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ວັນສຸກ, ໒໖ ເມສາ ໒໐໒໔

How America Works: Citizen's Group Gets Food to Needy Residents


INTRODUCTION: To most Americans, the governments in their towns and regional areas called counties are the governments they interact with the most. And alongside these local governments are groups of citizens who work on their own to make life better.

In this segment, VOA's Jeffrey Young highlights the efforts of a non-governmental group to provide food to needy residents in Montgomery County, Maryland.

Food. It is plentiful in the United States, but some people cannot afford to buy it. That is why Manna Food Center exists.

Montgomery County, Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C., has an affluent appearance with lots of big homes and expensive cars. But some people there do not share in that wealth. Many of these people have jobs and work long hours, yet their earnings cannot pay the high costs of living there. Sometimes, there is no food on their table. Manna Food Center, a nonprofit private charity, gives food away so families such as Antonio Reyanna's do not go hungry.

"We have a no-good salary. We make like eight [or] ten dollars an hour. We have to pay rent, insurance for the car, sometimes we pay for the bus. You know, we don't make enough money to buy food. That's why we come here."

When people come to Manna Food Center, they get a box filled with fresh produce, bread, canned goods and meat. Manna's Executive Director, Amy Gabala, says that box of food is a bridge between meager paychecks.

"We serve two-thousand families every month. So what that means is that we're giving two-thousand families each month a three-to-five day supply of food. And this is food that enables them to tide themselves over when they run out of money at the end of the month."

And before people get free food, their needs are verified. Recipients are referred to Manna Food Center by social service agencies, community groups, churches and other sources.

The food Manna gives away comes from a number of grocery stores in Montgomery County and the rest of the Washington, D.C. area. One of them is Giant Foods. Its vice president, Barry Scher, is enthusiastic about assisting the hungry through Manna and Manna has to go out to Giant and other stores and pick up this food. It starts early, as Manna's busy Operations Director, Donnell Foreman, explains.

"Our drivers start at seven o'clock. They go out to 22 different grocery stores in the morning. They bring it back here at 11:30. That's when the groceries are packed, and we're getting ready for distribution at 12 o'clock."

The people get their free food from noon until 3 p.m. Those who come reflect Montgomery County's diversity. Some dress well enough to hide their poverty. But it is still there. And sometimes that poverty can be the result of circumstances that keep people from earning a paycheck.

Montgomery County's government has assistance programs for the poor. But hunger is immediate -- and that is where local charity groups such as Manna step in and make a big difference in the community. Groups like Manna can be found across the United States. Because of them, there is more food on people's tables.

Listen to our special report for Lao translation.

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