Affordable Housing Finance
THE BUZZ
News
Food and Shelter Lines Grow
AFFORDABLE HOUSING FINANCE
• January 2009
LOCAL FOOD BANKS and shelters
don’t need the Labor Department
to tell them that jobless claims have
reached a seven-year high. They can
just look at the growing lines outside
their doors.
“You ride out these natural
disasters and economic downturns,
and you kind of feel there’s a light
at the end of the tunnel,” says Eric
Cooper, executive director of the San
Antonio Food Bank. “It seems right
now the tunnel is so dark. It’s uncertain
when there’s going to be relief.”
His organization, which aided
315,869 families in the fiscal year
that ended in June, saw an 85 percent
increase from the previous year—even
before thousands of Hurricane Ike
evacuees arrived in San Antonio in
September.
Other cities report similar stories.
In a local impact survey of 180 food
banks conducted by America’s Second
Harvest, now known as Feeding
America, last spring, 99 percent of the
respondents saw an increase in the
number of people being served compared
to the year before. The average
increase was about 20 percent.
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