1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

Military Families Rely on Food Donations

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by gifford1967, Oct 19, 2006.

  1. gifford1967

    gifford1967 Member
    Supporting Member

    Joined:
    Feb 4, 2003
    Messages:
    8,310
    Likes Received:
    4,659
    This is just unf-in believable. What a disgrace. The most powerful country in the history of world can't provide basic necessities for its soldiers and their families. Maybe we should spend less on military contractor boondoggles and more on getting our military families the basics.



    Helping the hungry on base

    Many military families rely on donated goods

    By Rick Rogers
    STAFF WRITER

    October 13, 2006

    The women and children who formed a line at Camp Pendleton last week could have been waiting for a child-care center to open or Disney on Ice tickets to go on sale.

    Instead, they were waiting for day-old bread and frozen dinners packaged in slightly damaged boxes. These families are among a growing number of military households in San Diego County that regularly rely on donated food.
    As the Iraq war marches toward its fourth anniversary, food lines operated by churches and other nonprofit groups are an increasingly valuable presence on military bases countywide. Leaders of the charitable groups say they're scrambling to fill a need not seen since World War II.

    Too often, the supplies run out before the lines do, said Regina Hunter, who coordinates food distribution at one Camp Pendleton site.

    “Here they are defending the country. . . . It is heartbreaking to see,” said Hunter, manager of the on-base Abby Reinke Community Center. “If we could find more sources of food, we would open the program up to more people. We believe anyone who stands in a line for food needs it and deserves it.”

    The base's list of recipients swells by 100 to 150 people a month as the food programs streamline their eligibility process, word spreads among residents and ever-proud Marines adjust to the idea of accepting donated goods.

    At least 2,000 financially strapped people in North County qualify for food and other items given out at the center and a Camp Pendleton warehouse run by the Military Outreach Ministry.

    To the south, about 1,500 individuals pick up free food, diapers or furniture at Miramar Marine Corps Air Station and several military-oriented distribution sites supported by churches and the San Diego Food Bank.

    The numbers don't include military households that frequent other charities countywide to get enough to eat.

    “I cry tears of joy every week,” said Patty Dutra of the Military Outreach Ministry. “You are looking at them and saying 'thank you' and they say, 'No, thank you.' ”

    Some of the women in last week's food line at Camp Pendleton were newbies like Jennifer Stocker, 25. A friend told Stocker, the mother of 7-week-old Shylah and wife of Cpl. James Stocker, about the service. She arrived an hour early to get first picks.

    “It looks good,” Jennifer Stocker said as she glanced at the tables stacked with loaves of French bread and doughnuts covered with red, white and blue sprinkles.

    “It looks helpful,” Stocker added as Shylah gummed her mother's wrist. “I'm definitely going to start doing more of this.”

    Also present were food-line veterans trying to make ends meet. Michelle Rankins counts herself as a reluctant regular.

    “I do this for the kids,” said Rankins, whose husband is a corporal deployed in Iraq. “They need the protein from the bread. For me and my family – for a lot of the families at Camp Pendleton – this (program) is a necessity. I come every week.”

    Barbara Chavez deals with many similarly challenged families in San Diego County. She is director of Military Outreach Ministries, which supplies bread and other staples to troops and their loved ones at the Miramar base, a Navy housing community in Lakeside and other locations.

    “The bases are in the more expensive parts of the county and things like gas, food, insurance and rent are just higher here,” Chavez said. “I got a call last night from a lady in need. She ran out of baby formula and diapers. She's 22 with two kids under 3 and her husband is in Iraq. She was distraught and cried for 10 minutes. This happens more often than not.”

    On the Miramar base last week, Melissa Dixon came to receive diapers, paper plates and canned goods. Her husband, John, is a lance corporal stationed there.

    “Believe it or not, there are a lot of military families struggling,” said Dixon, 22, as fighter jets flew overhead.

    At the Navy housing complex in Lakeside, Nicole Purselley said she wouldn't know what to do without the donated food.

    “One week we couldn't come to get food because we didn't have gas money,” said Purselley, a mother of three whose husband is a hull technician aboard the Bonhomme Richard, an amphibious assault ship based in San Diego.

    Purselley's disabled mother, Kathy Frisbie, lives with the family. Frisbie said the gracious spirit in which the food is given makes taking it easier on their pride.

    “They don't look down on us because we are here,” Frisbie said.

    During World War II, the National Presbyterian Church started an outreach program for military families coast to coast. In 1968, the Presbytery of San Diego took responsibility for the local chapter.

    The presbytery spun off its military food program this year, with oversight now divided between the Military Outreach Ministry in North County and Military Outreach Ministries in the rest of the region.

    “(Service members) struggle because of our cost of living,” said Faye Bell, executive director for the Military Outreach Ministry. “The lower-ranking enlisted guys do all the hard work and still have the stress of not being able to take care of their families the way they wish they could.”

    http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20061013/news_7m13bread.html
     
  2. losttexan

    losttexan Member

    Joined:
    Oct 18, 1999
    Messages:
    595
    Likes Received:
    0
    Stop right there!

    The Republicans support the military and the Democrats do not.

    Who sends our troops to fight for Oil? (at a cost of over 2700 americans and counting with no end in sight)
    Who sends them in without enough body armor?
    Who extends their enlistments (back door draft)?
    Who is over extending our Guard units?
    Who buys crazy expensive weapons designed for the cold war when the families of our soldiers have to rely on food donations?

    Wait,....Who uses "support our troops" as a catch phrase?
     
    #2 losttexan, Oct 19, 2006
    Last edited: Oct 19, 2006
  3. mc mark

    mc mark Member

    Joined:
    Aug 31, 1999
    Messages:
    26,195
    Likes Received:
    472
    This has been going on for generations in the military.

    I have vivid memories of families donating food to our family while my dad did his two tours of Vietnam. Wearing donated clothes to school and hoping the other kids wouldn’t notice I might be wearing their old clothes.

    The sad part is that we weren’t poor or destitute. My mom always had jobs while my dad was overseas, but it always seemed like a struggle to make ends meet.

    Same as it ever was I guess.
     
  4. pirc1

    pirc1 Member

    Joined:
    Dec 9, 2002
    Messages:
    14,139
    Likes Received:
    1,884
    The soldiers are always expandable in any country from the beginning of the time. The only difference is that the Republicans make it sound like they are actually pro military. What they are is that they are actually pro defense contractors, better killing machines and more efficient killing methods. They could care less about the actual soldiers fighting on the ground. They should just tell it like it is, but so many soldiers in the military could not see through their hypocrisy for whatever reason.
     
  5. Mr. Brightside

    Joined:
    Mar 27, 2005
    Messages:
    18,965
    Likes Received:
    2,148
    I guess adding another "we support the troops" sticker on the back of an SUV won't help when these children are hungry.
     
  6. Oski2005

    Oski2005 Member

    Joined:
    Nov 14, 2001
    Messages:
    18,100
    Likes Received:
    447
    Maybe we could put those military families to work in sweatshops making those "Support the Troops" yellow ribbon magnets instead of buying them from China.
     
  7. oomp

    oomp Member

    Joined:
    Feb 9, 2000
    Messages:
    4,557
    Likes Received:
    86
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KmsOIjzQ1V8

    Some language may be NSFW
     
  8. HayesStreet

    HayesStreet Member

    Joined:
    Oct 1, 1999
    Messages:
    8,507
    Likes Received:
    181
    Exactly. But it's a damn shame.
     

Share This Page