened by hunger and sickness. Today’s poverty report should be a wake-up call for urgent investments in helping parents get back to work and to meet the basic needs of Ohioans.”
It comes as no surprise for those who advocate for Ohio’s poor and working classes that Ohio was hit hard by the Great Recession in 2009. Data released today from the United States Census Bureau in the American Community Survey shows that more than 1.7 million Ohioans, representing 15.2 percent of the states population were living at or below the federal poverty level in 2009, an increase of over 217,000 Ohioans or 1.94 percent when compared to the same data in 2008.
The American Community Survey paints a bleak picture of Ohio for 2009 in many respects. The data shows there was a drastic increase in the number of Ohioans who were unemployed from 2008 to 2009, climbing an additional 4.1 percent or over 239,500 Ohioans when comparing the state’s civilian labor force. As the labor force decreased substantially, the average income for Ohio families decreased as well, showing that the recession is a multi-edged sword. In 2008 median household income was $47,428 annually, but in 2009 that annual income decreased to $45,395.
With the increase in the number of Ohioans who were unemployed along with the annual income of Ohioans decreasing, it comes as no surprise that the number of Ohioans who were receiving government assistance increased substantially. Over 7,800 additional Ohioans were in receipt of government cash assistance (Ohio Works First) in 2009, while the number of Ohioans in receipt of Food Assistance (formerly known as Food Stamps) climbed to over 1.4 million Ohioans in 2009, an increase of over 27.8 percent from the number in receipt of Food Assistance in 2008.
Through no fault of their own, Ohioans are being forced to make tough decisions each and every day. Data released by the Mathematica Policy Research Institute in their Hunger in Ohio 2010 study aligns with the stark picture of Ohio painted by the American Community Survey. The Hunger in Ohio 2010 study showed that more Ohioans than ever are being forced into the lines of the emergency food network due to lack of employment, wage stagnation and choices that no individual should be forced to make. In 2009 over 1.4 million Ohioans turned to the emergency food network for assistance with their nutritional needs, while at the same time, nearly 1 in 4 children in Ohio under the age of 5 were considered to live in a home with low food insecurity. This data is matched by the findings of the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey, which shows that 21.9 percent of Ohio children are living in households that are at or below the federal poverty level.
Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director at the Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks, is alarmed, but not surprised by the data in the American Community Survey. “The data released today may catch some off guard, but for many, it comes as no surprise. We each know someone who has been affected by this recession and we must now stand up together for the betterment of Ohio and its citizens, especially those who are most vulnerable. It is both wrong and unaffordable to leave such a large number of Ohio families poor and threatened by hunger and sickness. Today’s poverty report should be a wake-up call for urgent investments in helping parents get back to work and to meet the basic needs of Ohioans.”
Labels:
American Community Survey,
census,
Ohio,
policy and advocacy,
poverty,
recession
Monday, September 20, 2010
From Nora Nees, OASHF Director of Senior and Child Nutrition
Please take 5 minutes today and call your Congressperson on signing on to our back pack waiver request and funding a child nutrition bill that increases access and does not use SNAP/food stamps as an offset! Send this message on!
Back Pack Waiver
Today is the last day for our Congressional delegation to sign on to the waiver allowing federal reimbursements for meals taken off site. The letter is being circulated by Sarah McHugh in Congressman Driehaus’s office. Please call at the numbers listed below and urge your representative to sign on to the letter. They can contact Sarah McHugh at 5-2216.
Even if they have committed to signing they need to hear from you on the deadline and the urgency.
Dennis Kucinich—Yonatan Zamir (202) 225-5871 yonatan.zamir@mail.house.gov
Steven LaTourette—Sarah Cannon (202) 225-5731 sarah.cannon@mail.house.gov
John Boehner—Katherine Haley (202) 225-4000 katherine.haley@mail.house.gov
**Jean Schmidt—Matt Perin (202) 225-3164 matt.perin@mail.house.gov
Michael Turner—Joseph Heaton (202)225-6465 joseph.heaton@mail.house.gov
Jim Jordan—Wesley Goodman (202) 225-2676 wesley.goodman@mail.house.gov
Robert Latta—Bethany Peck (202) 225-6405 bethany.peck@mail.house.gov
Steve Austria—Courtney Temple (202) 225-4324 courtney.temple@mail.house.gov
Zack Space—Dan Farmer (202) 225-6265 dan.farmer@mail.house.gov
Pat Tiberi—Kelli Briggs (202)225-5355 kelli.briggs@mail.house.gov
Ask Senator Brown and Senator Voinovich to send a letter as well:
Sherrod Brown—Jonathan McCracken (202) 224-2315 jonathan_mccracken@brown.senate.gov
George Voinovich—Dana Smullen or Heather Homan (202) 224-3353 dana_smullen@voinovich.senate.gov or heather_homan@voinovich.senate.gov
Send a big thank you to signers!
Charlie Wilson—Heidi Ross (202) 225-5705 heidi.ross@mail.house.gov
Betty Sutton—Allison Abney (202) 225-3401 allison.abney@mail.house.gov
Tim Ryan—Michael Julian (202) 225-5261 michael.julian@mail.house.gov
John Boccieri—Justin Palmer (202) 225-3876 justin.palmer@mail.house.gov
Marcy Kaptur—Matt Kaplan (202) 225-4146 matthew.kaplan@mail.house.gov
Marcia Fudge—LaDavia Drane (out of the office) please email: ladavia.drane@mail.house.gov (202) 225-7032
Mary Jo Kilroy—Reginald Barker (202) 225-2015 reginald.barker@mail.house.gov
CNR Call In Days
We have a matter of days before the House goes home for the election. House members are being urged to pass the Senate version of child nutrition reauthorization funded with SNAP cuts before they leave!
Message: Far too many children - especially low-income children -- lack the nutrition they need to be healthy and successful. Urge the House to fund and pass a strong child nutrition bill now that increases children's opportunities for healthy meals both in and out of school -- and do so without cutting SNAP/Food Stamps.
Call In Days: From now through September 24th, make your CNR calls to Members of Congress toll-free via 1-877-425-4810 (courtesy of Voices for America's Children). In conjunction with the CNR Call-In Days, FRAC is hosting a "Tweetdown to CNR" to convey messages to Congress and the White House.
FRAC Resources: Watch for more detailed messages for the CNR Call-In Days and legislative updates to be posted to FRAC's website.
Sign and Circulate Letter Opposing Cuts to SNAP: More than 1,600 national, state, and community-based organizations have signed the letter opposing cuts to SNAP benefits. Help grow the list of signers. Click here for details.
Labels:
policy and advocacy
Thursday, September 16, 2010
OASHF Press Release 9/16/2010
The number of employed Americans dropped by over 8 million when comparing the nation’s workforce in early 2008 to the same workforce in late 2009. More alarming and showing the correlation between the national recession, long-term unemployment and poverty is the fact that 61 percent of those jobs were lost before the Recovery Act was enacted in February 2009.
For the state of Ohio, the numbers are dismal, but this is not new news for our state’s emergency food network. “Though alarming, these numbers are not one bit surprising,” said Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks. “In 2009, more than 1.430 million different Ohioans turned to the state’s emergency food network to supplement their everyday nutritional needs. The statewide hunger study, Hunger in Ohio 2010 gave us a real sense of what the forecast looked like for Ohio and it was not good. The Census Bureau’s data backs the same projection that Hunger in Ohio gave us, which is that more and more people need our help, which is why it is crucial for our network to be stronger today than ever.”
See the full press release
For the state of Ohio, the numbers are dismal, but this is not new news for our state’s emergency food network. “Though alarming, these numbers are not one bit surprising,” said Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Second Harvest Foodbanks. “In 2009, more than 1.430 million different Ohioans turned to the state’s emergency food network to supplement their everyday nutritional needs. The statewide hunger study, Hunger in Ohio 2010 gave us a real sense of what the forecast looked like for Ohio and it was not good. The Census Bureau’s data backs the same projection that Hunger in Ohio gave us, which is that more and more people need our help, which is why it is crucial for our network to be stronger today than ever.”
See the full press release
Labels:
policy and advocacy
Just Released: New Poverty Statistics from the Census Bureau
From the Associated Press: "Given all the unemployment we saw, it's the government safety net that's keeping people above the poverty line," said Douglas Besharov, a University of Maryland public policy professor and former scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
That may be true, but unfortunately today's release of new U.S. Census Bureau poverty statistics for 2009 also show the continuation of another trend: more Americans are falling below the poverty line. OASHF and its member foodbanks and partners are on the front lines of the fight against poverty every day, and these statistics speak to what we are witnessing in communities across Ohio.
Among the working-age population, ages 18 to 65, poverty rose from 11.7 percent to 12.9 percent.
Child poverty rose from 19 percent to 20.7 percent.
Read more about the most recent statistics and help someone you know to find the help that they need.
Labels:
policy and advocacy
Wednesday, September 8, 2010
Join the Paper Plate Campaign!
There is no better way for local legislators and the media to understand the hardships faced by millions of Ohioans than to hear from the Ohioans who are currently faced with making tough choices. To give a glimpse into the lives of what a staggering number of Ohioans are facing because of the Great Recession, we are asking that you join with us in the Paper Plate Campaign!
We ask that you distribute paper plates to your clients and ask them to write down their current situation or circumstance, including what choices they have been forced to make and what would happen if they did not have access to a foodbank or food pantry.
OASHF will provide each organization who would like to participate with the following:
1) Requested/specified number of paper plates
2) Writing utensils
3) Prepaid postage to send back the completed paper plates
Just fill out the Paper Plate Campaign registration form to join us!
Labels:
policy and advocacy
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
The New York Times Continues its Food Stamp Coverage
The Gray Lady strikes again with a gut wrenching story about families that subsist on nothing but food stamps for income. No unemployment compensation, no cash assistance, no job. Nothing. The coping mechanisms utilized by people in this predicament is heartbreaking.
And the amount of people dealing with this terrible hand is rising quickly. Check this out:
Yikes.
In our experience, we would estimate that half of all the clients we see don't have any income or have an income of under $250 a month. These people depend on food assistance to survive. Hopefully we can keep helping these people sign up.
And the amount of people dealing with this terrible hand is rising quickly. Check this out:
Yikes.
In our experience, we would estimate that half of all the clients we see don't have any income or have an income of under $250 a month. These people depend on food assistance to survive. Hopefully we can keep helping these people sign up.
Labels:
policy and advocacy
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