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Fourth Annual “Students Helping Students” Campaign

Henry Fetta

Westmoor Elementary School - Sunday, July 16th from 10 am – 2 pm. 

Hunger exists in every community in America and Northbrook is no exception. There are 400 students in the Northbrook public schools who are on the free or reduced lunch program and are food insecure. Hunger Free Northbrook, a program of Hunger Resource Network (a Northbrook-based non-profit organization), is currently serving 160 of the 400 students across the twelve public elementary and middle schools in Northbrook. 

 

Local college and high school students have decided to help these 160 students in a special way this summer. 

 

Samantha Mallahan, a senior pre-med student at Vanderbilt University and Raquel Press, a senior at Glenbrook North High School are leading a team to help their neighbors in need. 

 

With a goal of collecting at least one bag of personal care items per student, Sam, Raquel and their team members are hosting the third annual “Students Helping Students” event in the Westmoor Elementary School parking lot, 2500 Cherry Lane, Northbrook on Sunday, July 17th from 10 am – 2 pm. 

 

They have a few simple requests for those who would like to help:

 

  1. Purchase the list of essential household items found here and some fun snacks; please follow the contents and packaging guidelines  (Fun Bag Contents). Total cost is $25-30. 
  2. Bring the bag to Westmoor Elementary School, 2500 Cherry Lane, Northbrook between 10 am and 2 pm on Sunday, July 17th and meet Raquel and her college and high school team members who will be joining her to collect the bags and keep score! 
  3. Please spread the word. We need your help to reach the goal of 200 bags! 
  4. Note: if you prefer to have us put the items together for you, no problem! Simply go to hungerresourcenetwork.org and click on the “Donate” button to contribute $25-30 for each bag. Please add “HFN-PCB” (for Hunger Free Northbrook-Personal Care Bag) in the comment section. 
  5. And some additional great news! To help reach our goal this year, Tonya Romin, Director of Internship Development with Northwestern Mutual, has engaged her group of fourteen summer interns to collect the items and put together as many bags as possible for the July 17th event. Many thanks to Tonya and the Northwestern Mutual summer interns! 

 

Please look for the team’s fun and engaging posts on the Hunger Resource Network Facebook and Instagram pages over the next several weeks. 

 

The personal care bags will be distributed to the students and their families in August through the schools. Any questions about the program may be directed to Sam or Raquel via their social media pages or via Hunger Resource Network (hungerresourcenetwork.org). Thanks in advance for your generosity. 

 

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Hunger Resource Network News

By Marcy Kirshenbaum 22 Oct, 2023
By addressing food insecurity and promoting adequate protein intake, we can improve the overall health and well-being of individuals and communities. This requires collaborative efforts from governments, non-governmental organizations, community-based initiatives, and individuals to create sustainable solutions and break the cycle of food insecurity. Efforts should focus on improving access to nutritious food, promoting sustainable agriculture, fostering economic opportunities, and empowering vulnerable populations. Food insecurity has profound consequences on physical health, cognitive development, and overall well-being. When individuals or households experience food insecurity, they often struggle to access an adequate and diverse range of nutritious foods, including those rich in protein. Inadequate protein intake contributes to malnutrition and its associated health consequences. Protein is essential for growth , development, and maintenance of the body's tissues, as well as for numerous physiological processes. It plays a crucial role in building and repairing muscles, producing enzymes and hormones, supporting immune function, and maintaining healthy hair, skin, and nails. Protein intake has an additional benefit of reducing feelings of hunger because it metabolizes at a slower rate than carbohydrates thereby promoting fullness. Insufficient protein intake can lead to muscle wasting, increased illness, delayed wound healing, and decreased overall health and well-being.
By Kerry T. Smith 10 Oct, 2023
“Because of you, Franciscan Outreach is able to make a positive difference in the lives of so many who have nowhere else to turn for help and hope.” Executive Director, Franciscan Outreach, Chicago Hunger is not letting up even as inflation seems to slow To the surprise of many, food insecurity is not declining in the U.S. It’s hanging on as the last of the Covid-19 aid programs has ended and higher costs for some foods continues to strain American household budgets. Affordable housing shortages, higher interest rates, creeping energy costs, labor strikes, severe weather and the growing number of people being laid-off have all contributed to this surprising number of people who are having trouble putting food on their tables. The percentage of households across the U.S. who are food insecure is 10.2% with nearly 4% of those facing severe insecurity. Coming Events HRN Student Food Pack Program-­­Ongoing Free and reduced price school lunch programs are wonderful. But they’re not enough. So we provide nutritious, overflowing bags of food to every student we can. We have an amazing group of partner organizations including; Sunset Foods, Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, Northbrook Evangelical Covenant Church, Congregation Beth Shalom, The Village Presbyterian Church and the Northbrook Chamber of Commerce. But, we need lots more help to reduce the number of students coming to school on an empty stomach. Click here to donate or for more information. Community Outreach Food Delivery Day-Veterans Day, November 11 Once again thousands of pounds of nutritious frozen chicken will be sent winging its way to food pantries, shelters, soup kitchens and churches all over Chicagoland. This year, for the first time ever, we will be distributing 132,000 pounds. That’s 12,000 more pounds of chicken than ever before! That comes to 264,000 protein servings for our neighbors in need. And, this year, on Veterans Day, we will be providing thousands of servings to our Veterans in need. There is a great feeling of accomplishment as we load up some 80 trucks, of all types and sizes, and send them on their way to hungry families in every corner of Chicagoland. Click here to contribute needed funds to continue our Community Outreach Days. For more information on HRN and these events click here or go to hungerresourcenetwork.org .
By Henry Fetta 06 Jul, 2022
We can’t do this work without you—our supporters
By Henry Fetta 12 Jul, 2021
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By Marcy Kirshenbaum 16 Mar, 2021
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By Henry Fetta 02 Mar, 2021
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By Cathy Allen 24 Jan, 2021
It’s well known that the Covid-19 pandemic has caused serious consequences for millions of people worldwide, but the extent of those consequences closer to home is becoming alarmingly apparent. Cook County now has “the third-largest population of food-insecure people in the United States.” The increase in the number of people struggling to put enough food on their table in the area has been stretching the resources of food pantries and soup kitchens across the metropolitan area. Worst of all, it’s expected that it may take years for things to, ‘even return to pre-pandemic levels.’ For a look at what one group is doing to help alleviate this problem, go to “ Chicago is Experiencing the Biggest Hunger Crisis in Decades . ” Hunger Resource Network is committed to providing greater support than ever before across Chicagoland. Please consider a donation to Hunger Resource Network at hungerresourcenetwork.org to help us further our work. Cathy Allen Director, Hunger Resource Network
By Ron Goldblatt 05 Jan, 2021
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Hunger Resource Network U.S. Food Banks Having Trouble Keeping Up with Increasing Needs NORTHBROOK, ILLINOIS (December , 2020)-Across America, the richest nation on the globe, thousands of people are going to bed hungry each night. Food bank, shelter and soup kitchen staffs in virtually every corner of America are reporting dramatic increases in the number of people in need of food. They report that this is unlike anything they have ever seen, even during The Great Recession of 2007. In some communities, the lines of cars and trucks waiting for food is causing major traffic jams and keeping families waiting for hours to receive a box or bag filled with food. It has been reported that 40% of those relying on food pantries today are doing so for the first time in their lives. The number of people relying on food banks, shelters, soup kitchens and pantries was estimated at 18 million in 2019, before the Covid-19 Pandemic struck. The number by the end of 2020 is estimated to be more than 22 million people…and 1 out of every 4 American children. Feeding America, the nation’s largest food pantry, has been forced to close 20% of its 200 locations in 2020 due to a shortage of available food. They estimate that there will be a shortage of 8 billion meals in the next 12 months. A study by the Food Resource & Action Center noted that before the Pandemic, 25% of those relying on food had incomes of $50,000 or more. Today, so many have lost their jobs that even those receiving unemployment compensation and the modest stimulus checks provided by the government, there is not enough money to feed their household and pay all of their bills--often including their mortgage or rent. Some have lost their insurance coverage and have been hit with significant healthcare bills. In response, some people are setting up Go Fund Me pages, asking for their birthday or anniversary gifts be contributions to their local food pantries. Amazon’s Smiles program donates 0.05% of participant’s purchases, on most of their products, to a charity of their choice. People are setting up food drives, clearing out their pantries of extra food items and organizations like Hunger Resource Network are stepping up their food donations and programs as much as possible. To learn more about how you can help go to www.hungerresourcenetwork.org If you are in need of food, regardless of your income, contact the Northfield Township Food Pantry at www.twp.northfield.il.us or call 847-724-8300. Hunger Resource Network is an all-volunteer, 501c3 non-profit organization based in Northbrook, IL. It is dedicated to help alleviate hunger in the Chicago area by meeting the needs of food pantries, soup kitchens and shelters.
By Henry Fetta 04 Apr, 2020
At the Northfield Township food pantry in Glenview, staff members are dealing with a “frantic” flurry of people, an “unprecedented" demand, pantry director and Northfield Township Supervisor Jill Brickman said. But local restaurants, PTA groups, community organizations — even a historic preservation farm — are finding creative ways to keep the pantry stocked and help families in need receive food, especially those with school-age children. Some people who need groceries have told Brickman they’ve recently been laid off. The food demands and job interruptions come amid concerns over spread of the novel coronavirus. “I think it's the same thing as the grocery stores are seeing. People are nervous about not being able to get to food,” Brickman said. New Trier Township communications director Jack Macholl said the need at their food pantry has stayed consistent, but staff are planning for an increase in need if the shutdown continues. As the shelter-in-place order continues, Macholl said “money may begin to get tight” for families who have lost work, especially those whose resources were strained already. He said it may mean the pantry will see an increase in demand the longer the shutdown continues The township includes the North Shore towns of Glencoe, Kenilworth, Wilmette and Winnetka, and portions of Glenview and Northfield. Northfield Township Road District 9 officials helped the Northfield Township food pantry receive a donation March 17, 2020 after a volunteer group had to cancel due to concerns about social distancing Northfield Township Road District 9 officials helped the Northfield Township food pantry receive a donation March 17, 2020 after a volunteer group had to cancel due to concerns about social distancing (Northfield Township Food Pantry) As schools closed March 17, the Northbrook School District 27 PTA realized that a week’s worth of food was about to go to waste. There are no cafeterias at SD27 schools, and parents order kids’ lunches for delivery from local restaurants, often prepaying for them weeks or months in advance through the PTA. In an act of solidarity with community members in need, the PTA asked parents to continue to pay for meals, keeping revenue flowing to local restaurants, and the meal ingredients would instead be donated to the pantry. The first delivery was March 19, when Piero’s Pizza of Highland Park brought 35 pizzas, 35 pounds of uncooked pasta, sauce and 165 cookies. “It was almost 3,000 lunches that were donated, which was a lot of money,” said Robin Bear, who runs Lunch Solutions, the company that coordinates SD27′s lunch deliveries. “This is really hitting the restaurants in a tough way, so we were trying to give them some business as well.” As the pantry can’t accept hot meals, restaurants like Grill House in Northbrook and Yummy Bowl in Highland Park are giving individually packed ingredients like rice, uncooked hamburgers and chicken breast, which add up to the same dollar amount as the lunch money revenue, said Bear, who is coordinating among the PTA, pantry and restaurants. Dan Jariabka, the founder and president of the Hunger Resource Network, picked up donated food at Sunset Foods in Northbrook March 25, 2020. The PTA groups of Glenview School District 34 have also stepped up to help, raising money through their websites. The Springman/Attea middle school PTA has donated $14,475 to the Northfield food pantry as of March 25, PTA Co-President Dana Nate-Doffin said. The money will be matched by the pantry and go to a fund specifically for families with children who qualify for free and reduced-price lunch. In addition to groceries from the pantries, the families will receive a gift card to Aldi. Nate-Doffin said it’s been difficult to find items like toilet paper and sanitizers in stores as people stock up, and she hopes a gift card will help people buy what they need. In addition to delivering ingredients to the pantry from SD27′s lunches, Grill House came up with it’s own way of keeping people fed: offering coupons for free meals to kids who qualify for free and reduced-price meals. The coupons were distributed by officials to 1,000 kids at SD34, Northbrook School District 28 and West Northfield School District 31. Owner Nick Drivas said community support for his restaurant makes it possible to offer the service. “If the community doesn’t come together, and if we all don’t do our part, then what’s gonna happen?” Drivas said. “It was within our power to be able to do this and it was kind of the only way that we knew how to give back and help the community and the kids that are not as fortunate.” Even Historic Wagner Farm, located in Glenview, one of the last working dairy farms in Cook County and offers education about farm heritage, joined the wave of support. The farm, which is closed to the public for now, donated 30 fresh eggs to the pantry. Fresh eggs grown at the Historic Wagner Farm in Glenview were donated to the Northfield Township food pantry March 25, 2020. Fresh eggs grown at the Historic Wagner Farm in Glenview were donated to the Northfield Township food pantry March 25, 2020.(Glenview Parks District) New Trier Township agreed to give an additional $10,000 grant to Meals on Wheels in the North Shore area. Meals on Wheels is a nonprofit organization that delivers food to seniors. Township leaders also reached out to see if the organization needed volunteer support. The township food pantry is looking into the possibility of providing food bags along with the meals homebound seniors are receiving during the pandemic, Macholl said. A number of people have reached out through social media and called to ask to donate to the pantry, Macholl said. Divine Mercy Parish, in Northfield, is organizing a donation drive for the pantry and for A Just Harvest, a soup kitchen in Chicago, according to a release from the Archdiocese of Chicago. “I am very impressed by the generosity of people in the township,” Macholl said. “It’s incredible actually how generous people really are." As organizations see both a surge in volunteer efforts and in need, the coronavirus closures and social distancing concerns have created some challenges. On April 8, a Northbrook-based food rescue organization, Hunger Resource Network, was supposed to move a donation of 126,000 pounds of frozen chicken to other organizations in need. That would require 200 volunteers working in immediate proximity, Director Henry Fetta said. The organization is still deciding if there’s a safe way to move the food, but the event may have to be postponed or canceled. Since demand at grocery stores has been emptying shelves, there hasn’t been as much food to donate from those stores, said Daniel Jariabka, president of Hunger Resource Network. Sunset Foods, which has several locations in the north suburbs, has been donating food for over 40 years, Fetta said. “They’ve been so inundated with shoppers that there’s usually no bread left, usually no blemished vegetables, so that has actually decreased because it’s going out the door rather than being left there to donate the next day to agencies,” Jariabka said. Dan Jariabka, the founder and president of the Hunger Resource Network, picked up donated food at Sunset Foods in Northbrook on March 25, 2020. Dan Jariabka, the founder and president of the Hunger Resource Network, picked up donated food at Sunset Foods in Northbrook on March 25, 2020.(Brian OMahoney / Pioneer Press) But concerns about social distancing haven’t slowed a volunteer-driven supplementary meal effort, as the organizations can still pack meals for students from low-income families from their homes and drop them off at centralized locations, Fetta said. “Now that the schools are closed, we are receiving an overwhelming amount of support," Fetta said. "People are saying, ‘how can we help these kids during this challenging time?’”
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