Posts Tagged ‘Poverty’

Happy Hunger Games!

Friday, March 23rd, 2012

Happy Hunger Games!!! This Friday is so special that it deserves a holiday!…hmm want to know what’s so special about this particular Friday? Well, today is the opening day for “The Hunger Games!” However, while you’re heading out to watch to watch “The Hunger Games” remember there are still people in this world who lack adequate nutrition or do not have access to food.

Here are ten facts about hunger to consider and inspire you to fight hunger in your community:

  1. For 1 in 6 people in the United States, hunger is a reality. Right now, millions of Americans are struggling with hunger.  These are often hard-working adults, children and seniors who simply cannot make ends meet and are forced to go without food for several meals, or even days.
  2. Suburban poverty appears to have distinct regional patterns. Fourteen of the fifteen suburbs with the highest poverty rates in 2000 were located in the Southern or Western regions of the country. 
  3. Female-headed households were more than twice as likely to be among the working poor as male-headed households in 2008.
  4. Among families with at least one member working at least half a year, families with children were 4 times more likely than families without children to live in poverty in 2008.
  5. One in five kids in America struggles with hunger. Kids who struggle with hunger have a hard time learning in school and don’t get the nutrition they need to grow up strong and healthy.
  6. According to the USDA, over 16 million children lived in food insecure (low food security and very low food security) households in 2010.
  7. 20% or more of the child population in 40 states and D.C. lived in food insecure households in 2009. The District of Columbia (32.3%) and Oregon (29.2%) had the highest rates of children in households without consistent access to food.
  8. In 2009, the top five states with the highest rate of food insecure children under 18 are the District of Columbia, Oregon, Arizona, Arkansas, & Texas. iii
  9. In 2009, the top five states with the lowest rate of food insecure children under 18 are North Dakota, New Hampshire, Virginia, Maryland, & Massachusetts. iii
  10. Proper nutrition is vital to the growth and development of children. 62 percent of client households with children under the age of 18 reported participating in the National School Lunch Program, but only 14 percent reported having a child participate in a summer feeding program that provides free food when school is out.

Additionally, our affiliate GenerationOn, is hosting “The Great American Bake Sale” in which awesome youth and caring adults sign up to hold bake sales and send their profits to Share Our Strength. Share Our Strength will use the proceeds to end childhood hunger.

May the odds be in your favor, volunteer as Tribute and watch this video!

10 Ways to Fight Poverty in America

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012

January is awesome! Why is January awesome?! Because January is Poverty in America Awareness Month. While poverty has plagued our society for decades, attention should be given to the poverty rate increase from 13.2% in 2008 to 14.3% in 2009-the biggest statistical increase since 2004. Similarly, according to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, between 2000 and 2008, the number of poor Americans grew by more than nine million. Now that you have been inspired to fight poverty in America, we have ten ways to fight poverty in your community and throughout America:

  1. Support a local or family-owned business. Small businesses keep communities together, while also pumping money back into the community and ultimately fighting poverty. These small businesses also often have interesting or unique items, which is always a bonus. 
  2. Plan a vacation around a learning or helping experience. Vacations are always fun; however, consider the communities around your vacation destination and the potential poverty within those neighborhoods. Take a few hours out of your day while you’re on vacation and volunteer.
  3. Donate to your local food bank. Hunger is a year-round issue, and forces people to choose between food and other expenses.
  4. Shop for good. Choose stores or services that support local groups. Buy local, it can be better for your health and wallet.
  5. Organize a food drive in your community. A food drive will provide a family food, while also bringing your community together and hopefully motivate other community to do more to fight poverty.
  6. Do a fundraiser! Plan a walk-a-thon, yard sale, lemonade stand, or benefit concert to raise money for a local organization. Why not have fun with your fundraiser while supporting a good cause?! These activities will surely be exciting and worthwhile!
  7. Research! Become aware of local policies and programs that affect low-income families. Find out where poverty is focused in your city, how widespread the poverty stricken areas are, and how you can help. 
  8. Share your research! Voice your concern and tell your community members that it’s Poverty in America Awareness Month so that they are also inspired to improve the community or will spread the word about this awesome month.
  9. Always show respect to people working at minimum wage. Be courteous and respectful of their efforts or just greet them with a simple smile. You never know how much a smile can improve their day.
  10. Use public transportation whenever possible. Your support helps to insure that public transportation remains available for us all.

We hope these tips have inspired you to support Poverty in America Awareness Month! Tell us what other community service activities you plan on doing to commemorate Poverty in America Awareness Month.

January 16: A Day On, Not Off

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

So with all this talk about Martin Luther King Day being next Monday (January 16) you may be asking yourself “What exactly should I focus my service project on?” That is a perfectly reasonable question with all of the service options available during this time.

There is no specific cause that should be honored on this national day of service. King envisioned a community where members helped their fellow man out with their successes and their struggles.

His vision is inspiring to all who want to make a difference in their community. King’s love for a strong community should guide your service decisions during this time. The following are a few service areas that were important to King and can be honored during MLK Day.

  • Poverty: “The curse of poverty has no justification in our age. It is socially as cruel and blind as the practice of cannibalism at the dawn of civilization, when men ate each other because they had not yet learned to take food from the soil or to consume the abundant animal life around them. The time has come for us to civilize ourselves by the total, direct and immediate abolition of poverty.” Poverty is a horrible reality within all communities with 46.2 million people in the United States living in poverty. You can do something about this:
    • Donate food to a your local food bank or soup kitchen
    • Hold a clothing drive for your local shelter
  • Education: “The function of education is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. Intelligence plus character – that is the goal of true education.” Only 39% of the United States population completes college within four years. The education system within the United States has received harsh criticism over the last few years. There are many things you can do to help:
    • Organize a school supply drive
    • Tutor
    • Volunteer to clean up your local school
    • Mentor a child
  • Community: An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.” Dr. King highly emphasized the importance of community bonds and service to the community. The current volunteering rate in the United States is 26.3 percent. It is important that individuals not only give back to the community in which they live, but also learn about their surroundings.
    • Learn about your community’s history
    • Identify cultural and religious groups in your community that may be neglected and discuss how their needs can be met.
    • Host a Sunday Supper
  • Youth: “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” Dr. believed in the importance of building up the nation’s youth because they are the future. Our mistakes will only be replicated by them if we do not teach them otherwise. 21 percent of all American children live at or below the set poverty level.
    • Organize a toy drive
    • Volunteer at a women’s or family shelter
  • Military/ Veterans: “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual doom.” It is important that our communities across the nation honor the work that our military voluntarily performs to ensure our safety.
    • Assemble care packages for military members overseas
    • Write letters
    • Help a military family in need by babysitting or cooking a meal

The above facts are just a few reasons why we should make Martin Luther King Day a “day on, not a day off.” Not only does this day of service honor the memory of Dr. King, but it also strengthens our nation’s communities.

How will you make Dr. King’s dream a reality January 16?

One Step At A Time

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

Today’s guest post comes from Ashley Cannady, an AmeriCorps National Direct Member serving with HandsOn Network.

What’s the first word that comes to mind when you think of the homeless in your community? For me that word was ‘helpless’. Helpless was a word that reflected the mentality towards my capabilities to rupture any kind of negative cycles in their lives.

I recently got the opportunity to organize a volunteer project where my fellow staff members and I volunteered for an organization that helps the homeless become self-sufficient.

We used the mock interview toolkit from the gethandson.com site to conduct practice interviews as well as provide resume advice. It was amazing how simple the toolkit made what would appear to be a more complex task at first glance. It made me feel more equipped to do the mission at hand.

I got to talk to a lot of interesting people with amazing stories. I was so impressed by them, it was an encouraging experience!

Often times we see issues around us that we would like to address but they look so huge before us that we don’t move or respond at all. It’s refreshing to see how the Get Hands On Campaign makes it easy to take the first steps to tackling the big issues in our communities.

No longer do I feel ‘helpless’ in the issue of poverty in my community. I have a real place in this issue and the best thing about it is that you can too!

In Africa, Anti-Malaria Mosquito Nets Go Unused by Recipients

Saturday, May 8th, 2010

by Sonia Shah
Originally published on May 2, 2010 for the
Los Angeles Times and cross posted here with permission from the author.

Last week, in honor of World Malaria Day, viewers of “American Idol” were urged to donate $10 for an insecticide-treated bed net to save an African child from malaria, the mosquito-transmitted scourge that infects about 300 million people every year, killing nearly 1 million.

The premise behind the idea of treated nets is simple. The netting prevents malarial mosquitoes from biting people while they’re asleep, and the insecticide kills and repels the insects. World health experts say that using the nets can reduce child mortality in malarial regions by 20 percent.

But even as donations roll in and millions of bed nets pile up in warehouses across Africa, aid agencies and nongovernmental organizations are quietly grappling with a problem: Data suggest that, at least in some places, nearly half of Africans who have access to the nets refuse to sleep under them.

Why that is gets to the heart of the trouble with our efforts to dislodge the diseases of the very poor. When scientists first developed the treated nets in the late 1990s, they were hailed by international donors and aid agencies as a magic bullet for malaria. Unlike nearly everything else that combats the disease, including better housing and drainage, anti-malarial drugs and insecticidal spray campaigns, the insecticide-doused nets are cheap and easy to use. Equally important, they require little infrastructure on the ground. A single volunteer on a motorcycle can distribute hundreds of nets a day, in even the most remote locales. There is no need for cold storage to keep drugs and vaccines refrigerated, nor for expert clinicians to oversee proper dosage.

To date, millions of dollars from international agencies, NGOs and USAID have been spent to get treated nets into the hands of impoverished, sub-Saharan Africans. The inter-agency Roll Back Malaria Partnership is calling for 730 million more.

But, as even the staunchest advocate will admit, the treated nets were not designed with the cultural preferences of the rural African villager in mind. Among other design flaws, their tight mesh blocks ventilation, a serious problem in the hot, humid places where malaria roosts. Minor discomfort might be tolerable in rural African communities desperate for anti-malarial prevention. But, as medical anthropologists have consistently found, because malaria is so common in much of sub-Saharan Africa, and because the overwhelming majority of cases go away on their own, most rural Africans consider malaria a minor ailment, the way that Westerners might think of the cold or flu. Many rural people also believe that malaria is caused not just by mosquitoes but also by other factors such as mangoes, or hard work.

As a result, while we see the treated nets as a lifesaving gift, they see them as a discomfort that provides only partial protection against a trivial illness. Is it any wonder that many use their nets to catch fish or as wedding veils or room dividers — all documented uses of insecticide-treated bed nets? If that sounds ungrateful, think about what would happen if public health officials, concerned about the 41,000 lives that Americans lose every year due to flu, blanketed the United States with anti-viral face masks to be worn during the winter flu season. Donning masks would be a simple, safe and effective measure that could save thousands of lives. But would people wear them?

At a recent meeting in Washington, a group of aid workers, social scientists and businesspeople active in various net programs met to consider the bed net dilemma. All agreed that thanks to the sheer scale of the current distribution effort, many nets will be hung over sleeping mats, even as others are hoarded, resold and diverted to other uses. As a result, many cases of malaria will be averted.

But then what? The nets don’t last forever. In three or fo

ur years, they will need to be replaced. If local people do not seek out new ones, whether from the local health clinic or the marketplace, today’s remarkable and historic net donation effort will have to begin anew, and be repeated, indefinitely.

Nobody in the room underestimated the dilemma, and their frustration was palpable. “You can see the train wreck coming,” one said dolefully.

This is not an insoluble problem. Some aid groups, aware of local ambivalence about the nets, have started education programs to support bed net distribution efforts, urging the rural poor to actually unwrap and sleep under the nets they’ve been given. It’s not an easy or cheap fix, of course. Such exertions take time and money — exactly what bed nets were suppos

ed to save.

Perhaps what we need is a whole new approach. Instead of masterminding solutions for distant problems and then handing them down from on high — as we do not just in our anti-malaria efforts but in a variety of aid programs aimed at extreme poverty — we should empower the poor to come up with their own solutions, and then help figure out how to implement them.

Such a process might not lead to grand, magic-bullet solutions. More likely, we’d get micro-solutions, variable from locale to locale, from village to village. But we’d be supporting self-reliance and building goodwill along the way. And we’d surely avoid the wastefulness — and really, the affront — of befuddling communities with “gifts” that many neither want nor use.

Sonia Shah is the author of “,” which will be published by Sarah Crichton Books/Farrar, Straus & Giroux in July. She wrote this for the Los Angeles Times (McClatchy-Tribune).