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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, April 18, 2009

Hawaii Foodbank launches annual drive amid deep need

Photo gallery: Hawaii Foodbank's 20th annual food drive

By Will Hoover
Advertiser Staff Writer

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

One-year-old Jahziah Alualu-Talamoa stands amid all the food donations at Kuhio Park Terrace as volunteers with the Hawaii Foodbank get ready for the 20th annual food drive today, the biggest day for food and money collections.

Photos by JEFF WIDENER | The Honolulu Advertiser

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IF YOU NEED HELP

Those who need emergency food can dial 211 to reach the Aloha United Way Social Services Hot Line. The call is free and confidential. A referral specialist can direct the caller to the nearest food pantry, homeless shelter or low-cost medical center.

Food and monetary donations can be made between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. today at the following locations on O'ahu:

  • Waterfront Plaza/Restaurant Row

  • Koko Marina Center

  • McCully Shopping Center

  • Pearl City Shopping Center

  • Pearl Highlands Center

  • Town Center of Mililani

  • Wai'anae Mall Shopping Center

  • Waiokeola Congregational Church, Kahala

  • Windward City Shopping Center

    For more information on how to donate or where to give, visit www.hawaiifood bank.org or call 954-7870.

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    Volunteers sort through the food donations at Kuhio Park Terrace. Contributions from wholesalers and manufacturers are down 15 percent this year.

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    Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

    Volunteer Walter Haço unloads two 50-pound bags of onions. The Foodbank feeds about 131,000 people statewide.

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    HAWAII FOODBANK

    131,862

    Different people fed by the Hawaii Foodbank network each year

    39,803

    Average pounds of food distributed each day

    250

    Agencies that receive food from the Foodbank on O'ahu

    25

    Years the Hawaii Foodbank has been in operation

    Source: Hawaii Foodbank

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    The Hawaii Foodbank's 20th annual Food Drive today comes amid the greatest demand some veteran Foodbank workers say they've ever witnessed.

    "I've never seen the need higher," said Hawaii Foodbank president Dick Grimm, who added that the demand for food this year has surpassed the imaginary "worst-case scenario" he always thought he'd be prepared for.

    Driving much of the demand for food aid is the high level of unemployment in Hawai'i. The state reported yesterday that unemployment in March was 7.1 percent, its highest level in 30 years.

    The increase in need has been swift among the more than 250 agencies, homeless shelters, soup kitchens and food pantries the Foodbank supports, said Lori Kaya, Foodbank grants and communications manager.

    "Compared to last year, sometimes they are reporting double the number of people standing in their lines," she said. "They are seeing new faces, people who have never needed assistance before, and more people overall."

    The majority of those hungry faces belong to children, Kaya said, based on the Hunger in Hawai'i Study conducted in 2006.

    "Of the 131,000 people statewide we feed, the largest group — nearly 33,000 — is made up of children. Those are kids who come from low-income families."

    The remaining faces belong to the elderly, the homeless, the disabled and the temporarily unemployed.

    Last month, the Foodbank distributed 961,000 pounds of food, compared with 633,000 pounds in March 2008, Grimm said.

    DONATIONS DOWN

    Meanwhile, contributions from food wholesalers, manufacturers and growers — who traditionally donate nearly 40 percent of the Foodbank's annual food supply — are down 15 percent.

    "To make that up, we had to go out and purchase food," said Grimm, who has headed the organization for nearly a decade.

    "We have purchased 391 percent more food this year than we did the previous year."

    Despite those daunting figures, Grimm and Kaya both believe the 20th annual Food Drive will succeed in meeting the agency's goal of 550,000 pounds of food and $450,000 in monetary donations. That's because they say one thing has not changed: the legendary generosity of the people in the Aloha State. That aloha attitude has been a main reason the Foodbank has been able to meet its goal over the past two years even as money was getting tighter, Grimm said.

    And this is the day folks here will do it again, Grimm and Kaya said.

    "What we are asking people is, when you see our fishnet volunteers, when you see our sign wavers, please wave, say hello, and give what you can," Kaya said.

    To make that easier, nine major shopping centers from Wai'anae to Honolulu to Windward O'ahu are ready to accept dollars and canned goods on behalf of the Foodbank. Just look for the banners and sign wavers. Organizers most need canned meats or tuna, canned meals (such as spaghetti, chili and corned beef hash), as well as canned soups, fruits and vegetables.

    If you don't happen to have a box of canned goods, an open wallet works as well. A $20 donation will feed one child for two weeks, according to Foodbank officials.

    Today's drive is the biggest day of a food and money collection campaign that began in January. Although it is the culmination of the drive, Foodbank officials say they will be happy to accept food or money after today and throughout the year.

    Reach Will Hoover at whoover@honoluluadvertiser.com.