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Agenda
Session I
* Part 1
* Part 2
Session II
* Part 1
* Part 2
Session III
Session IV
Session V
Session VI
*
Group A
* Group B
Session VII
* Group C
* Group D
* Group E
Session VIII
* Group F
* Group G
Session IX
Session X

 

 

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Breakout Session I—The Face of Hunger in America

Part 1: What Does It Mean To Be Hungry and Poor in America?

Moderator: Bill Shore

Speakers: Donna Pususta Neste, Sharon Thornberry, Cecilia Munoz, Deborah Leff

Recorders: Carol Olander, David Burr, Carolyn Foley

Purpose: This session was intended to strengthen the political will to end hunger in America by highlighting both the success of the anti-hunger network and its future. How can the network be made more effective in the 21st century? This session humanized the problem of hunger and concluded by focusing on strategies to marshal the nation's resources and commitment to eliminate hunger.

Goal: To humanize the problem of hunger and poverty by presenting the experiences of former nutrition assistance recipients.

Hunger Speaks: The Voice of Experience

Donna Pususta Neste, Mt. Olive Lutheran Church
Ms. Neste described the struggles she faced 17 years ago when she was pregnant and her husband became unemployed. Even though her husband eventually found a minimum-wage, full-time job, life continued to be difficult. The food stamp and WIC benefits provided her family with nutritious food and prevented them from going hungry. Ms. Neste emphasized the following:

  • The food stamp and WIC programs allowed her family to regain financial stability because they could concentrate on paying bills, such as rent and medical expenses, without sacrificing meals.
  • The WIC program was responsible, in large part, for enabling her son to become a bright, healthy, and athletic teenager.
  • The laws prohibiting immigrant families from participating in the Food Stamp Program will have a negative impact on the long-term health of their children.
  • Small children and infants who do not participate in the Food Stamp Program should be studied in their later teen years to determine if they suffered from negative effects with respect to their general health and learning ability.

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Sharon Thornberry, Oregon Food Bank
Ms. Thornberry shared her story of her family's participation in the Food Stamp and WIC Program following the breakup of her marriage. Speaking from her experience as a single parent, Ms. Thornberry emphasized the following:

  • Minimum wage jobs are not sufficient to bring families out of poverty.
  • Working poor households often face negative attitudes about their participation in assistance programs.
  • Working families must be provided with a living wage, and program rules must accommodate their job schedules and expectations. This is especially true in the Food Stamp Program where people often must choose between taking or keeping a job and adhering to the program's required periodic interview with a caseworker.
  • The Food Stamp and WIC programs did not make her family dependent but rather "helped us to succeed."

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Cecilia Munoz, National Council of La Raza
The National Council of La Raza is an organization dedicated to protecting the civil rights and representing the interests and needs of Hispanic Americans. Even though the vast majority of Hispanics in America are legal immigrants or are American-born citizens, the perception exists that all Hispanics are illegal aliens. The Hispanic population experiences poverty at a higher rate than the rest of the country. While 12 percent of the population of the United States is Hispanic, 25 percent live in poverty and are at risk of experiencing hunger. Legislation enacted in the past few years at the Federal and State levels has helped fuel the confusion and fear many Hispanics feel about participating in Federal initiatives, such as the Food Stamp Program. To ensure that nutrition assistance is provided to the Hispanic American community, we must

  • Restore Food Stamp Program eligibility for all legal immigrants, regardless of their age or the year they entered the United States.
  • Conduct aggressive outreach programs to eliminate confusion and fear among the food stamp-eligible households in the Hispanic community.
  • Establish policies to support work that will assist eligible households to apply for food stamp and WIC benefits.

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Deborah Leff, America's Second Harvest
Second Harvest is a network of food banks assisting the efforts of more than 50,000 emergency feeding organizations in the United States. The organization also conducts research on food, hunger, and related issues. One in every 10 Americans will visit a food bank this year, even though this fact is inconsistent with the current economy. One in 5 people served in a soup kitchen line is a child, and 40 percent of those visiting food pantries are employed—one-half of those full time. The safety net needs to be strengthened to

  • Make the USDA nutrition assistance programs, especially the Food Stamp Program, less complex and more accessible.
  • Provide the working poor with a living wage.
  • Measure welfare reform policies in terms of the effect on peoples' lives instead of the impact on caseload numbers.
  • Better support work by allowing the working poor to apply for and continue to receive food stamp benefits.
  • Work with public and private agencies as a part of food stamp outreach and other program areas.

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Audience Comments Following the Panel Presentations

  • The Food Stamp Program is too complex. People who may be eligible for benefits are going instead to food banks or food pantries because access to the program is too difficult.
  • Perceptions about the Food Stamp Program could be changed by showing how it helps the working poor to remain employed.
  • The benefit of the Food Stamp Program to retailers and farmers could be illustrated by developing a formula to clearly determine how the program helps the community as a whole.
  • A living wage must be established to bring working poor households out of poverty.
  • The methodology for establishing the Federal poverty level should be redesigned to provide a more accurate definition.

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