The numbers are enough to make us lose our appetite. They’re pretty rotten. A study conducted by Feeding Indiana’s Hungry and Feeding America and released Tuesday shows that nearly 650,000 Indiana residents receive emergency food from food banks annually.
Of those 650,000, nearly 300,000 are children. And, 46 percent of those surveyed said they had to choose at least once in the past year between buying food and paying utilities.
Times are indeed hard, especially here in northern Indiana. Imagine how much worse off our community would be without the help and hard work of our local food banks. The individuals who run these pantries work diligently on keeping the shelves stocked with donated food items. There are more than 25 food pantries in Elkhart County, many run by local churches.
Salvation Army offices in both Elkhart and Goshen are two excellent resources for families in need. As this latest study shows, food banks are a vital resource for these families. We all need to do our part to help keep the cupboard from going bare.
Please give what you can when you can. Every little bit helps.
Opinion
Give if you can
- Opinion
-
-
Globe’s quality is coming in loud and clear
The Globe is aptly named. Thanks to the Internet — and via globeradio.org — listeners worldwide have the opportunity to check out Goshen College’s radio station. Minus the web, local listeners can dial in to 91.1 FM and hear WGCS in about a 40-mile radius around campus.
-
Obama's action on education rule will help Indiana
It’s about time Indiana got out from under the onerous provisions of the No Child Left Behind law that was promoted by President George W. Bush and passed by Congress in 2001.
-
We don't want to be on this top 10 list
When it comes to being included in a top 10 list, nobody wants to be ranked as a leader in methamphetamine manufacturing. But Elkhart and Kosciusko counties have again cracked the top 10 for the number of meth labs found, this time for 2011. Elkhart County was ranked second and Kosciusko third. Vanderburgh County, way down on the Ohio River, has been awarded the infamous top spot.
-
Indiana's time to shine is now
During Gov. Mitch Daniels’ visit to Goshen recently, he was asked a very important, very direct question: “Who are you rooting for in Super Bowl?”
-
Community is proud of Skyler Carpenter
Skyler Carpenter had a choice to make.
-
Stahly has served his community well
There are moments that cause us to say “oh, no,” and “outstanding” nearly in the same breath. That’s how we felt recently when Bruce Stahly announced that he plans to retire as superintendent of Goshen Community Schools in June. We said “oh, no,” because we know how important Stahly has been to the school corporation for the past 13 years. And we said “outstanding,” because we know how much he deserves this after a job well done.
Stahly came to Goshen in 1999 as deputy superintendent. He had worked previously as the assistant superintendent of finance for the South Bend Community School Corp. In July 2002 Stahly was promoted to superintendent of Goshen’s schools. That was a great decision by school trustees. -
Digital technology good for education
Things have changed in education and today has been set aside to encourage educators to embrace those changes.
- Tommy W. Woodworth
-
Behavior of teens must improve during First Fridays
Goshen’s downtown has a success story, and the tale gets told every month.
-
Solar panels should have limited placement in cities
Goshen resident Marvin Bartel has won approval for his solar array on a vacant lot along College Avenue, which is something we have mixed feelings about.
- More Opinion Headlines
-







