Feed The Dream

15 04 2011

Did you know that in Hamilton more than 23,000 students get a breakfast, lunch and/or snack each day at their local school or community centre? Many of these kids, 1 in 4, live in poverty. Others lack the required nutrition to get them through the day because busy lives, work schedules, or stressful home situations get in the way. Hamilton Partners in Nutrition (HPIN) provides nutritional meals and snacks to students across this community, funded largely through provincial money but relying also on donations and fundraising. Rising food costs require ongoing efforts to raise money and a significant dependence on volunteer dedication.

On Saturday, June 18th you can support their work by supporting their Feed The Dream Auction. It will be held at Hamilton’s Discovery Centre and will include both silent and live auction events as well as entertainment and hors d’oevres. Opportunities to help include buying event tickets, donating auction items, volunteering for the evening, or advertising in the auction brochure. EnMark Associates is pleased to be donating an auction item, and challenges readers of this site to do the same.

Full details can be found at www.partnersinnutrition.ca or by calling 905-522-1148, ext. 301.  Be sure to find out about the special pre-auction cruise aboard The Harbour Queen.

There are more than 100 student nutrition programs in Hamilton, and as of June 2010 they serve 447,183 breakfast meals and 650,690 snacks with the help of 6,695 volunteers. Parents alone contribute more than 45,000 hours of volunteer time, estimated to represent more than $750,000.

 

Karen’s recent work has included a project with the Hamilton Community Foundation and area stakeholders to develop a universal school-based nutrition program in Hamilton. Buildiing from what is already in place, the initiative aims to make nourishment available to all elementary school students (secondary school population would come next) and to help the community move forward towards the goal of being the best place in which to raise a child. Watch this blog and the Hamilton Community Foundation’s web site (see link at right) for updates on the project.





Food, Glorious Food

26 01 2011

All things organic, local and sustainable are on the agenda for the upcoming Hamilton food policy conference (a first). “Hammering Out a Food Policy for Hamilton: Preparing the Ground” is set for Thursday, February 10th at the Royal Botanical Gardens and will feature speakers (including Gord Hume, author of Local Food Revolution), presentations, workshops and networking. Registration deadline is February 4th. Cost for the full day event is $30 including refreshments and lunch (local and healthy, of course!).

The event is hosted by the Community Food Security Stakeholders Committee, Hamilton Eat Local, and Slow Food Hamilton. These groups may not be particularly well known but are part of an increasing movement to connect local residents with the foods they eat. They will mark February as Farm Month, for example, with various events (for details go to www.environmenthamilton.org) including a gathering at the newly-renovated Hamilton Farmers’ Market and a food film festival on Locke St.

Growing your own vegetables this year? Interested in ways to eat local all year round? Or just wondering what sustainable agricultural policy looks like? These events are for you. A nice opportunity to escape winter and think about seeds, soil and Savoy cabbage instead of snow and shovels for a bit. And, if you’re a parent, these promise many teachable moments…how far, for example, did the items on your dinner menu tonight have to travel before making it to your table? Do your teens know where they can get a locavore pizza? Did you know you can volunteer for a local fruit tree project to pick (and share) fruit that would otherwise go to waste? Fun to find out, and important information for community members who agree that  local food is better food.





Hunger Heroes

14 12 2010

Hats off to some of Hamilton’s generous responders to the need for food and support among those experiencing hunger in this community:

The Copetown Lions Club has “adopted” King George School on Gage Avenue North in Hamilton, supporting a nutritious snack program through donations  of $3,700 in the past year. Along with donations from other area Lions Clubs, some $12,000 has been raised by this generous service group. The Club will also host about 250 students from King George for a free turkey lunch at the Lions Community Hall in Copetown.

No Frills and Fortinos grocery stores (part of the Loblaw chain) are hosting the 2010 Extra Helping Holiday National Food Drive in stores now – the aim is to raise $1.35 million and 1.2 million lbs of food to combat hunger across Canada. Here in Hamilton, monies and food raised will go to Hamilton Food Share. Donate money at checkout, or pick up needed food items to deposit in designated collection containers. Items of particular need include canned meat and fish, pasta, rice, dry and canned soups and stews, canned fruit and vegetables, flour, cereals, peanut butter, canned or powdered milk, beans and legumes, butter, infant formula and baby food.

More than 18,000 people rely on food banks in this community, and by extension rely upon our generosity. This is the time of year when the level of that generosity peaks, but please remember the food bank each and every time you shop for groceries throughout the year. Pick up an extra item or two, especially from among the needed items list above, and drop it in the collection container when you check out. Hamilton’s hungry thank you for doing so.





World Food Day

16 10 2010

October 16 is World Food Day. This year, the theme of the day is “united against hunger”.

We are fortunate in Canada to be among the world’s healthiest populations and producers of significant amounts of food. From grains to fish, our ability to draw from the land and waters is abundant. Still, we have our own problems with hunger. Many find this surprising, but we nonetheless have a sizeable number of people in this country who do not get adequate food on a regular basis. Food banks, hot meal programs, community gardens, and various public health and community initiatives are aimed at this food insecurity problem. Here in Hamilton, local farmers and concerned donors have joined in the battle against hunger. Hamilton Food Share was out in those fields today, receiving freshly-harvested carrots destined for food banks in the coming days. Increasing the amount of fresh food available to food bank users is just one of the challenges facing local service providers.

In coming weeks Karen will be working with the Hamilton Community Foundation to support a community initiative aimed at bringing enhanced nutrition and food intake to local schools. Hunger hits children particularly hard, negatively affecting their development and learning. More than 8,000 children use local food banks despite breakfast programs and school nutrition initiatives. Watch for future updates about the local food insecurity landscape and the Hamilton Community Foundation initiative.

Of interest, the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization has a world hunger map indicating levels of food insecurity and hunger around the globe. With the exception of Australia and New Zealand, the current map shows the entire southern hemisphere as being hungry to varying degrees. North of the equator, parts of Central America, Mexico, the Caribbean, China, the Middle East and Southeast Asia are indicated on the map as experiencing some level of hunger but nowhere in North America, Europe, Scandinavia, Japan, or the rest of Asia.

For more information, visit www.fao.org.

To support local food banks, go to: www.hamiltonfoodshare.org. Every $1 in donations raises $5 in food. To support the Hamilton Community Foundation, go to: www.hcf.on.ca.

You can add your name to the worldwide anti-hunger petition by going to: www.1billionhungry.org.





Hungry in Hamilton

6 09 2010

The start of school for another year will be bittersweet for some families. The excitement of returning to the classroom can be exhilarating for kids…seeing friends again, new learning adventures. But, for those who don’t always have enough to eat it’s a compromised milestone. In Hamilton, where community leaders are working to make this “the best place to raise a child”, attention is being paid to children’s nutritional requirements and the impact of hunger in the classroom. This is a community challenge, not simply one for parents or educators.

According to Hamilton Food Share, nearly 20,000 people turn to local food banks each month. That’s nearly four times the number using food banks in 2001. Children under age 18 make up 42% of these food bank users but account for only 26% of our population. The disproportionate reliance on food banks by children is just part of this signficant community problem.

Comment heard the other day: “Parents are the ones responsible for feeding their kids. Just how much of that free food goes to those who really don’t need it? There’s so much abuse in the system. I don’t support it.”

Sorry to say this is not a rare opinion despite being misinformed. Yes, parents are responsible for feeding their children and many make extreme sacrifices trying to do just that. As for the notion of abuse in the system, I have come to think this is simply a ready excuse for not knowing any better. Lining up at a food bank, going through the screening process, and leaving with what little happens to be available (whether it’s food you like or not) isn’t something done on a whim. And there’s nothing “free” about the food distributed by local food banks. The costs can be measured in homes, neighbourhoods, communities and society overall – not to mention in humility, dignity, spirit and independence. I count my blessings each time I donate to the food banks. The last economic crunch tipped the balance for many who now need help at the end of the month. Some lost jobs, some have more than one but still can’t make ends meet. 

Thirty Percent (30%) of food bank recipients report frequent problems eating balanced meals and providing balanced meals for their children.  Hamilton Food Share’s HungerCount 2009 reported more than 8,300 children access food banks every month. According to Dietitians of Canada, “mothers sacrifice their own food to protect their children from hunger.” Despite access to a food bank, many parents struggle. One in five children do not eat a balanced meal most days of the week and almost 20% of children using a food bank do not eat breakfast every day. There is no lack of evidence about children and hunger. Kids need to be ready to learn. We know that hungry children in food insecure households frequently experience a lack of focus in school and in the long term can experience learning impairments.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation indicates affordable housing should account for no more than 30% of total household income. For single parents on Ontario Works (OW) rent will account for 49%-77% of  total household income; for single people on OW, 67%-100% of their income goes to rent. Doesn’t leave much for anything else, including food.

What can we do to change this? If you agree that social assistance rates are insufficient you can contact your elected representatives and add your voice to those who advocate for change. Do what you can to support those in need in this community – donate, volunteer, share food, support school-based nutrition initiatives, and educate others about this community issue. Below are some good starting points.

Hamilton Food Share web site: www.hamiltonfoodshare.org.

Hamilton Roundtable for Poverty Reduction: www.hamiltonpoverty.ca.

Hamilton Community Foundation: www.hcf.on.ca.

Check out the 6th Annual Empty Bowls event hosted by the Potters’ Guild of Hamilton & Region during their Fall Sale 2010, November 5-7. www.hamiltonpotters.ca.  This event raises funds for Hamilton Food Share (more than $20,000 last year) – $20 lets you take home one of the many handmade soup bowls on sale and helps support this great initiative. I have several in my collection and use them all the time – they are meant to remind us that there are always empty bowls out there unless we do something to change that.

2  The Fall Sale 2009 raised $20,420 for Hamilton Food Share Empty Bowls