The picture on Ted Bergh's
cellphone showed a long line of people winding around Springfield
Central Catholic School in western Ohio. They were there April 13 to get
food, he said; 733 families, 2,378 people in all.
Bergh, CEO of Catholic Charities of Southwest Ohio based in Cincinnati,
was astonished by the numbers. The agency worked with the Second Harvest
Food Pantry and Catholic parishes in Springfield, northeast of Dayton,
to distribute the food in an area continuing to experience high
unemployment.
The photo was the cornerstone to a series of meetings Bergh had April 17
with congressional staffers during Catholic Charities USA's annual Hill
Day. Bergh came to Washington to convince members of southwest Ohio's
congressional delegation to preserve funding for important food and
nutrition programs.
"Hunger is alive and well in the middle of Ohio." Bergh told Catholic News Service prior to his first appointment in the office of Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio.
At the meeting Bergh talked about the crowd in Springfield as well as
the need for immigration reform and sensible gun control. The senator's
assistant, Tyler Brace, listened to Bergh's stories about agency clients
and accepted handouts detailing the work of Catholic Charities across
Ohio, much of it through federal grants. Brace remained noncommittal on
Portman's stances.
An hour later, Bergh was at the office of House Speaker John Boehner,
R-Ohio. He showed the same picture, told the same stories and reiterated
the same concerns to legislative assistant Derrick Walter. This time
Bergh invited Boehner to see the work of the food pantry, which is
located in the speaker's district, and meet the people receiving
assistance.
Later, Bergh met with Rep. Brad Wenstrup and Rep. Steve Chabot, both
Republicans representing large parts of the Cincinnati Archdiocese. He
said the meetings went well and that both representatives praised the
work of Catholic Charities.
Bergh was one of 30 local Catholic Charities officials from 20 states to
participate in Hill Day activities. The event allows local leaders to
explain the value of their work by telling the stories of clients and to
call upon members of Congress to keep the poor and marginalized a
priority when they consider federal budget outlays.
Jeffrey Bialik, executive director of Catholic Charities CYO in the
Archdiocese of San Francisco, described the effort to CNS as making "the
invisible visible" to members of Congress.
This year's congressional visits took on a more serious tone given the
widening support for social service spending cuts from congressional
Democrats and Republicans and the White House.
Several diocesan Catholic Charities directors told CNS some cuts are
already being felt thanks to the sequestration, an automatic 5 percent
budget cut in social services and military spending that kicked in March
1. Their goal this year was to avoid future funding cuts that would
harm the elderly, veterans, single mothers and children.
Steve Bogus, executive director of Catholic Charities of Louisville,
Ky., took his time with legislators to explain the challenges poor
people face daily in trying to piece together their lives, often running
from one social service agency to another.
"It's really a full-time job to survive when you're a poor person," he
said. "A lot of people look and say people are just lazy, they've been
very dependent and they just kind of milk the system. But it's very hard
work to be poor.
"Most people who are on food stamps, for example, are disabled or are
single moms trying to do the right thing by their kids. So they have to
do something to feed their family for the seven days (of the month),"
Bogus added.
He said he wanted to urge Congress to look beyond simply slashing social
service spending in a time of sluggish economic recovery.
"If they're feeling pressured to redo government, then we need to find
ways where government can be a catalyst," he said. "We need to get the
whole community involved, including the private and business sectors as
well as nonprofits."
In Montana, the needs and concerns are much the same for Rosemary Miller, who was part of the Hill Day event in earlier years.
"It's a crucial time for our social service agencies that are serving
the poor and need in Montana and every other state," said Miller,
executive director of Catholic Social Services of Montana in the Helena
Diocese. "We really need for them (legislators) to be strong in
promoting the needs of people."
Protecting Head Start and other services for children were top concerns
for Miller. Such programs, she said, often prevent future social crises
such as unemployment, homelessness and hunger.
"I'm sure they're very cognizant of those needs of the poor," she told CNS.
Laura Cassell, CEO of Catholic Charities in the Diocese of Rockville
Center, N.Y., brought concerns about proposals to cut housing support
for families and military veterans. The agency continues to offer
whatever assistance it can to residents who continue to struggle with
the high cost of housing on Long Island, which has worsened in the
aftermath of October's Hurricane Sandy, she said.
"In addition to folks who we were already providing some assistance to,
we now have huge numbers of families, many whom have never been in need,
who have a very, very long road to recovery," she said.
The agency has helped 1,800 families and the case management program
Catholic Charities established is expected to continue through at least
2014, Cassell said.
"When you hear representatives talk about housing, it's often affordable
home ownership," she explained." Our experience is that affordable
rental is just as important. That sometimes gets lost in the
conversation."