4 Thursday, November 14, 2024 BATTLE CREEK SHOPPER NEWS http://www.thebattlecreekshopper.com
HAVEN
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through The Haven’s doors each
year. “When I go out and speak, I am
never surprised that somebody has
either had a son or a daughter or a
father or grandfather come through
our program in the last 20 years. The
Haven is very prevalent and needed
in our community. Last year we
served 1,800 people.”
Jones added that The Haven’s
numbers are back up to pre-COVID
levels.
“When we were going into COVID
we stayed open during the entire
pandemic,” said Jones. “We actually
registered as a laboratory with the
state of Michigan. We could admin-
ister our own 15-minute
COVID tests right at the
door. That was a game
changer for us. That was
huge.”
The length of stay, on
average is less than 30
days, but some stay as
long as 60 days in order to
get the help thy need.
“We want to address
whatever issue is causing
the homelessness,” said
Jones. “I tell people home-
lessness is not the problem – usually
it’s the symptom of the problem. The
problem can be an underlying issue
of substance abuse or a mental health
issue or generational poverty or a
combination of them all. In 30-
days, we do an awful good job of
trying to get to the root problem and
address it best we can. That’s why
we have community partners with
mental health and substance abuse
treatment programs.”
Jones hopes that those in the com-
munity, those who are first-time giv-
ers and those who have helped in the
past, will offer their support.
“Your support has been crucial in
providing shelter, recovery and hope
to countless men, women and chil-
dren in our community,” said Jones.
South Michigan Food Bank is
commending the announcement of
$1 billion in additional funding for
emergency food assistance by the
Biden administration and the U.S.
Department of Agriculture, says
spokesperson Lori Sunie.
Specifically, the USDA will provide
$500 million for additional food pur-
chases to be distributed through The
Emergency Food Assistance Program
(TEFAP), which helps emergency
food providers like food banks, and
$500 million for the Local Food
Purchase Assistance Cooperative
Agreement Program (LFPA) for
states, tribes and territories to pur-
chase foods for their emergency food
systems from local growers.
“These funds are a welcome relief
to South Michigan Food Bank as we
help address the extraordinary need
for food assistance in south Michigan
amid a decline in resources and a rise
in demand for services,” Sunie wrote
in a Nov. 4 press release.
She added, “One in seven adults
and one in five children are food
insecure. Families and individu-
als experiencing hunger in south
Michigan are working to secure
access to fresh, healthy food needed
to thrive, and these investments
will provide critical resources for
South Michigan Food Bank to assist
them. In support of our neighbors,
South Michigan Food Bank con-
tinues to operate under heightened
need, increasing food purchases and
continuing to use local fundraising
efforts to offset transportation costs.”
— Ann Pulsipher
Local food bank applauds
extra funds for hunger relief
$3,