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LEHIGH VALLEY WEATHER

ANOTHER VIEW ‘No one should go hungry’ Food assistance in Pennsylvania is available

I have never been in the circumstance of being hungry and having nothing to eat.

My family, which includes my husband, our son, myself and our dog, has been fortunate in the fact we always have money to buy food to fill our freezer, refrigerator and pantry, and neither myself nor my husband have lost our jobs.

But that is not the case for many.

“More than 35 million people in the United States experienced hunger in 2019,” according to feedingamerica.org.

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, that number is higher - more than 42 million is estimated, with 13 million children, possibly.

“In Pennsylvania, 1,353,730 people are facing hunger and, of them, 383,520 are children. One in nine people face hunger. One in seven children face hunger,” the feedingamerica.org website also states.

June is National Hunger Awareness Month, so now is the perfect time to mark this awareness month and donate food items to your local food bank or volunteer at other fighting hunger community projects.

Many food banks and groups in the Lehigh Valley and beyond are doing a great job providing perishable and nonperishable food, personal items and meals to those in need.

In Whitehall, there are Whitehall Food Pantry and Whitehall-Coplay Hunger Initiative; in Coplay, Coplay Food Bank; in Northampton, Northampton Area Food Bank; in Bath, Bath Area Food Bank; and in Catasauqua, Catasauqua Community Food Bank.

Other organizations, churches, schools and small groups also pull together to provide much-needed assistance to their community members.

I will never forget the first time I met with Shari Noctor, president of Whitehall-Coplay Hunger Initiative.

I was doing a story on a garden project she was helping with at one of the Whitehall-Coplay School District elementary schools.

In explaining why she organizes and contributes so much of her time and resources to hunger and food projects, she said, “No one should go hungry.”

It is a very simple statement but one that has continued to make an impact on me to this day. Its message and mission are what I am teaching my son as he continues to grow and mature.

Other organizations helping in the fight against hunger are Christ’s Church at Lowhill Food Pantry, Parkland C.A.R.E.S. and East Penn Food Coalition.

Together these boards, organizers and volunteers are truly making a difference in people’s lives. Thank you.

On a larger scale, food resources in Pennsylvania include Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), on.pa.gov/3d03Zq3; Summer Food Service Program, fns.usda.gov/meals4kids; Women, Infants and Children Program (WIC), pawic.com; Senior Food Box Program, on.pa.gov/3i0PVTk; Feeding PA, feedingpa.org; Hunger-Free PA, hungerfreepa.org; and food banks, https://on.pa.gov/3ct4k4K.

If you need help feeding yourself or family, don’t hesitate to reach out. Assistance is here.

Stacey A. Koch

editorial assistant

Whitehall-Coplay Press

Northampton Press

Catasauqua Press

The Rev. Gordon Camp, pastor of Union Lutheran Church, Schnecksville, discusses the need for the ULC Free Pantry in front of the church.
FILE PHOTOS Parkland C.A.R.E.S. Food Pantry Executive Director Katrina Sundstrom places a jar of spaghetti sauce on a shelf at the food pantry.