Saturday, February 25, 2012

St. Louis Food Pantry Demand Doubles In One Year


While the national news media narrative continues to be one of economic recovery, many local news stories appear every day that completely contradict the idea--far more stories, in fact, that I could ever hope to post here. Stlouistoday.com has one particularly telling such report:
Kornblum Jewish Food Pantry, which is wrestling with a spike in demand, will soon move into a new building that has more space.

The pantry, at 10950 Schuetz Road, recently bought a 21,000-square-foot building less than a mile away at 10601 Baur Boulevard and plans to move there by midyear. The nonprofit organization said the upgrade will cost $1 million.

"We were feeding 2,500 people a month last year, and now we are feeding over 5,000 people per month," said Fred Steinbach, board chairman of the Jewish Family and Children's Service, which runs the food pantry. "We didn't have room to run the facility efficiently."

The pantry serves the St. Louis region, but in recent years more clients are coming in from areas such as Ladue, Chesterfield and Creve Coeur. Other food pantries in the region have also seen spikes in demand from people in affluent suburbs.

"We have people picking up food at the pantry this year who donated last year," Steinbach said. "What we are hearing is people have mortgages that they can't unload and a house that they can't sell, and their families still need to eat."
Maybe some of those national news reporters stenographers who keep repeating that same old tired recovery line should venture out of their little bubbles sometime and interview some of these people down at ground level. Too bad they would never condescend to do so.

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