Amid recession, Memphis becomes America's hunger capitalBy Shashank Bengali | McClatchy Newspapers
Posted on Friday, March 26, 2010
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — It wasn't long ago that Rachel Cales volunteered at her church's food pantry, bagging canned goods and emergency provisions for families that had fallen on hard times.
Last May, however, Cales lost her job managing a yogurt shop. Her elder daughter was about to be married and her two teenage children were living at home and looking for work. Suddenly, she couldn't afford the groceries her family needed, and she had to turn to the pantry for help.
"I never thought we'd have to ask anyone for food," said Cales, who lives on a tree-lined street in eastern Memphis, in a two-story house with prim blue shutters.
She's far from alone. This Southern city, long famous for blues and barbecue, has earned a grim new distinction: the hunger capital of the United States.
As more and more Americans struggle to pay their bills, a recent survey co-sponsored by Gallup found that 26 percent of people in greater Memphis couldn't afford to buy the food their families needed at some point over the previous 12 months, the highest rate in the nation.
Rest of article at
http://www.mcclatchydc.com/2010/03/26/91171/amid-recession-memphis-becomes.htmlunhappycamper comment: And in other news, President Obama requests another $40 billion dollars to continue the Afghanistan occupation. Call me silly, but I think the occupations are just plain wrong - economically, politically and morally.