Madeleine List
Capital News Service
COLLEGE PARK, Md. — After the holidays, the number of volunteers and
donations at the Maryland Food Bank is expected to decline. The needs of
Maryland’s hungry won’t.
“Hunger’s a year-round issue,” said Joanna Warner, communications director for
the Maryland Food Bank, a non-profit hunger relief organization with centers
in Salisbury, Hagerstown and Baltimore.
The need for food aid is clearly rising in Maryland, and not just at the
holidays, said Tom Blackburn, 61, pantry director at Community Assistance
Network Inc., a Baltimore County-based nonprofit that provides support to poor
neighborhoods.
The average number of families seeking food aid at the Community Assistance
Network pantry in the city of Baltimore has doubled in the last two years, he
said.
The pantry serves between 80 and 150 families a day depending on the time of
year, he said. In early November, the pantry served 200 families in one day, a
record high number, he said.
“It’s tough out there,” he said, adding that besides his job at the food
pantry, he works at a cleaning service and as a limousine driver just to make
ends meet.
“I think a lot of folks are unaware that there’s a lot of people
out there struggling to eat.”
Last year, the Maryland Food Bank distributed over 44 million pounds of food,
the equivalent of about 37 million meals, Warner said.
The number of Marylanders participating in the federal Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program, also known as SNAP or food stamps, increased by 118
percent between 2007 and 2012, according to the Food Research and Action
Center, a national nonprofit anti-hunger group.
About 13 percent of Maryland’s population is food insecure, according to
Feeding America, a national hunger-relief organization. But 41 percent of
food-insecure people aren’t eligible for SNAP benefits because they make too
much money to qualify, but not enough to afford sufficient food for themselves
and their families, according to Feeding America.
“People making minimum wage, they’re still living in poverty,” said Michael
Freeman, 55, a food transporter for the Brooklyn Church of God pantry in
Baltimore. “The need every year gets bigger and bigger.”
In January and February, the Maryland Food Bank will need help categorizing
the supplies left over from the influx of holiday donations, but after
Christmas, volunteers are harder to find, said Meg Kimmel, vice president of
marketing for the Maryland Food Bank.
“Once the holidays are over, we have a real drop off in the number of
volunteers, and the need stays the same,” she said.
The Maryland Food Bank requires an average of 260 volunteers each week to box
and sort donated supplies, and shifts can be booked in advance, Kimmel said.
All of the shifts from October through December were already filled in July,
she said, but volunteers for the later winter months remain sparse.
People are in the giving spirit around the holidays, and are especially
inclined to help those suffering from food insecurity, Warner said.
“There’s an emotional toll because a lot of people are celebrating around a
table with family and friends and there’s a lot of empathy for people who
can’t,” she said.
The Maryland Food Bank raised more than $10,000 through the
statewide Giving Tuesday campaign run by Maryland Nonprofits, an organization
supporting the state’s nonprofit sector, she said. This money will help
provide around 20,000 meals, she said.
But it’s important to remember that the number of hungry people won’t decline
after the holidays, and the food bank can always use extra help, Kimmel said.
Regulars, like Maria Engelbrecht, 51, of Columbia, who volunteers weekly at
the Maryland Food Bank, help keep the work running smoothly all year.
“I feel like this is useful, like it’s going to help somebody,” she said.
“People are hungry all year round. There’s always a need.”
To donate, visit the Maryland Food
Bank’s website.
(Copyright 2014 by Capital News Service. All rights reserved.)