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Highlight the Increased Reliance on Community and Faith-Based Organizations
The Catholic Campaign for Human Development has been helping the
poor find a way out of poverty for nearly 35 years.
Catholic Charities USA reports that each year, more than 9.5 million
people in need turn to some 1,400 local Catholic Charities organizations
for help. That help ranges from a bag of groceries offered at a
food pantry to family counseling or child care. The services vary
depending on community needs. For many states, the $27 billion reduction
in the Food Stamp Program, passed as part of the 1996 Welfare Reform
Act, has left more people in need of emergency services. For example,
according to a recent report of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, between
2000 and 2001, aid for emergency food grew 23%, and requests for
emergency shelter increased by 13%. And in a study of Second Harvest,
nearly 60 percent of local hunger relief agencies reported an increase
in the number of people requesting food aid since 1997.
Although provision of emergency services represents one type of
response to poor people with urgent and immediate needs, it is only
part of the story. The Catholic Campaign for Human Development promotes
a more structural and long-term solution. The Campaign helps poor
people help themselves by changing the social conditions that cause
poverty (such as, racism, lack of access to health care and quality
education, and failure to pay living wages) and by developing self-sufficiency.
Explore how CCHD and other organizations, religious and secular,
are picking up the slack where public funding falls short. How does
your state fare? What are the needs in your community and who is
filling them today?
- Contact local shelters, soup kitchens and other providers of
emergency services to find out how changes in assistance programs
are impacting them.
- Talk to local churches and other charities about increased demand
and what they're doing to fill the growing need.
- Ask your state's division of Welfare or Medicaid, or the Women,
Infants and Children (WIC) and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families
(TANF) offices about caseloads and the obstacles faced by those
still receiving assistance.
- Contact a community-based, self-help organization, like those
supported by CCHD, to learn about its agenda for action to solve
the problems of poverty and injustice in the local community.
Project
Highlight: MANNA has been fighting hunger in Nashville,
Tenn., for 25 years by addressing the root causes of hunger. It
has won a state-mandated school breakfast program, brought the federally
funded Women, Infants and Children (WIC) food assistance program
to Nashville, helped thousands of poor families receive public benefits
through its outreach programs and won fundamental improvements in
the state's food stamp and welfare programs. To learn more about
MANNA or other CCHD-funded hunger-fighting projects, contact Barbara
Stephenson, CCHD director of communications, cchdmedia@usccb.org
.
Top
of Page
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press
releases...
story
ideas...
CCHD
news room...
poverty
facts...
Use
this collection of facts about
the state of poverty in America to enhance your story, including
the Top Ten Poverty Rates of U.S. cities, counties
and states.
profiles...
About
CCHD
Bio:
Father Robert J. Vitillo
2004 PSA numbers...
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TV:
240 stations in 46 states |
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Radio:
504 outlets in 50 states |
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Print: 1,274 insertions in newspapers and magazines
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PSA
Campaign Numbers Soar
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media
contacts...
For
more information about the state of poverty in America, Poverty
in America Awareness Month or the Catholic Campaign for Human
Development, contact:
Barbara
Stephenson
Director of Communications
Catholic Campaign for Human Development
(202) 541-3364 or
(email)
Or
visit the Catholic
Campaign for Human Development web site.
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