Hungry Heroes: 25 Percent of Military Families Seek
Food Aid
BY MIRANDA
LEITSINGER
SAN DIEGO, Calif. —
Petty Officer 1st Class Adam Yetter, a Navy sailor for 17 years, works a second
job as a security guard and donates blood plasma twice a week to help make ends
meet for his family. Deployed seven times during his military career, including
an extended 19-month tour to Iraq, Yetter squeezes in family time with his
three young boys and his wife in-between jobs.
To save money, the
Yetters recently moved off base into a two-bedroom apartment they share with
another sailor and his two sons, who stay there part time. Despite their
penny-pinching efforts, the Yetters have been living paycheck-to-paycheck for
many years as they work to get rid of debt accumulated over everyday expenses
like car repairs and gas and the costs of caring for an autistic son. They
often visit food pantries to keep their kitchen stocked.
“We’re doing everything we can possibly think
to be doing and we're barely making it,” said Adam’s wife, Lindsey, 36. (Adam
declined comment). She accesses many local pantries, uses money-saving
strategies and has met with a financial adviser to get the family budget into
the black, but they’re stuck, she said.
“You're robbing Peter
to pay Paul most of the time,” said Yetter, a teaching assistant at a
preschool.
Yetter’s family is
among the 620,000 households that include at least one soldier, reservist or
guardsman – or 25 percent of the nation’s total active duty and reserve
personnel – that are seeking aid from food pantries and other charitable programs
across the country, according to a rare inquiry about the food insecurity of
troops and veterans conducted by Feeding America, a hunger relief charity, that
will be released Monday.
Another 2.37 million households including veterans receive assistance from food
pantries that are part of Feeding America's network (this figure doesn't
include households where both a former and current service member reside).
The help is sought for
various reasons, experts say: For active duty, pressures include low pay, poor
financial planning by junior soldiers, the difficulty for spouses to hold
steady jobs amid base transfers and deployments, and the higher costs of living
in some states. For veterans, the triggers are the transition to the civilian
world, and, for some, living off low disability pay or retirement funds. Both
groups were hit by the Great Recession, too.
“We’ve heard for the
last several years from our food banks that there’s a growing need among
military families for food assistance,” said Maura Daly, a Feeding America
spokeswoman. Though the organization “found the results to be incredibly
disheartening” it also will give Feeding America the opportunity “to partner
with military organizations on the ground to help ensure that we are better
meeting their needs,” she added.
Defense Department
spokesman Lt. Cmdr. Nate Christensen said in a statement on Friday that the
Pentagon was reviewing the survey and was “concerned with anything
that impacts the wellness and readiness of service members and families. The
work of Feeding America and other organizations will help the department
amplify the DOD resources available to service members and families,
particularly in high-cost locations.”
He added that the
Pentagon “recognizes that personal financial readiness of service members and
their families must be maintained to sustain mission readiness” and offers
personal financial management counselors, as well as other tools and services,
to help personnel get a clear understanding of their finances. Military stores
– like exchanges and commissaries – provide savings to troops, he said. (On
Monday, the Pentagon issued a new statement on the survey, saying: "The
Department of Defense disagrees with the methodology that
Feeding America used to calculate the estimated percentage of military
households served by its food assistance programs.")
Spikes in food aid
sought by active duty service members, reservists, guardsmen and veterans
emerged in states with large military bases, like in Delaware, California,
Texas, Colorado, Georgia, Washington and Virginia, according to Feeding America
data from its "Hunger in
America 2014" report, a national study it runs every four
years. Other surges came in states where a lot of people join the military,
like Iowa, and then return home after being discharged. More than 60,000
clients of the organization’s network and 32,000 of its partner agencies
participated in the survey. Operation Homefront, a nonprofit focusing on the
lowest-paid enlisted service members, wounded warriors and their families, said
requests for food assistance from people they serve tripled starting in 2009
and have only slightly receded since then.
Adding to the
financial strain for military families, the Defense Department this year issued
its lowest pay raise – 1 percent - in 50 years, according to the Military
Officers Association of America, a nonpartisan nonprofit focused on military
personnel matters, and it will seek the
same level from Congress through 2017. Limiting the pay
increase came after Congress in 2000 passed a law to redress the salary gap
between civilians and the military, which was then at 13.5 percent, the
association said. The new pay cap hurts retention and readiness, particularly
impacting young military families already living on tight budgets, said Army
Col. Mike Barron (Ret.), the association’s deputy director of government
relations.
“It’s going to cause
them (soldiers) to not be as focused on their job at hand and a lot of the jobs
that we have, lives depend on them being focused,” he said. The financial
hardships translate into “more stress on the force, more stress on the service
member, more stress on their family,” he added.
The DOD said in its
FY2015 budget request that the rate of growth in military pay and benefits over
the last decade had “more than closed compensation gaps” but it couldn’t
sustain that pace in the current constrained fiscal environment. A 2012 Pentagon
study found that pay for enlisted soldiers, who have the lowest
salaries in the military, exceeded wages paid to 90 percent of civilians with
similar qualifications.
For enlisted soldiers,
pay starts at about $18,000 for new recruits and can reach upward of $65,000
for some who log more than 18 years in the military,according to the
DOD’s pay grade for 2014. While they also get tax-free allowances
for housing,
food and clothing, many families said they were still struggling to get by.
In interviews with
veterans and active duty families, many told NBC they had various schemes for
trying to stretch their dollars or raise extra cash: recycling, couponing,
visiting multiple food pantries and homeless shelters for emergency food like
milk for their children, buying groceries from dollar stores, delaying payment
of utility bills, and signing up for food stamps and WIC – the nutrition
program for women, infants and children. Some 2 percent of troops and 7 percent
of veterans received food stamps from 2009 to 2012, according to the U.S.
Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. Similar data for WIC wasn’t
available.
“Lowest income
military families are living paycheck to paycheck, and even those paychecks
aren't enough to make ends meet,” said Shana Hazan, a director at Jewish Family
Service (JFS) of San Diego, which began holding food distributions at military
locations in early 2007. As JFS makes its yearly plans, “I don't think we ever
questioned whether the need will remain in terms of food insecurity among
military families. That is just a base of assumption for us.”
Food banks have in the
last few years responded to the demand, with pantries holding monthly
distributions on military bases or nearby, like at the Army’s Fort Drum in
upstate New York, Marine Corps’ Camp Pendleton in Southern California and at
naval housing in San Diego. Some food pantries have opened in schools in
military neighborhoods.
In late July, 112
families – some with children in strollers and pulling wagons to carry their
food – formed a line snaking around two buildings at Camp Pendleton on a hot
Sunday in the arid, coastal mountain climate. The pantry, run by JFS, provided
games for the kids, massages for the parents and let individuals choose what
they wanted in a bid to remove the stigma of standing in a food line.
“It's hard to know
that my husband is fighting for his country and he's working long days and long
hours and we still have to struggle to keep food on the table and gas in our
cars,” said Shirley Starkey, 45, whose husband, a Marine of 11 years and a
sergeant, has been deployed twice to Afghanistan and once to Iraq. Starkey’s
18-year-old son left for Marine boot camp in May, but the couple is raising
their six-year-old grandchild. They started having difficulty making ends meet
when they moved from Camp Lejeune in North Carolina four years ago, where they
had savings, to the more expensive northern San Diego County, where they can’t
get ahead financially.
“It helps us out so
we’re not struggling so much,” she said of the food aid. “A lot of these
families are the same way.”
“You have to go there and I hate to say it, but it makes you
feel like you're begging for food.”
The stories are
similar for veterans, though they are typically wrestling with the switch to
civilian life and, for many, living with disabilities. A 2012 survey of nearly
1,000 post 9/11-era veterans in Minnesota found that 27 percent were
experiencing food insecurity, with about half of them in more dire straits.
Both numbers were nearly double that of the national average,
according to the survey by the University of Minnesota and the VA Health Care
System in Minneapolis.
There had been no
published research on food security among this group of veterans until the
survey and the numbers were “surprising,” said lead author, Rachel Widome,
assistant professor in the university’s Division of Epidemiology &
Community Health and an investigator at the Minneapolis VA.
“I think it's
important for those of us that interact with veterans to be aware that even if
you're talking to them and working on other issues, they might also have
another hidden struggle that's not received very much attention and can be
really difficult for people to talk about,” she said.
The food-insecure
veterans had one or more of the following characteristics: they tended to be
younger (like their active duty counterparts), have lower incomes, were
unemployed, single and had more children at home than their peers who weren’t
having food challenges.
When NBC asked the
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs if it gave food assistance to former
service members, it said it didn’t provide direct food aid to vets but noted
they would most likely receive that help from the VA’s local or state partners.
Navy veteran Mike
Hernandez, 37, said he grappled with the transition to post-military life after
leaving the service in 2006. He had $12,000 saved for the change, but that wouldn’t
get him far as the country slid into recession the following year.
“I'm there with a high
school-level education, ten years in the Navy, competing against people who are
unemployed with associate's, with bachelor's, with master's,” he said. “And I'm
there trying to compete against them trying to find a job? It just didn’t
happen.”
Hernandez worked in
San Antonio as a day laborer to get by, and one time, he and his family had to
get groceries from his parents and sister because he didn’t have any money to
buy food. His work in the Navy as an Aviation Systems Warfare Operator – in
which he deployed several times - didn’t translate well in the civilian world.
“When you join the
military, it's like you're taking a time out in your life,” he said, noting some
employers didn’t see his service as “any real job that you've done. And that
makes it very hard.”
Hernandez got a
security guard post in 2008. That, plus his disability check from the Veterans
Administration for post-traumatic stress disorder, weren’t enough – still
aren’t -- to make ends meet so he, his wife and their three daughters (ages 12,
9 and 18 months) went to a food pantry.
“It's pure
embarrassment. I hate it. I don’t like it. It's like taking away the pride you
have and making you humble,” he said. “You have to go there and I hate to say
it, but it makes you feel like you're begging for food.”
The family qualified
for food stamps but stopped using them when their situation improved because,
Hernandez said, they didn’t want the stigma associated with collecting them.
But they now need food help again and he doesn’t have the money to pay the
water bill until his next paycheck.
“If you look at my
(military) record, it's immaculate. And look at how bad I struggle,” he said.
“Why can't there be some type of program to help us out? We didn’t do anything
wrong. We come out of the military, next thing you know we're left to fend for
ourselves and you just can't make it.”
BILL WECHTER / FOR NBC
NEWS
Jonny Richardson, 9,
left, and his brother Josh, 7, center, both sons of an active duty Navy person,
volunteer helping out with Navy wife Lindsey Yetter, at the Jewish Family
Service food distribution for military families in San Diego.
That’s the situation
the Yetters are facing. Adam Yetter earns about $75,000 annually (before
taxes), including the allowances for housing and food. A family with two young
kids – not three like the Yetters have - living in San Diego needs $85,000, or
$10,000 more than Adam earns, to make ends meet in the area, according to a
2014 study by the Center on Policy
Initiatives.
Lindsey Yetter said
she has done paper routes, worked night shifts while pregnant, and babysat to
plug their financial holes.
“It's hard to find
different ways and tricks. And everyone's always looking,” she said. “At
military handouts the lines are long. People are selling things or working from
home. I'd say the majority of military families are always trying to find
another source of income.”
Amid the hardships,
Yetter said she also went to pantries in order to help provide her boys healthy
fruits and vegetables, which can be prohibitively
expensive for people on limited incomes. The family volunteers
at one of the pantries, a way for the boys to learn about giving back, too, she
said.
Yetter said they’re
grateful for the benefits they have received from the Navy, like her husband’s
education, yet wishes they didn’t have to struggle so much. The family stands
to lose about $1,600 this year from the DOD pay cap, according to Barron of the
officers association, but they’re hoping to save money by moving into the apartment
and to pay off their debt.
“This hopefully is
going to make that happen,” said Yetter. She wants a better future for her boys
– ages 6, 8 and 10. She tells them that with the apartment, “we’re on an
adventure just for now. It’s temporary. A temporary adventure, hopefully.”
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