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Aid workers say holiday donations trail needs

Rising prices, housing problems lead to growing year-round assistance

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John Mulvaney, Navistar Financial's chief financial officer, plays Santa Claus on Wednesday in Chicago as he and his staff handed the gifts to excited students, including Tia Martins, left, who had written "letters to Santa."
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updated 3:58 p.m. ET Dec. 21, 2007

CHICAGO - A Salvation Army shelter in a well-to-do Kansas county has an unprecedented waiting list that includes families who've lost their homes to foreclosure.

In Florida, a real estate agent who said she was having a tough time making it this year sought assistance from a food bank for herself and her children. And in Maryland, one agency that serves families said it's seeing more young, working, single mothers who move into shelters and ask family members to care for their kids. They just can't afford rent.

Stories like these tell of a holiday season rife with need across the country, but also what aid workers are calling a disturbing and growing need for assistance all year.

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Everywhere, people are feeling the crunch of rising gasoline and grocery prices, as well as utility bills, rent and mortgage payments. Those factors also are cutting into people's ability to donate.

"Not only can they not give, many — for the first time — have need and are coming to us," said Melissa Temme, a spokeswoman for the Salvation Army, where stories like that of the overflow at the Johnson County Family Lodge in Kansas are becoming increasingly common.

Last year, 4.8 million Americans got holiday assistance from the Salvation Army, everything from meals and clothing to gifts.

It is too early to tell if those numbers will go up this year. But while her organization generally sees a surge in giving of gifts and at kettles right before Christmas, Temme said she's sensed a general unease among staff about the level of need that's out there.

A growing need for food
Others said the same.

"This isn't a holiday shortage, per se. This is a shortage that's been building," said Ross Fraser, a spokesman for America's Second Harvest, a domestic hunger-relief organization based in Chicago. At Thanksgiving, the organization estimates that food banks nationally were short a total of 15 million pounds of food, or roughly 11.7 million meals.

Since then, his agency has heard about recent shortages at food banks, from New York, Illinois and Tennessee to Texas and California. One food bank in Dallas reports having to spend $100,000 a month buying food, because of declining donations of excess food from grocery stores and farmers through the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

"I don't think anybody ever thought food banks would be going out and buying food," Fraser said.

One food bank in Orlando, Fla., he said, told of a single mother who was forced to get food donations because her income as a real estate agent fell from $66,000 last year to just $18,000 this year, due to slumping housing sales.


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