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Farmers and ranchers continue feeding Oregon's hungry
12/22/2010
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Oregon farmers and ranchers continue putting food on the plate for many of the state's most vulnerable citizens, even as the need for hunger assistance reaches unprecedented levels:  


 
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Donations from organizations like Farmers Ending Hunger remain strong despite the fact that the agriculture industry is not immune to a struggling Oregon economy. This year's efforts are approaching the record setting mark of 2.1 million pounds donated to the Oregon Food Bank set in 2009. That's a big boost, says Rachel Bristol, executive director of the food bank:

BRISTOL:  "We've seen the trend to moving toward more fresh, frozen, ready-to-serve. The bulk of our donations are coming from Oregon's food industry."  :09

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Nearly a million people, or 7 percent of Oregon's population, are eating out of emergency food boxes at some time during the year. While demand is up, Oregon's producers are ready to help:

BURT:  "When presented with the issue- with the knowledge and the awareness that a problem likes this exists- farmers, the ranchers, the food processors, the agriculture industry will step up."  :12

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John Burt is with Farmers Ending Hunger. As the year draws to a close, the group has donated 660-thousand pounds of potatoes, 350-thousand pounds of onions, 165-thousand pounds of fresh vegetables, 130-thousand pounds of beef, and enough wheat- with the help of the Oregon Wheat Foundation- to provide 225-thousand pounds of pancake mix. That helps what is routinely ranked as one of the nation's five hungriest states. In Salem, I'm Bruce Pokarney.  


Additional audio: Audio 03
BRISTOL says the Oregon Food Bank has built up the network's capacity to handle bulk products donated by the state's farmers and ranchers by purchasing freezers and refrigerators:

"We bring in truck loads of product, a lot of fresh food from farmers. In fact, in this state, we've had to get ahead of the curve nationally in being able to handle fresh and frozen product."  :15

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BURT says Farmers Ending Hunger has been successful in its four years of operation. But to reach the need, the public needs to help:

"Farmers and ranchers, food processors are involved. Those are people that are dealing with food products all the time. Oregon Food Bank is a huge partner. But we need the public to be involved in this sort of ‘adopt an acre" way of helping cover the cost of getting the product from point A to point B, and then put it in what I call a food-box friendly form."  :18

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Full story
http://oregon.gov/ODA/news/101222hunger.shtml