Tuesday, November 23, 2010

A Detroit News Editorial: Food Banks Help Michigan's Needy


"Recently, my family and I were trying to decide what we wanted to have for dinner. We debated back and forth on where to go and what type of food we wanted. We considered all the various restaurants down the street on our side of town but nothing "sounded good."

After spending what seemed like an eternity trying to decide, given all the options available, we decided to stay home and eat leftovers. After dinner, I started thinking about the people who aren't debating where or what to eat, but how to put food on the table for their families. It's so easy to get caught up in the day-to-day bustle of life and forget that there are many people who are struggling to make ends meet"

From The Detroit News:

detnews.com/article/20101123/OPINION01/11230340/Food-banks-help-Michigan’s-needy#ixzz168EFURYf

Monday, November 22, 2010

Southwest Michigan teens help lead discussions on race as part of Kalamazoo Valley Museum exhibit


Southwest Michigan Teens are working together to address the issue of race as part of Kalamazoo Valley Museum's RACE exhibit. A total of 50 teens from the ages of 12 to 18 have attended the five public sessions held at KVCC’s downtown campus and two private sessions held by the Girl Scouts of America and the Jack and Jill Club.
Courtney Asselin, 14, of Paw Paw, commented on the bones display in the exhibit that discussed anthropological forensics. “You can’t determine race by bones.” She added, “Discrimination doesn’t have a point. It’s like having a black dog and a white dog. They’re all dogs, just different colors.

NATIONAL RACE EXHIBIT

What: "RACE: Are We So Different?" exhibit.

Who: The installation, created by the American Anthropological Association and The Science Museum of Minnesota, is designed to spur a national dialogue on race. It explores the subject from biological, historical and human points of view, using photographs, movies and interactive displays.

Admission: Free.

Where: Kalamazoo Valley Museum, 230 N. Rose St., downtown Kalamazoo, near the Radisson Plaza Hotel & Suites.

Run dates: Through Jan. 2.

Museum hours: 9 a.m. -5 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays; 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Fridays; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturdays; and 1-5 p.m. Sundays.

For group tours: Call the museum at 269-373-7990.

For private facilitated conversations: Call Leah Catherman at the YWCA at 269-345-5595.

Read the full article: http://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/index.ssf/2010/11/southwest_michigan_teens_help.html

Sunday, November 21, 2010

An Editorial Cartoon from Brian Duffy



This editorial cartoon from Brian Duffy of Daily Ink. and King Features more or less expresses pretty well what some of us already know: when the economy turns bad, the most vulnerable among us suffer the most.

However, Brian said it in a cartoon better than I just did.

Hint: If you are having trouble reading the cartoon, click on it for a clearer and larger view.

Migrant Workers in Michigan: An Invisible Population

More than 90,000 (migrant workers) come to Michigan every year to harvest crops. That number includes family members - children, spouses, parents - who don't work in the fields but travel to keep the family together.

An estimated 70 percent of them are in the United States on legal work visas or are U.S. citizens.

• Their average income: $12,000 to $16,000 for a family of five.

• Most live in one of 800 migrant camps around the state provided by the growers who hire them
.

The Civil Rights Commission began investigating migrant working conditions in 2009 after a public forum in Kalamazoo raised some red flags about possible health and safety violations.

The commission decided to investigate further through a series of town hall-style meetings around the state where workers, growers and migrant advocates could testify about everything from wages to clean water.

Commissioners also visited several of the state's 800 licensed migrant camps.

Among their more startling findings:

• At one camp, there were three showers available for 35 women and children to share.

• At another camp, there was a single toilet and shower for all workers and their families to share with no curtain or other form of privacy.

• Several instances of overflowing or broken toilets and no running water.

After a (Civil Rights) report was released, Michigan Farm Bureau issued a statement lambasting it for casting a "damaging black eye" on all farmers. Now, a Farm Bureau representative is on the state task force and the Office of Migrant Affairs is publicly applauding farmers who take proper care of their workers. Even critics say they've witnessed farms where workers have access to on-site day care, schools and health clinics.

"This situation is not unlike others," Core said. "There are good apples in the bunch, and there are bad apples. We have to find a way to effectively deal with the bad apples."

Several state agencies have some responsibility for dealing with migrant farm workers, including the Department of Energy, Labor and Economic Growth, the Department of Agriculture and DHS.

www.lansingstatejournal.com/article/20101121/NEWS01/11210505/Recent-report-cites-Third-World-like-living-conditions-for-migrant-workers

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Early Estimate: Project Connect affects 1350 Kalamazoo County Residents

Yesterday, Project Connect went off without a hitch. The event served 800 individuals, which will in turn affect 1350 Kalamazoo Residents. One of the most significant improvements for this event was moving the registration process to another area, eliminating the congestion that plagued the event last May. Services such as haircuts, the free lunch and winter coats came in right in the nick of time, providing an exceptional benefit to the attendees of the event.

WOOD TV 8 also ran some exceptional coverage of the event yesterday: http://www.woodtv.com/dpp/news/local/kalamazoo_and_battle_creek/Kzoo-helps-all-with-Project-Connect




The next Project Connect event is scheduled for Wednesday, May 11th from 1pm - 6pm at the Kalamazoo Expo Center in at 2900 Lake street.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Berrien County Restaurants Host Fundraisers for the Homeless

"Four years ago a group of area agencies took on a huge goal — to end homelessness in Berrien County.

Alysia Babcock, executive director of the Benton Harbor Emergency Shelter, said that since the Housing Resource Network (HRN) wrote a 10-year plan to accomplish this goal, a lot of progress has been made.

And she is hoping a county-wide fundraiser during Homeless Awareness Week, which began Sunday, will continue the momentum.

Seven county businesses will be donating 10 percent of their customers’ bills to the Barrier Busters Fund, a county-wide fund that provides financial assistance to local families living in poverty.”The monies raised will be used for things grants usually don’t cover,” Babcock said. “IDs or birth certificates are hard to come by for somebody living in poverty.”...

... This year, HRN has helped three previously homeless families become homeowners.

The fundraiser began last Wednesday at the Niles Pizza Hut and continues today at The Nuggett in downtown Niles and Wednesday at Mancino’s and Blueberry Hill in Niles.

Personal donations can be made out to Emergency Shelter Services Inc. (with memo to Barrier Busters Fund) and mailed to 645 Pipestone Benton Harbor, MI 49022."


www.nilesstar.com/2010/11/15/restaurants-fundraising-for-local-homelessness-assistance/


Monday, November 15, 2010

Record Number of Americans Face Hunger


The number of Americans who struggled to get enough food last year remained at a record high, according to a report released Monday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

More than 50 million Americans lived in households that had a hard time getting enough to eat at least at some point during 2009. That includes 17 million children, and at least a half-million of those children faced the direst conditions. They had inadequate diets, or even missed meals, because their families didn't have enough money for food.

"Household food insecurity remains a serious problem across the United States," says Agriculture Undersecretary Kevin Concannon.

He says there's a reason the hunger numbers hit a record high in 2008 and stayed there in 2009: a struggling economy.

"It is a considerable reflection of what is going on in the economy," he says. "So jobs, employment, the overall economic health of the country are a major portion of it."

www.npr.org/2010/11/15/131328286/record-number-of-u-s-households-face-hunger


Number of homeless students up 41 percent in the last two years

A WWMT news story covers the struggle that local families must adapt to after losing their homes:



Watch it at: http://www.wwmt.com/articles/sure-1383727-homeless-west.html

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Kaiser Family Foundation Asks Serious Questions About Cutting Entitlement Programs for the Poor

Well before we have any clarity on the impact of the election on health reform, the pundits are handicapping the prospects of efforts to make a serious dent in the national debt and deficit. Three national commissions are hammering out recommendations for reducing the debt and reining in entitlement spending, putting two giant health programs that serve the elderly, disabled and low-income Americans, Medicaid and Medicare, as well as Social Security, in the crosshairs of a new policy debate...

Nearly half (47%) of all elderly and disabled people on Medicare have incomes below twice the federal poverty level (less than $20,800 for an individual and $28,000 for a couple in 2008). Poverty rates are even higher among women, African American and Latino Medicare beneficiaries. And two-thirds of the 8 million disabled people on Medicare who are under age 65 have incomes below twice the poverty rate; beneficiaries with disabilities face more serious access problems than others on the medicare program...

If new policies are proposed to rein in entitlement spending and reduce the deficit, it seems only reasonable to include the following criterion among others for evaluating proposals: do no harm to the financial security or access to care for elderly and disabled beneficiaries living on low and modest incomes. Indeed, given the high out-of-pocket costs these groups have, and the large share of their incomes they already pay for health care, a comprehensive approach might well seek to improve circumstances for these most vulnerable groups, while also advancing "hard choices" for entitlement programs to reduce the deficit.

www.kff.org/pullingittogether/People-Behind-The-Entitlement-Debate.cfm

Benton Harbor Seeks Promise Zone Designation from Lansing

Benton Harbor Area Schools officials say they are hoping to send their outgoing students to college for free in the near future.

Although still in its preliminary stages, Leonard Seawood, the district's superintendent, said officials are putting together a plan to present to the state in hopes of approval for such a program.

"We've had to go through the hurdles," he said.

The idea was first started in Kalamazoo a few years ago. It's called the Kalamazoo Promise and provides for any high school graduate in Kalamazoo's public school system accepted into a Michigan college or university to receive free tuition. The program, which has since been implemented in other districts around the state, is privately funded.

Seawood said there are 18 other sites around the state that are in the same boat as Benton Harbor and attempting to receive backing from the state, which is required. He added the most important question is how the district will raise the money to pay for the tuition.

www.southbendtribune.com/article/20101110/News01/11100360/1052/News01