harvest news - Forgotten Harvest
Transcription
harvest news - Forgotten Harvest
HARVEST NEWS Metro Detroit’s Only Food Rescue Organization I Driving Hunger from Our Community Since 1990 I spring 2013 No School . . . Means No Breakfast or Lunch For Many Kids This Summer in our Metro Detroit Community Remember summer vacation? Nothing was better than the thought of having weeks with no worries. That’s not the case for all of our community’s children. For thousands of children in metro Detroit, summer vacation may mean not having enough to eat. During the school year, our kids wake up every weekday morning knowing that at least they will be able to have a nourishing breakfast and a hot lunch through their school lunch or breakfast program. During the summer it’s a much different story — especially now, O D R when 1 in 4 metro Detroit children O U R KI are living in poverty. For these children, there may not be any meals except those provided by Forgotten Harvest. These kids live in your neighborhood with families who are struggling to provide food for their children. Please support the Forgotten Harvest Million Meal Challenge. Help us ensure that metro Detroit children will have a “summer vacation from hunger.” Donate today at www.forgottenharvest .org or call 888-332-7140 seven days a week. F S MIL LI NGE LE MEAL CHAL N O Thanks to generous donations from the PNC Foundation and GM Foundation, every $1 you give up to $85,000 means we can provide 10 meals to kids in need. Detroit Tiger Torii Hunter Goes To Bat For Our Kids Torii Hunter - Detroit Tiger He hasn’t forgotten. Growing up in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, Torii and his grandmother waited in line to eat at a food pantry called Neighbor to Neighbor. Torii still supports that organization and a food pantry near his off-season home in Plano, Texas. This summer Torii will be featured in Forgotten Harvest public service announcements to be run on the Fox Sports Network Tigers game broadcasts. Thanks, Torii! On Heroes & Hope One in four of our children in metro Detroit face hunger or a lack of food. In a nation and community of plenty, that number is staggering and difficult for most of us to grasp. At Forgotten Harvest, our number one commitment is to be certain our children get the healthy food they deserve. Once again, I come to you with a plea to help our kids this summer by supporting our fourth annual One Million Meal Challenge. Without your help, many of our kids will be deprived of meals they would normally get through school breakfast and lunch programs. The economic crisis had a devastating impact on our families. The 2010 American Community Survey, conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau, confirmed a continuation of a trend that began in the second half of the last decade-poverty rates increasing in both suburbs as well as the City of Detroit. Poverty in our suburbs has increased by 96.4 %. Hunger and a lack of food are now pervasive in neighborhoods throughout metro Detroit. We face the future undaunted and filled with hope, though, knowing that the immense heart and spirit of metro Detroit will sustain us and enable us to reach the day when no child has to go to bed hungry. I would offer our deepest thanks to the 86,000 Forgotten Harvest donors, 9,200 volunteers and 260 agencies on the frontline of hunger serving thousands of people in need every day. You are truly heroes! Spice Up Your Fundraising Efforts With Garden Fresh Jack Aronson was owner/operator of Clubhouse Barbecue on Woodward Avenue in Ferndale, Michigan, when he ignited the fresh salsa revolution. Fifteen years later, Garden Fresh, with headquarters located in Ferndale, is the number-one fresh salsa in North America employing over 400 people. Working in conjunction with Jack, who supports a number of charities across metro Detroit, we have created “Forgotten Harvest Fundraising Heroes,” a program that makes it easy to raise funds for your nonprofit organization, group or clubs by selling the exciting line of Garden Fresh products. Any organization or group can now raise funds by selling the Garden Fresh line of deli-quality snacks and dips and become a Forgotten Harvest Hero-helping us feed the hungry in our community. Garden Fresh has committed to a cash donation to Forgotten Harvest over and above the profits earned by the participating organization’s fundraising efforts. You win-and hungry people across metro Detroit win! Jack and the Garden Fresh crew have set a goal to generate funds that will help Forgotten Harvest serve one million meals. We call it the Million Meal Harvest™ and you can help us reach that goal by featuring Garden Fresh products in your next fundraiser. Organizations can keep all the profits generated through the program, or donate a portion (or all) to the Garden Fresh Million Meal Harvest program. It’s your choice! For full details on this exciting new way to raise funds for your nonprofit organization, club or group, call Carol Bahri at 248-336-8486; e-mail her at [email protected]; or visit the Million Meal Harvest web site at www.gardenfreshsalsa.com/fundraisingheroes. Susan Ellis Goodell President and CEO Jack Aronson, Founder and President, Garden Fresh Gourmet On the Frontline of Hunger: Our Partner Agencies in Action Open Door Food Ministries, Canton, MI Open Door Food Ministry in Canton lies at the foot of a mountainous landfill and serves as a microcosm of the need for food in Southeastern Michigan and model of efficient food distribution. Housed in a former cardboard box factory, volunteers from around the community help feed their neighbors in an operation that showcases the skills of its founding and current leadership — a former auto industry engineer. A well-oiled assembly process helps volunteers send boxes down rollers to be filled with a mix of fresh, perishable food and then placed in color-coded carts designated for small, medium or large families. Every Thursday night, up to 500 families are served. As each car pulls up to the dock, their barcoded ID card — issued after an application and interview by Open Door staff to determine need — is scanned and the correct cart for the family size is rolled out. Food is loaded by the volunteers into recipient vehicles. “We have a microcosm of America right here,” said Steve Darr, who co-directs Open Door with his wife Jackie. “These are people who have lost their jobs, many are now working part time whose income has been drastically reduced. After people pay their car, house, medical and insurance bills, sometimes there just isn’t enough for food.” Steve Darr (right), his wife Jackie and mom-in-Law Faye Hysinger. Faye is 80 years old and participates in food distribution every Thursday night without fail. Waterford Senior Center, Waterford, MI The Waterford Senior Center has seen the need for food assistance grow tremendously in recent years. The Center has partnered with Forgotten Harvest since 2010. About 165 meals a day are delivered to homebound seniors, many of whom are at or below the poverty level. Over the past few years, though, a surprisingly diverse group of people from all age groups have begun to reach out to the Center for help – single parents with low-income jobs, larger families where one or both parents had been unemployed and — a new trend — adult children moving back in with their parents due to economic hardship. During an average week, the Waterford Senior Center distributes Forgotten Harvest food to between 90 to 100 individuals every Tuesday. Maureen Margraff, Coordinator and Program and Nutrition Supervisor at the Center, believes these individuals probably represent as many as 300-400 people who wouldn’t otherwise have access to food the next week. Maureen Margraff, Coordinator and Program “The people we work with tell us that we have no idea what and Nutrition Supervisor, at the Waterford this means to them and how much this helps their families,” said Senior Center Margraff. “We hear constant stories of people having to choose between medication, heating their homes or food. Many of these individuals have nowhere else to turn.” “We hear constant stories of people having to choose between medication, heating their homes or food.” Feeding the Minds Of Future Scholars HEROES Volunteers Hit a Record 21,540 Hours of Service during January–April 2013 at Forgotten Harvest Patrice Merritt, Executive Director, Detroit Public Library Friends Foundation, with our future scholars and Brian Glowiak, Vice President, The Chrysler Foundation Forgotten Harvest, in partnership with the Detroit Public Library and The Chrysler Foundation, has launched an innovative program to provide afterschool nourishment to children utilizing the Detroit Public Library branches. The program enables DPL librarians to combat hunger in the City of Detroit for those most vulnerable, our children, through the distribution of a healthy afternoon snack or meal alternative. The idea for the program evolved after Brian Glowiak, Vice President of The Chrysler Foundation, met with Detroit Public Library Friends Foundation Executive Director Patrice Merritt to learn more about library services and how Chrysler might help. Glowiak recognized the potential of the library as another means to provide direct assistance to Detroit families in need. The libraries serve as a haven for afterschool activities such as homework help, tutoring, reading and literary assistance. “When students are hungry, it is difficult for them to focus on their studies. Our librarians see hunger daily in our branches and understand that an afterschool snack may be for some the last meal of the day,” stated Lurine Carter, Coordinator of Children’s’ Services at the Detroit Public Library. Currently 18 library branches serve over 1,750 nutritious snacks in the course of a week distributed by Forgotten Harvest. Advance Capital – 114 Hours Blue Cross Blue Shield – 123 Hours Chandler Park Academy – 120 Hours Consumer Bankruptcy Assoc. – 138 Hours Chrysler – 258 Hours City Year – 270 Hours DTE – 261 Hours Eton Academy – 186 Hours Fifth Third Bank – 220 Hours Finesse Fast Pitch – 102 Hours Ford Motor Company – 435 Hours GM – 610 Hours Greenhills School – 175 Hours JP Morgan Chase – 180 Hours Jewish Vocational Services – 150 Hours Lakeview High School – 135 Hours LTU – 165 Hours Macomb Christian Church – 163 Hours Macomb Community College – 183 Hours Macy’s – 150 Hours Maharashtra Mandal of Detroit – 105 Hours Michigan Adventures Club – 111 Hours Plymouth 8th Grade – 171 Hours Phi BETA Sigma Fraternity Inc. – 129 Hours Quicken Loans – 561 Hours U of M – 216 Hours United Way – 118 Hours University Prep Academy – 234 Hours Other Individuals and Groups – 988 Hours 6,909 volunteers dedicated their time to help feed the hungry. Thank you! A New Era: Forgotten Harvest Launches Farm Operations FAR MS Volunteers are needed to help in the harvest this summer and fall. Contact Marci Fitch at 248-967-1500 ext. 125, or visit our web site. Operations are in full swing at our new Ore Creek Farm. Thanks to the generosity of Nora Moroun, who donated 92 acres of land, we are now on our way to harvesting an estimated two million pounds of produce for the tables of Metro Detroit families in need. Pictured left to right: Patricia Larson, Forgotten Harvest volunteer; Nicole Heins, Farm Events Coordinator; Sandy Gabel, Director of Agriculture & Agency Relations; and Nora Moroun, Forgotten Harvest Board Member. 21800 Greenfield Road Oak Park, MI 48237 (248) 967-1500 www.forgottenharvest.org For all the freshest information, visit our website at www.forgottenharvest.org We’re very social! Join us on: