Food Insecurity, Part 1 of 3 As the holidays approach, Second Harvest Food Bank of East Tennessee and the food pantries it serves already are seeing a surge in people seeking assistance. With this influx, they have to prepare to serve more families and individuals. “Our numbers have picked up about double from what we’ve been getting,” said Joan Cambeses, who is in charge of Grassy Valley Baptist Church’s food pantry. “We’ve been averaging about 160. Today, we had 187, and it’s a lot of new people. “These are huge families,” she said. “They have to fill out a form and list how many people in a household, and it was averaging like one to two, three, sometimes four. Now, we’re looking at eight, sometimes nine, 10 people in their homes. “There’re a lot of teenagers and younger children on these lists,” Cambeses said. “Some of it is grandparents taking care of their grandchildren. “We’ve had a lady from Lenoir City came over here. Some from Knoxville and Alcoa,” she said. “They have been looking for food pantries, and one they went to was out of food, and they couldn’t find any others open. “All food pantries run differently,” Cambeses said. “Some run once a week, like us. Some are open once a month. Some are by-weekly. And, there are certain hours.
Read MoreGingerbread men, sugar cookies and more are being made for this year’s Faith Lutheran Church Cookie Walk & Craft Fair. The church is welcoming members and the community to come choose cookies around the tables the first Saturday in December. This year, Gabriel Figueroa, Faith Lutheran’s director of communications, said the cookie walk will take place from 9 a.m. to noon, Saturday, Dec. 6, in the church, 225 Jamestowne Blvd., while the craft fair will begin at 8:30 a.m., giving attendees time to shop before buying cookies. “We are expecting 20,000 of all sorts of variations (of cookies),” Figueroa said. “We have a lot of members from the church and even a lot of our friends and families contributing to baking cookies.” He advises people to come early to get their best choice of cookies and crafts. “That’s the exciting part about it,” he said. “The appeal is as opposed to you coming in and we just hand you a box (of cookies), you get to pick out your own cookies. “So if all you want is a box of chocolate chip cookies, then go for it,” Figueroa added. Even more fun, “you can fill your box up as much as you can as long as the lid closes,” he said. When a person comes in, he or she pays $20 for a 9-by-9-by 2-inch box then they get in line to get their cookies.
Read More