Tag Archives: homeless families in Worcester

Tonight! Abby’s House Spring-Tacular!🌺🌻🌼🌷

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Parlee (left), Abby’s housing advocate, will be at Holy Cross tonight.

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The Abby’s House event also features Dorrie, proud mum of just rescued Peggy Sue. Here’s Peg resting – a few hours earlier she had a tooth extracted at the vet’s.😢 pic: D.M.

The annual Abby’s House Spring-Tacular fundraiser, a food and beverage tasting event, will take place TODAY – Thursday, April 20 – from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the College of the Holy Cross’ Hogan Campus Center.

The event will feature:

14 tasting stations🍤🍷

jewelry sales💍💎💍💖

surprise Buy-A-Bed boxes💕

and a silent auction.💋

The cost is $65 per person.

Money raised will help to support Abby’s overnight shelter, affordable housing programs, and advocacy for homeless women and their children.💙💜💛

For more information or to purchase tickets, visit http://www.abbyshouse.org/spring-tacular or contact Justina at Abby’s House at (508) 756-5486 Ext. 14.

Too many American schools are still flunking lunch!

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This summer the City of Worcester ran a kick-ass summer lunch/snack program for low-income/hungry kids at our parks – the USDA’s national Summer Food Service Program! This blue bus (pictured above) could be seen rolling down our city streets, even making stops at our branch libraries! … School’s begun! Hola, Ms. Lunch Lady! Unlike lots of school districts, the Worcester Public Schools work to incorporate fresh veggies and fruits into students’ meals – at every grade level! AND EVERY STUDENT CAN GET A FREE LUNCH! Go, WPS, go!!! – Rosalie T.

By Heather Moore

I don’t care what kids say — the school lunch lady is not trying to kill them. The federal government is. Well, I have my suspicions, at least. Many of the meals served as part of the National School Lunch Program are high in fat and cholesterol and contain considerably more sodium than fiber. They’re a heart attack in the making. I wonder if that’s why the American Heart Association has warned us that atherosclerosis – hardening of the arteries — begins in childhood and progresses into adulthood, at which point it can lead to coronary heart disease.

Most American schools serve the same artery-clogging meals that were served when I was a student, and frozen meals still had to be baked in the oven. How can we expect students to take a health teacher’s “healthy eating tips” seriously when their school cafeteria is serving unhealthy foods?

Salisbury steak, pepperoni pizza and chicken nuggets need to go the way of film projectors and hand-crank pencil sharpeners. And fast-food corporations should also be expelled from schools — or at least suspended until they serve more plant-based meals.

As Dr. Neal Barnard, the president of the nonprofit Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, says, “Fresh produce, legumes, whole grains, nuts, and seeds are nutritional powerhouses that study after study has shown to be quite literally lifesaving .… [D]iets high in animal protein are associated with a fourfold increase in the chance of dying from cancer or diabetes — making heavy meat and dairy consumption just as dangerous as smoking.”

Responsible parents teach their children not to smoke because cigarettes cause cancer and other health problems. For the same reason, they should make sure their kids don’t get hooked on hamburgers and other unhealthy foods. Let’s put more emphasis on teaching children to eat vegan meals — at school and at home. Kids will gladly eat plant-based meals, such as pasta, veggie burgers and black bean chili, if they’re delicious as well as nutritious.

Knowing this, the Coalition for Healthy School Food created the Cool School Food program to develop, test and implement plant-based meals in school cafeterias. The program — which helped two public schools in New York implement the first entirely plant-based school menus in the U.S. — aims to make it fun and exciting for young people to try new foods and learn about their health benefits.

Food Is Elementary, another school program that was recently featured in VegNews magazine, is also working to introduce children to plant-based foods, which the kids prepare and eat as part of a curriculum established by the founder of the Food Studies Institute, a New York-based nonprofit that helps school cafeterias incorporate low-fat, high-fiber foods into their menus.

We need more programs like these. Students are fed up with the unappetizing, inhumane and potentially disease-promoting fare that passes as lunch in many school cafeterias. Last year, students at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Chicago boycotted school lunch in an attempt to persuade officials to serve healthier meals, including more fresh fruit and vegetables.

That’s hardly an unreasonable request. The school cafeteria is supposed to be a source of nourishment, not disease. This year’s National School Lunch Week, which will be observed in October, aims to remind “parents, students and school officials that a healthy lunch helps students power through the day!”

But how can we expect kids to make it through the day — and learn compassion and empathy — if they’re eating unhealthy animal-based foods? We need to teach children that “v” is for vegan and serve them healthy, tasty, cruelty-free plant-based foods.

Today at 1:30 p.m. and … Helping the less fortunate – From Jim: Here’s Why I Stayed at a Homeless Shelter

Before we get to Jim’s speech, THIS JUST IN!

TODAY!

Congressman Jim McGovern, Mass. School Leaders, New England Patriots Call to Strengthen Student Access to School Meals

FOXBOROUGH – Today at 1:30PM, Congressman Jim McGovern, the New England Dairy & Food Council and the Massachusetts Association of School Committees are hosting a convening at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, titled Breaking the Cycle of Poverty: One Meal at a Time, in celebration of National School Breakfast Week to discuss actionable steps to help increase student access to school meals.

Congressman McGovern is a champion of childhood hunger issues and will highlight how the School Breakfast Program presents a huge opportunity to ensure that Massachusetts students, especially those who live with food insecurity, can get the nutrition they need to succeed in the classroom and beyond.

Joining Congressman McGovern will be key leaders from school districts across the state to issue a powerful call-to-action to the audience.

This event, will be held at Gillette Stadium today at 1:30 PM.

The goal of the event is for school committee members, superintendents and other key administrators to return to their communities and start a conversation with school nutrition professionals to actively support breakfast efforts.

WHO:
· Congressman Jim McGovern (MA-02)
·
New England Dairy & Food Council
·
Massachusetts Association of School Committees
·
New England Patriots Players
· Massachusetts School Leaders

WHAT: National School Breakfast Week: Breaking the Cycle of Poverty: One meal at a Time

WHERE: Gillette Stadium, 1 Patriot Place, Foxborough (Northeast Putnam Club Lounge at E1 entrance)

WHEN: Today, March 8 at 1:30 PM – 2:30 PM

**********

By Congressman Jim McGovern

Last week during our district work period, I spent the night at the Interfaith Hospitality Network, a family homeless shelter in Worcester. This was my second time spending a night there in recent years. It was a wonderful opportunity to hear firsthand the stories of families who are facing tough times and to see the incredible support provided by groups like IHN.

In today’s media environment where every development in the presidential campaign gets a breaking news banner, it’s easy to lose sight of the real issues impacting real families and homelessness is one of them.

In 2015, more than 500,000 Americans were homeless on any given night. Of that number, more than 200,000 were people in families and nearly 50,000 were veterans.

Even in Massachusetts, one of the richest states in the nation, homelessness continues to be a challenge in many of our communities. In recent years, state budget cuts have led to a record number of homeless children in Massachusetts and the overall uptick in homelessness has led to overcrowding in shelters with thousands of families being turned away.

In the richest country on the planet, it is simply astonishing that anyone is homeless, but the fact is this continues to be a persistent problem. Fortunately, there are amazing organizations like the Interfaith Hospitality Network that are making a difference.

IHN works in partnership with the faith community to provide shelter and assistance to families with children who are homeless. Their primary goals are to assist families in increasing their income and to help them secure permanent housing, while providing the critical support services necessary for them to succeed.

It’s a ‘community bed shelter’ that provides private bedrooms and shared living areas for six families at a time who are homeless but don’t qualify for state-funded shelters.

One of the points that the people I met made very eloquently was that sometimes life is very complicated and sometimes things don’t work out as you expect them to.

Many of the families that I met during my stay included at least one working parent. But they had fallen into the gap where they earned too little to make ends meet but too much to qualify for other housing assistance programs.

Some of the residents included college-educated parents with families that fell on hard times – maybe a parent is sick or a child’s sick, or a parent got laid off from a job. Those families are not there because they made poor choices; there were a series of events that led to this. One thing parents at the shelter have in common is that they love their kids more than anything and are working tirelessly to get back on their feet.

The families at IHN are not charged rent and work with a caseworker to budget and save money for their own apartments. The caseworker also helps families access necessary health care or counseling, learn job skills, enroll in job training or educational classes, and assists them with other life issues.

IHN is a very special place. It’s a home. It’s comfortable. It’s safe. Families prepare and eat dinner together. Children do their homework together, color in coloring books, and play games. IHN provides a sense of normalcy during times of turmoil and uncertainty for families.

With each visit to the IHN shelter, I am inspired to see that within our community, there are so many wonderful people who care about their neighbors who are going through difficult times and who want to get back on their feet. The volunteers and staff are incredible people. Places like IHN represent the best of our community and there is a real need for places like this.

Too often in this chamber, I have heard colleagues demonize and disparage America’s poorest families. But those who are homeless don’t fit into a stereotype. Every family faces different challenges. It’s hard work to be poor in America and the families I met are working hard for a better life for their kids. We should be helping them get back on their feet, not kicking them while they’re down, and certainly, we should not be indifferent to their struggles.

To help more of these families get ahead, we must do more at the national level to strengthen the social safety net to better address homelessness, food insecurity, and poverty and many other issues which deserve to be front and center.

Looking at the big picture, we need to be talking about how we can make sure that work pays enough so that all working families can afford rent and place to live, and be able to put food on the table for their kids. We might start by increasing, at long last, the federal minimum wage so that it’s a livable wage. If you work in this country, you ought not to be poor and you ought certainly not to be homeless.

In the richest country on the planet, I know we can solve homelessness. Spending a night at a homeless shelter is an incredible experience and I encourage more of my colleagues to do the same in their districts.

Those of us who serve in Congress are blessed that we don’t have to worry if we’ll have a roof over our heads on any given night. But there are many families, too many families, in this country who do. We need to do a better job of listening to their stories and lending a helping hand so they can get out of their difficult situations and move on to a better life.

I urge my colleagues to listen what I said today and do what I did and spend a night at a homeless shelter in their district.

Today! Starting at noon! Walk/run for the homeless at Elm Park!!

Today! Sunday – May 17

Elm Park

Starting time … NOON

Registration & Start Times:

5K Runner registration begins at noon (12 pm)

Walker registration begins at 1 pm

Walk+Run begins at 2 pm

Join us after the Walk+Run!

Food!  

Live music by the Chuck & Mud!

For more info, go to: walkrunforthehomeless.org 

With your help, this year we will:

Raise $30,000

Help 350 families maintain safe and stable housing.

Assist over 1000 additional people who need access to safe shelter, nutritional meals, and the household goods to move beyond homelessness.

Bring together with over 1,500 walkers, runners and volunteers to demonstrate a community commitment to ending family homelessness.

Everyone who participates in the Walk+Run makes a difference! Walk, run, volunteer or make a donation – every contribution helps to make a better Worcester!