Some of us need help. Let's make sure it's there.

Anyone passing through the quintessential New England towns of the Northwest Corner on Route 44 might think twice about the general economic health of this rural area, but even with some vacant storefronts, there is nothing that would give them the impression of underlying poverty. The town centers are well-kept and even have some renovation and new construction underway. Yet nothing defines poverty in the United States more surely than the presence of hunger in a community, and there is hunger in the towns of this region.  

Chronic hunger takes its toll incrementally. It affects both the physical and mental health of those who are not able to regularly put food on the table for themselves and their families. Children have a hard time learning new concepts in school when they’re undernourished and thinking about where their next meal may come from. Adults can’t think straight and may act out of desperation when they’re hungry and know their families are, too.

There are more and more people in this generally affluent corner of Litchfield County who are struggling to pay for life’s basic needs, including food. Anyone who doubts that should visit one of the area’s local food banks or the towns’ social services departments and witness the rise in the number of people who must rely on help from them. While in Torrington and the more densely populated municipalities in Connecticut the United Way gathers more of the food for donations, in the small towns of the Northwest Corner there are also local volunteer organizations gathering food for their residents in need. In Lakeville there’s OWL’s Kitchen, in North Canaan there’s Fishes and Loaves, in Kent there’s the Kent Food Bank. They were very busy during Thanksgiving week, as were town social workers, using donated funds to try to ensure that all in their communities would have a holiday meal despite current personal troubles that would prevent them from being able to pay for it.

Hunger affects not only those in the Northwest Corner, of course, but also residents in the Tri-state region as a whole. The Sunday in the Country Food Drive (founded by “NASCAR� Dave MacMillan, a radio personality at WHDD in Sharon, formerly of WQQQ radio in Lakeville), for instance, has been a fixture in volunteer support for the hungry for more than a decade. In 2008, a total of $46,300 was raised by MacMillan’s various fundraisers, which paid for 550 Thanksgiving dinners and 530 Christmas dinners. In 2009, the $50,000 donated provided 1,180 complete Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners through 17 food pantries in the Tri-state area, 570 for Thanksgiving and 610 for Christmas. This year, 642 meals went out for Thanksgiving, and Sunday in the Country has been asked to provide about 640 for Christmas. That is a total of about 1,280 full chicken or turkey dinners, which, feeding four people, equals about 5,000 meals. According to WHDD’s Marshall Miles, this regional food drive still needs to raise an additional $5,000 in order to meet the need for Christmas.

So don’t think that because Thanksgiving has come and gone the need to help the hungry in the Tri-state region has diminished. It’s a need that is ongoing throughout the year. While the long-term answers to hunger may be more complicated, there are simple ways to give our neighbors a helping hand to get through tough times. Support the food pantries and food drives in your communities. Especially at the holidays, such help can mean a lot, giving those who are struggling a boost just when their problems can seem most overwhelming.

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