Miami Herald (Sunday)

Feeding South Florida, Miami-Dade school district are food lifelines for thousands

- BY NATALIA GALICZA

Nearly two years after COVID-19 vaccines were rolled out and businesses began reopening, food insecurity in Miami-Dade County remains nearly as exacerbate­d as it was at the height of the pandemic.

The high cost of food — and housing — in South Florida has led to a growing number of families facing food scarcity and food banks stretching to fill the gaps.

Food insecurity can mean a lack of nutritious food, or a lack of food altogether. And it doesn’t discrimina­te — anyone can become food insecure through financial hardship; the pandemic made that abundantly clear.

The Florida Department of Agricultur­e and Consumer Services reported in 2020 that 3.4 million Florida residents experience­d food insecurity, including 1 million children. The numbers marked a drastic uptick from pre-pandemic 2018, where food insecurity impacted 2.5 million people statewide and 760,470 children.

MIAMI-DADE’S FOOD INSECURITY ISSUES

In Miami-Dade County, the numbers are actually worse: The county has a higher rate of food insecurity among adults and children than the state average.

“We are now seeing 1.1 million individual­s coming into our warehouse or our pantries at our partner agencies not only the way they came during the middle of the pandemic, but more frequently because their dollars are not going as far as they used to, their federal benefits are not going as far as they used to,” said Paco Vélez, president of Feeding South Florida. “They’re having to ask for assistance more often than before.”

A lack of access to food is not a novel issue created by COVID, but it grew more acute with the economic downturn spawned by the virus. Businesses shuttered their doors, millions lost jobs and it became difficult for many to know where their next meal might come from.

Though unemployme­nt in Florida has sprung back to pre-pandemic levels as recently reported by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, food scarcity still remains.

“What we’ve all learned from the pandemic is that we have emotional needs, we have physical needs, and all of those things matter,” said Penny Parham, director of MiamiDade County Public Schools’ Food and Nutrition Department.

“Changes occurred during the pandemic that were able to break down any barriers that might have led to food insecurity in the past.”

Census data shows that 15 percent of the more than 2.5 million people in Miami-Dade County experience poverty.

Miami Matters, a Health Council of South Florida initiative, releases data on food insecurity across the county each year. The most recent data estimates the county’s food insecurity rate is 10.8 percent, and the child food insecurity rate is 18.2 percent — both higher than the statewide average of 10.6 percent and 15.7 percent, respective­ly.

According to Feeding America, the largest hunger-relief nonprofit in the country, food insecurity is associated with “delayed developmen­t in young children; risk of chronic illnesses like asthma and anemia; and behavioral problems like hyperactiv­ity, anxiety and aggression in school-age children.”

And in adults, the United States Department of Health and Human Services reports a higher risk of obesity and chronic disease associated with food insecurity.

Here’s a look at what two groups — Feeding South Florida and MiamiDade public schools — are doing to help feed people in Miami-Dade County:

FEEDING SOUTH FLORIDA

Paco Vélez said he believes he found his way to food banking through fate. The former Texan began working with food banks when he accepted a job offer in San Antonio fresh out of college. He had studied to become a doctor or forensic scientist, but stumbled across food banking by chance and chose to stick with it. The line of work is what prompted his move to Florida, where he became the president of Feeding South Florida 10 years ago.

Feeding South Florida is a member organizati­on of the Feeding America network. It services Palm Beach, Broward, MiamiDade and Monroe counties, more than 25 percent of the state’s food insecure population. Vélez said the past few years have proved especially challengin­g for the nonprofit.

Ordinarily, Feeding South Florida feeds about 700,000 individual­s a year, Vélez said. During the pandemic, that number skyrockete­d to 1.5 million. And even now, it still hovers over 1 million.

“Over the past couple of years, Feeding South Florida has seen food insecurity rise to levels not seen before, but isn’t always indicative of the magnitude of what a family can experience,” Vélez said.

Through 2019 and 2020, Vélez and his team worked in overdrive. They created about 40 drive-through distributi­on centers to ensure families could still access boxed donations. Shifts were extended from five days a week to six, from two shifts a day to three.

Over the past year, Feeding South Florida was able to go back to its pantry system. Now, across 232 pantries and participat­ing locations, South Floridians can enter a food pantry and select from a broad range of items.

Feeding South Florida also offers a warehouse training program and culinary training program to help residents gain skills to land jobs in food service. And the organizati­on offers applicatio­n assistance for families seeking federal benefits like SNAP food stamps or Medicaid.

“We really wrap services around the food to ensure families don’t just have the food but they have other support around them to help them move to a place of self sufficienc­y,” Vélez said. “We help families

 ?? DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com ?? Derek Jeter, then the CEO of the Miami Marlins, and Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava distribute food as part of a Thanksgivi­ng food drive in 2020, sponsored by the Marlins, Miami Marlins Foundation, Feeding South Florida and Tito’s Handmade Vodka.
DANIEL A. VARELA dvarela@miamiheral­d.com Derek Jeter, then the CEO of the Miami Marlins, and Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava distribute food as part of a Thanksgivi­ng food drive in 2020, sponsored by the Marlins, Miami Marlins Foundation, Feeding South Florida and Tito’s Handmade Vodka.
 ?? ?? Feeding South Florida feeds about 1 million people a year in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach and Monroe counties. Here are some of the items in its food pantries.
Feeding South Florida feeds about 1 million people a year in Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach and Monroe counties. Here are some of the items in its food pantries.

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