Coronavirus Pandemic Tests Food Banks Throughout W.Va.

 

As restrictions on daily activities tighten and confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus continue to rise, across West Virginia many community-based food pantries report more people are using their services. 

While federal food resources are being expanded during the pandemic, some organizations operating on the ground say they are grappling with how COVID-19 is changing day-to-day operations.

The closure of restaurants and the rush to stockpile food has impacted the need across the state. In addition to the higher demand, food banks are also struggling to figure out how to deliver food to the elderly and vulnerable populations with limited staff and volunteers, who are in some cases vulnerable themselves. 

“I think it’s important to remember that before this COVID-19 crisis, we were already in a crisis around food insecurity,” said Joshua Lohnes, director of food policy research at the West Virginia University Food Justice Lab

According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, on average between 2016 to 2018, 15.7 percent of West Virginians were food insecure, which means, at times, their household struggled to have enough to eat. 

The Mountain State experiences a high level of poverty, which creates the conditions for hunger, Lohnes said. An estimated 300,000 West Virginians relied on food pantries each month before the coronavirus pandemic ground the U.S. economy to a halt and put, so far, at least 28,000 West Virginians temporarily out of work

The state’s 550 food pantries serve a vital role in many communities, but their services and capacity varies widely, according to Lohnes. Especially in the most impoverished counties of West Virginia, food pantries play a vital role. 

‘We’re Just Waiting’

At the Five Loaves and Two Fishes Food Bank in McDowell County, supplies are limited, and to ensure safety, the volunteers are asking people to make appointments to pick up food. 

Linda McKinney is the co-owner of this food bank, which is entirely volunteer run. In a recent video produced by her son-in-law, J.D. Belcher, she explains the day-to-day challenges the food bank is facing during this time. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Linda McKinney walks around the Five Loaves and Two Fishes Food Bank In Kimball, McDowell County in December.

“People were texting me, they want to know, ‘are you still going to give out food tomorrow?’ I have to wait. I don’t know. We’re just waiting,” she said. 

This past weekend, McKinney estimated there were about 80 people on the waiting list. 

“But we have to regroup on Monday to see how much food we’ve got, and how much we can stretch it,” she said. “Then if you can go out and shop, like you did this morning, if you’ve got a child and a family, you’re going to get some cereal. We may be able to give them a gallon of milk.”

One item in particularly high demand is baby formula. The food bank has run out of baby formula, McKinney said, and they are having to send away parents and family members in need. 

Many of the clients who use the food bank in McDowell County are grandparents raising their infant grandchildren, and they do not therefore have formula to feed these babies.

 

Overnight Increase

The state’s two largest food banks, which distribute the bulk of federally-purchased food aid, said they too are seeing an increased need. 

Chad Morrison with Mountaineer Foodbank in Gassaway, West Virginia said in an email the organization, which provides food to pantries across the state, has seen “almost a 30 percent increase in need almost overnight.”

He said currently the food chain is still available, but the surge “is a massive undertaking for our organization and our network of feeding agencies throughout the state.”

The Facing Hunger Food Bank in Huntington provides food to 220 member pantries throughout West Virginia, in Boone, Cabell, Jackson, Lincoln, Logan, Kanawha, Mason Mingo, McDowell, Putnam, Wayne and Wyoming counties. 

Executive Director Cynthia Kirkhart said the food bank has also seen a roughly 30 percent increase in emergency food assistance requests for individuals. 

Meanwhile, the organization is seeing a decline in donations from retailers. Due to “panic buying,” many grocers have less items to offer. 

There’s also a push to help seniors who especially are homebound at this time due to higher risk. Kirkhart said Facing Hunger is providing hundreds of prepackaged meals to homes throughout Lincoln, Wayne, Cabell and Mingo Counties. Many of these have never before used the food bank.

Facing Hunger is also stepping in to help individuals, as some pantries throughout southern West Virginia are closing. Kirkhart said she has noticed several member pantries shut their doors in the last few weeks. 

“The majority of folks who are managing them, running pantries, they meet that vulnerable population description,” Kirkhart said. “So some of them have concerns about the volunteers’ health and well being. Some of the churches have determined from maybe their higher up organizations, that they’re going to close through the end of the month or until Easter. So then if the church is closed, the pantries can’t operate as per their usual.” 

In Wheeling, the House of the Carpenter has seen an over 200 percent increase in the amount of people requesting assistance. Executive Director Michael Linger said he expected this uptick in demand when he heard about the first cases of people in the United States to test positive for Covid-19 a few weeks ago.

“We made some large purchases of food late February, early March, in anticipation that this might happen,” he said. “So, we’re actually pretty good on food at the moment.”

Another way Linger’s organization has prepared for the increased demand is by suspending their other services, which includes after school programs and a thrift store. Instead, they plan to focus solely on the food pantry for the time being. The House of the Carpenter is currently operating its food pantry as a curbside pickup operation to keep up with social distancing recommendations.

Many of those stopping at the House of the Carpenter are people who have not used their services in the past.

“[There are] two things that we haven’t seen before. One is a large number of people whose jobs have been put on hold. And so they’re waiting to get any kind of, you know, unemployment benefits or anything that will allow them to shop. The second is people going into the grocery store and finding limited resources,” Linger said.

With panic buying surging across the country, necessities like canned goods and bread can be hard to find at the grocery store.

Linger said his food bank has also seen an increase in the number of children in need of meals, after Ohio County Schools recently suspended their bagged lunch program, where students could pick up food at their bus stops.

“Longterm, based on the number of people we’re seeing, we don’t know how long our supply will last, but we will continue to distribute food for as long as it lasts,” he said. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Craig Hammond shows off Bluefield Union Mission’s food supply in mid-December.

‘Gaps On The Shelves’

Director Craig Hammond at the Bluefield Union Mission said he’s noticed a similar increase, around 35 to 40 percent, in food and hygiene item requests. 

“As we look at our food pantry shelves, we’re starting to see gaps on the shelves,” Hammond said. “We had a full pantry starting off in March. We bought canned fruit and other shelf stable food items. I think we’ll be running a little low by the end of the month, and now we could sure use some of those items.”

Union Mission serves food, shelter and clothing needs to people in a five-county area, including McDowell, Mercer, Monroe and Summers counties in West Virginia, and Tazewell County in Virginia. Hammond said he doesn’t expect to turn anyone away at this time, but staff and volunteers have made some changes to limit potential disease spread at the mission.

“We have, because of the crisis, tried to reduce the density of people in one place,” he said. “When you serve a lot of people, it’s not that easy, but we’ve been actually getting pretty good at it.”

Making Adjustments

Credit Glynis Board / West Virginia Public Broadcasting file photo
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting file photo

Food pantries and soup kitchens are also adjusting how they provide their services to the people who use them. Many have moved to curb-side pickup, or appointment-only services. 

At the Salvation Army of Monongalia and Marion counties, location in downtown Morgantown, Sheldon Greenland said the organization has seen an uptick in need for all its services, including emergency food bags, help with utility bills and hot meals. 

The organization serves a hot meal daily from 4 p.m. to 5:15 p.m. Since the pandemic began, Greenland said more individuals are taking advantage. On an average day, the Morgantown location serves between 100-120 people, he said. Lately, it’s been between 125-140. 

The soup kitchen has also had to make adjustments in how it serves patrons to stay in line with state and federal guidelines related to the coronavirus. 

Usually they invite people inside to sit and eat in their cafeteria, but now they are providing the meal as takeout. 

“It kind of breaks our heart because we built a really good culture in our cafeteria, but we have to maintain the distance,” Greenland said. He said they will soon be adding hand washing stations outside the building for those experiencing homelessness. 

Like other food pantries, they are also recalibrating where they source their food. 

“A lot of our food was donated from some of our local restaurants, and most of them are closing,” Greenland said. 

They have increased their orders from the USDA. However, many other pantries are doing the same. 

“It is really a conundrum that we’re all facing right now,” he said. “But we want to be able to stay open so that we can continue to serve our communities.”

‘A Day To Day Situation’

Union Mission’s food pantry in Charleston recently began an “elder care initiative” to deliver food to seniors in the program’s network. 

After purchasing $20,000 of food for roughly 70 seniors, Union Mission CEO Jason Quintrell said Tuesday evening the effort was already running dangerously low on funds. 

On Tuesday, Quintrell said the program was unable to accept new seniors at this time.

“If I open this up to the public, and I [can’t] produce food, that really worries me,” he said. “I’m going to do the best I can with the people that we contact and set up appointments, but right now it’s like a day to day situation.”

 

 

Eastern Panhandle Response

Not all food pantries are reporting challenges, however. Some food pantries in the Eastern Panhandle region of West Virginia are preparing for a possible storm, but they’ve not seen a drastic increase in clientele yet.

Berkeley County’s largest food pantry, Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry, located in Martinsburg, is open Monday through Friday. Beverly Van Metre, president of the Berkeley County CCAP Loaves and Fishes Food Pantry, said they’ve been busy, but they also haven’t seen as many people as they’d expected.

Credit Mountaineer Food Bank
/

In Grant County, Vice chairman of the Petersburg Interface Pantry Melissa Collens said they’ve seen a minor increase in the number of families who have called for food, but it’s not clear whether it has to do with the coronavirus.

“We are doing okay … [and] we’ve taken some measures to be more efficient,” Collens said.

In Mineral County, Faith in Action Food Pantry has closed “for the foreseeable future,” according to the pantry’s phone voice machine, due to the “safety of our staff and our clients.”

Government Response

 

During Gov. Jim Justice’s daily press conference on Tuesday, March 24, West Virginia National Guard Major General James Hoyer said the Guard is aware that some food pantries are struggling. He said the Guard, through West Virginia Voluntary Organizations Active in Disaster, or VOAD, is working to provide help. Hoyer said Justice has instructed the Guard to prioritize supporting the state’s vulnerable populations, including children and the elderly.

“We will continue to build out a plan to sustain support for our vulnerable population,” Hoyer said. He said they plan to work with retailers to ensure that food stays on the shelves in grocery stores, to help reduce some of the high demand for donated food at food pantries.

On Wednesday, March 25, Hoyer said more than 600 “food packs” were assembled. Packs contain multiple days of food and will be distributed to both seniors and families with children, he said. 

Last week, Congress passed the Families First Coronavirus Response, which allocated an additional $400 million for The Emergency Food Assistance Program, the federal program that provides food for distribution to food insecure households through food pantries and soup kitchens. 

According to Lohnes at WVU, West Virginia’s share of this money, based on a formula, is about 0.62 percent, or about $1.9 million in emergency food dollars. The state is also slated to receive around $620,000 in administrative dollars to help food banks distribute the additional supplies.

He said that while that is positive, food banks across West Virginia are already struggling to move food because of a lack of administrative resources, including funding to pay staff, for fuel and for cold storage.  

“With the increased demand food banks will now likely need even more,” he said. 

With the increase in federal assistance, and quick response of school districts and food pantries to serve people during this fast-moving crisis, Lohnes said hopes those lessons can be applied once the pandemic has subsided. 

“It is amazing what’s been done in a week,” he said. “I think we need to be attentive to the policy shifts and learn from them so that we can ensure the right to adequate nutritious food for all, even once this crisis is beyond us.”

Wheeling Teaches Students a Thing or Two about Food Justice

A group of students from the University of Notre Dame just came to West Virginia for fall break. Instead of relaxing with friends, as many college students do, these guys got a taste of life in a food desert.

They report, it was surprisingly delicious, or it could be if there were a little more “food justice” in the world.

One in seven people in West Virginia has trouble putting food on the table at some point in the year (~15 percent), according to data from the US Census Bureau. Sometimes the problem is lack of money. Sometimes it’s access to good food. And many communities exist that are disproportionately affected. 

A nonprofit called Grow Ohio Valley is working to help more people get access to healthy meals by growing food in abandoned lots in Wheeling. The organization is also trying to teach people about existing food disparities. One way organizers are getting ideas out is by inviting college students in for a “Food Justice Immersion Program.”

What is Food Justice?

The definition of food justice is often debated but for many people it means the right for everyone to have access to plenty good and healthful foods. This idea was central to the immersion program the non-profit Grow Ohio Valley hosted in Wheeling.

FOOD JUSTICE is the right of communities everywhere to produce, process, distribute, access, and eat good food regardless of race, class, gender, ethnicity, citizenship, ability, religion, or community. Includes: Freedom from exploitation Ensures the rights of workers to fair labor practices Values-based: respect, empathy, pluralism, valuing knowledge Racial Justice: dismantling of racism and white privilege Gender equity(See more at: http://www.iatp.org/documents/draft-principles-of-food-justice#sthash.iBMx87MH.dpuf)

Credit Gabrielle Marshall
/
Students from the University of Notre Dame hang out on 14th street in Wheeling, waiting for the next immersive experience.

Students from Notre Dame

Caroline Skulski pulled her blonde hair pulled back into a ponytail somewhere on the back of her head. She was relaxed and unassuming. She gave the sense that nothing in life could be that bad. But Caroline cares about food and she cares about people. She’s a junior at the University of Notre Dame, and she volunteered to be one of the two group leaders in an food justice immersion program in West Virginia.

“My dad’s a doctor so we had a lot of medical school loans, so for a while, not comfortable life,” she said. “But then after he was in practice, very comfortable. Definitely coming from a place of privilege. We were pretty lucky.”

The 16 students Skulski was leading had varying educational aspirations, and came from all across the United States. What tied them together, aside from being enrolled at Notre Dame, was that they each decided they would spend their fall break living out of a homeless shelter in Wheeling, West Virginia, with a goal of exploring the food issues there. Grow Ohio Valley, a young organization bent on improving the food culture in the area, partnered with Notre Dame to bring students to the area.

“We really want to give the students a hand-on learning experience looking at food economy, the food system, and the problems that there are and potential solutions,” said GrowOV’s director of educational programs, Kate Marshall.

Marshall lives in East Wheeling where the students stayed for the week. The nearest supermarket is two and a half miles away (a 40 minute walk along roads mostly designed for vehicles).

“This is a food desert meaning, there is no easily accessible health food and healthy produce within walking distance and there’s only convenient stores to shop at,” Marshall said.

Credit Gabrielle Marshall
/
Students cross 16th street on their quest to buy lunch with $1.30.

Finding Food

Marshall started the immersion experience off by splitting students into two groups and sending them out onto the urban streets of East Wheeling. 100-year-old, faded Victorian row houses line the once-bustling roads. But today, entire neighborhoods have been torn down. The population has dwindled from 60,000 city residents in it’s heyday in the ‘30s and ‘40s, to about 27,000 according to the last census.

Credit Gabrielle Marshall
/
Students quickly decided to pool their money. They bought a loaf of wheat bread, an off-brand jar of peanut butter, jelly, and with the remaining coins, they bought several green bell peppers and a cucumber. No one bought anything to drink.

Erin Callaghan, is a sophomore at Notre Dame. Her group headed south with a portion of money in their pockets that was determined by dividing a month’s worth of food stamps into a daily meal’s allowance. In West Virginia that amounts to $1.30.

“We have to be creative in what we can find and what we can eat for lunch,” said Callaghan.

In a different part of town, the other group hit another convenience store. They picked up minute rice, a can of chili, and a dozen eggs.

“I think probably what shocked us the most was that everything there was so expensive based on the nutritional value, the cost seemed so unreasonable,” said Sophomore Kathleen Rocks, the other student group leader.

***All photos by Gabrielle Marshall

 

Food for Thought

 

Lunch provided plenty of food for thought. Marshall pointed out to students that there could be legal barriers to pooling funds because federal dollars are meant for individual families, not groups of people. Marshall also pointed out how good-intending government-funded programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) can clash with economic realities:

 

“Now we have federal dollars that are going to convenience stores that don’t actually support a community but support companies far away that are bringing food into our area that isn’t nutritionally sound and causes health risks to the people eating the food. Then our medical dollars are spent at a higher rate because people are sick.”

 

Credit Gabrielle Marshall
/
Farm 18, Grow Ohio Valley’s urban farm. Students pulled weeds, groomed vegetable beds, and harvested snacks as they learned about things like community gardens, urban farms, mobile food markets, and other ongoing efforts to combat food disparities.

Solutions

Exploring systemic issues related to the food economy led students beyond the trappings of convenience stores into abandoned lots that have been reclaimed by Grow Ohio Valley. NAT Students pulled weeds, groomed vegetable beds, and harvested snacks as they learned about possible solutions to the food problems here. Things like community gardens, urban farms, mobile food markets, and other efforts GrowOV and community members are engaged in trying to combat food disparities–disparities that often lead the most vulnerable in society to chronic health problems.

 

To that end, the group visited with health care providers like Dr. William Mercer to learn more about the kinds of health issues that ultimately crop up in food deserts.

 

“I came away more excited than they did just because of their enthusiasm. Here are some young kids who are interested in carrying the torch and hopefully make our society better.”

 

Credit Gabrielle Marshall
/
Late in the week students and community members and Grow OV staff prepared a feast in the community greenhouse in East Wheeling.

Growing Justice

 

Grow Ohio Valley’s education program director, Kate Marshall, says students left with new ideas of what “justice” means (and much more interest in growing gardens), but she observed that there was also room to continue to grow their understanding.  

She says post evaluations revealed that some students felt perhaps they ate too well during their stay. Marshall disagrees.

“True justice would be making it so that everybody could partake in that same table of plenty and healthful foods, not us eating less and joining the ranks of the unhealthy diet.”

She says the trip was meant to demonstrate the value and potential abundance to be found in local food economies.

“Out of 15 meals,” Marshall said, “we only served meat three times and utilized other protein sources in all our meals. We used over 16 local food sources to provide the bulk of food throughout the week.”

She had to pay a bit more upfront for local homemade breads and jams, but the ability to harvest from the garden provided a drastic reduction in the immersion program food budget (but not, Marshall noted, in the quality of the food).

Marshall says GrowOV plans to continue their immersion programs in spring, summer, and fall breaks. She says she might spend more time in the future talking about economic as well as ethical implications of eating locally. She wants kids, and everyone to realize the impacts of what we choose to eat everyday on a community’s health and well-being.

Parting Thoughts

Students stayed during the week in Wheeling at what’s referred to as a Winter Freeze shelter housed in the Youth Services System building in East Wheeling. The shelter is open during the coldest months of the year. It’s the only shelter that will let anyone stay regardless of legal or addiction problems. Marshall asked students to write a letter to the person who will be staying in the bed when the shelter opens later this year. 

Exit mobile version