United Relief
A ground-level primer on Portage County’s hunger crisis—how the pandemic exposed long-standing gaps, what ALICE reveals that federal poverty stats miss, and how county leaders tried to plug holes with ARPA funds. YOU’LL HEAR FROM: * John Kennedy, Portage County Treasurer * Sabrina Christian-Bennett, Portage County Commissioner IN THIS EPISODE: * The moment hunger got personal: families living in cars at a single pantry stop. * Kent vs. Ravenna: visible prosperity, hidden need—and why Portage is a microcosm of the country. * ALICE vs. poverty rate: why 23% under ALICE (and 60%+ in Kent City) reframes the scale of hunger locally. * What ARPA enabled (and couldn’t): rapid grants, pop-up pantries, moving dollars to the Foodbank to cut red tape. * Rural barriers: food deserts, no transit, the cost of distance. * The collaboration problem: breaking “silo mentality” so people actually find help. RESOURCES MENTIONED: * ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) methodology [https://www.unitedforalice.org/] * Akron-Canton Regional Foodbank [https://www.akroncantonfoodbank.org/] * United Way Portage County [https://www.uwportage.org/] * 211 (call or 211.org) for local services [https://211.org/] CREDITS: Reporting/hosting by Ben & Patrick Childers. Editing/mix/master by Patrick. Fact-check by Dash Lewis. Story edit by Jenna Marson. Artwork by Miggs Sonny. Original music by L.T. Headtrip. Mentioned in this episode: Neighbors In Need: Portage County Emergency Support Drive Neighbors In Need [https://united-relief.captivate.fm/neighbors-in-need]
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