By Rita Markley, Executive Director of Committee on Temporary Shelter and Marissa Parisi, Executive Director of Hunger Free Vermont
The timing of Hunger and Homelessness Awareness week (Nov 17th-23rd)
is especially poignant this year.
Just last month, the U.S. Dept of Education reported that the number of homeless students in public schools reached the highest number on record at 1.1 million children. A week later, the US Census bureau released data showing that real median household income was 8.3% lower than in 2007, the year before the recession.
Meanwhile, the cost of housing, gas, utilities continues to rise beyond the reach of flat and falling incomes. Not surprisingly, nearly one in four children now live in poverty. And 47 million Americans need SNAP (known as 3SquaresVT or Food Stamps).
Given the nature of politics and the media these days, we
hear very little about the appalling reality of hunger for millions of
Americans. There’s scant attention to
the impact of homelessness on school performance or health. Several news outlets have shown misleading
images that obscure completely the wrenching choices that struggling families
are forced to make every day: rent or groceries, snow tires or fuel bill,
birthday cake and present or back-to-school shoes.
Vermont is among the
ten states with the highest increase in homeless students attending K-12 public
schools (31%). The Committee on Temporary Shelter (COTS)
just completed its annual survey for Chittenden County which showed a 19%
increase since last year. That means 140
children getting ready for school this morning from emergency shelters,
overflow motels or doubled up and sleeping in places that are frequently
unsafe.
Many of these homeless families rely on 3SquaresVT and free
school meals to ensure children get proper nutrition. Meals provided by these nutrition programs
are a lifeline for many Vermonters who have struggled with job loss, erosion of
wages, and home foreclosures. One in six
Vermont households receives 3SquaresVT benefits, the majority of whom are families
with children. Hunger Free Vermont
frequently hears from school staff who see ravenous children on Monday morning who
did not eat over the weekend. 3SquaresVT
makes a difference in the lives of thousands of Vermonters every day, but in
many cases, the benefits are too low to allow them to purchase nutritious food
on a consistent basis. These families also suffered a recent reduction in
3SquaresVT bene
fits due to a cut in recovery act funds lessening a family of
four’s benefits by $36 or more.
When families are strained to the breaking point by ever
increasing rents, when they can’t afford basic necessities like daily meals it
impacts everyone in our community. Homeless
and hungry children are sick more often, have more behavioral challenges, and
struggle more in school. Vermonters have
a long and proud history of coming together to support one another in hard
times. With hunger at epidemic levels
and a significant rise in homeless children in our state it is our
responsibility as citizens to insist that our state and federal government take
care of our country’s most precious resource, our youth.
This week, many people who have never lived on a 3SquaresVT
budget before will experience firsthand what it is like to feed themselves on
$1.72 per meal. The purpose of the
3SquaresVT Challenge is not to emulate the reality of food insecurity for
Vermonters, but to instead draw attention to the experience of living on a
strict food allotment and how that may or may not change daily life both
physically and psychologically.
As politicians on
the national stage debate the federal budget, we hope they remember that the
face of homelessness and hunger in America is increasingly the face of a
child. So, when they talk about cutting the deficit by slashing food
benefits and basic needs programs for the poor, they’re talking about harming
children. This week, here in Vermont, let’s remember that and make sure to
stand up for those who are too young and too vulnerable to defend themselves.
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