Skip navigation

Economy takes harsh toll on relief agencies

Charities, food banks report less coming in to help rising number of poor

Video
  Starved for resources
Corporate donations are also down, which means slim pickings for food pantries. Krista Klaus of NBC affiliate WFLA-TV reports from Tampa, Fla.

NBC News Channel

  Photo features  
  More
Image: Youth summer camp
AFP - Getty Images
  The Week in Pictures
A gaggle of geese, Russians in training and a refreshing California moment highlight a week of images.
image: Fish give a pedicure
AP
PhotoBlog
View and discuss the pictures and issues that caught our eyes.
By Alex Johnson
Reporter
MSNBC
updated 9:53 a.m. ET April 21, 2008

Alex Johnson
Reporter

This time last year, Braxter Cundiff had a job and an apartment in Albany, N.Y. Now he relies on the Capital City Rescue Mission for his meals and shelter.

“I thought I could stay in place and hold my own, and it got kind of hard,” he said. “The money I was making, living on my own, to buy food and pay rent — it was kind of real hard.”

Cundiff isn’t alone. In Albany, as in communities across the country, everyday Americans are seeking help with food and shelter in record numbers.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement

“It started increasing, and it just became overwhelming,” said Maxwell Amsong, a professionally trained chef who oversees food services at the nonprofit Christian mission, which served about 16,000 clients last month, a 23 percent rise over March 2007.

The story is retold over and over: 40 percent more clients for the Salvation Army in Panama City, Fla.; 20 percent more for Urban Ministries of Raleigh, N.C.; almost 200 percent more for the Community Ministries Food Pantry in Boise, Idaho.

It’s a double whammy. At the same time that the sagging economy is producing more mouths for relief agencies to feed, it is also drying up donations to help feed them.

In Raleigh, demand is so high that the Salvation Army’s soup kitchen is in danger of running out of enough food for the day’s meals.

“We were feeding 30 to 40 people a day. Now we’re up to 170 to 180 a day,” said Helen Randolph, who has run the soup kitchen for nearly 20 years. “I used to be able to make a monthly menu, but I can’t do that anymore. I have to make a day-to-day menu.”

Government programs fall short
Food prices have been rising steadily, by 4.4 percent over the past 12 months, according to economic data released last week. Gasoline is 53 cents a gallon steeper than it was a year ago. More Americans are losing their jobs, and those who do have work have seen their average weekly earnings fall for six straight months.

Everyday staples are the biggest culprit in rising food prices — the cost of bread rose by 14.7 percent in the past year, while milk was up by 13.3 percent — but the average food stamp benefit grew by only 4.8 percent, said the Agriculture Department, which administers the program. The average benefit is only $99 a month.

“We find that food stamps don’t stretch your dollar as far as they used to,” said Chris Long, a supervisor with the Department of Social Services in Washington County, Md.

And with summer coming up — when schoolchildren who get free or reduced-price lunches at school won’t get those guaranteed meals — relief agencies say they’re in a critical situation.

“People are going to continue to come in daily asking for food assistance, and the worst thing we want to do is say, ‘I’m sorry, we don’t have any of that,’” said Scott Hoover, volunteer coordinator for the Salvation Army in Panama City, Fla.

But with charitable contributions slowing to a trickle, the resources aren’t coming in.

“2007 seemed to be a typical year for fundraising until the environment changed dramatically at the end of the year with the mortgage crisis,” said Paulette V. Maehara, president of the 28,000-member Association of Fundraising Professionals, which advocates for philanthropy and ethical fundraising.

Participants in the association’s annual survey overwhelmingly chose the economy as the biggest challenge they faced in 2007. No other issue came close.

And “it looks like 2008 could be one of the most challenging years charities have seen in some time,” said Timothy R. Burcham, chairman of the association.