Sunday, August 23, 2020

Food Lines Growing As Stimulus Checks Run Out




De Blasio's 'Utopia'? Quarter-Mile Food-Bank Line Spotted In Queens




Three weeks into a fiscal cliff, a large food bank line emerged on Saturday (Aug. 22) in Queens, a New York City borough, stretching for nearly a quarter-mile down the street. 
With each passing day, the failure of Congress and the Trump administration to agree on the next round of stimulus exerts more and more pressure on consumers, who now derive a quarter of all personal income from the government. 
The La Jornada food pantry, located on 133-36 Roosevelt Ave, Queens, usually hands out food packages to 1,000 families per week. Now, according to the New York Post, the number, in recent weeks, has skyrocketed to 10,000. 

"It reminds me of the picture from the Great Depression where a man in a suit and tie is giving another man in a suit and tie an apple. That's all he had," La Jornada's Pedro Rodriguez told The Post, adding that food supplies are running low. 
Rodriguez, a volunteer of the food pantry who is executive director, said, "We feel like we are underwater, drowning in a tsunami of people."He said the surge in hungry families coming to the food bank is "unbelievable."

The Post interviewed Walter Barrera, who arrived at the food bank at 6:00 ET Saturday to pick up groceries for his family. Barrera, 50, has waited in line every Saturday for food as he lost his construction job during the pandemic. He said there are no jobs available; nevertheless, his teenage sons, 19 and 17, also cannot find jobs. 
Barrera said his family is broke, close friends and relatives are helping them pay their $2,300 per month rent in the city: 

The Post interviewed others waiting in line, many of whom said they're jobless and broke. 
We noted, in early August, food bank lines emerged in Ohio County, West Virginia, after stimulus checks ran out in late July. A large food bank in Baltimore County appeared in late July, just days before the fiscal cliff hit. 
The reemergence of food bank lines is evidence the fiscal cliff is hitting low-income consumers the hardest, who are no longer receiving stimulus checks, still jobless, and must seek food pantries to feed families. Even though President Trump signed an executive order weeks ago to extend an extra $300-$400 of weekly jobless benefits for tens of millions of Americans, much of that has been delayed as states struggle to fund their portion of the handout. 




No comments: