In Plain Sight, Poverty In America : NBC NEWS
After jobs move out, hunger takes root in factory town
Wed Jul 3, 2013 9:01 AM EDT
Spencer Bakalar
Cliff
Lambeth, right, checks individual bags to make sure each contains a
sandwich, juice, fruit and a dessert for the bag lunches He Cares
distributes.
Spencer Bakalar
Mike
Turner assembles sandwiches to be distributed in the next few hours.
Before all of the 300 sandwiches were made, the volunteers ran out of
meat, causing them to go back into the sandwiches and cut every slice in
half.
It is difficult to ignore the six abandoned and crumbling factories that dot the landscape surrounding Main Street in Thomasville, N.C. Less than a half-mile away from the faded storefronts, children race in the shadows of broken window panes, past the empty lumberyards that once brought the town to life.
More than 100 years ago, Thomasville was the furniture industry hub of North Carolina. It was the type of town that created generational jobs where grandfathers, fathers and sons could each work and prosper, knowing that the opportunity for employment would be there for years to come.
"It's all a lot of people ever knew," said Mike Turner, founder of He Cares, an outreach ministry in Thomasville that distributes bag lunches and food boxes to the community.
In the past 15 years, however, the town of roughly 27,000 people has lost more than 5,000 manufacturing jobs. Companies like century-old Thomasville Furniture Industries, Inc., Duracell, and others downsized, relocated or closed.
Spencer Bakalar
Edward
McClatchen gives bags to a family in the poorest apartment complex in
Thomasville. "This is the last stop before the streets," says Mike
Turner.
Mike Turner was laid off in 2005 from Thomasville Furniture, but found factory work in nearby town, much like many of his former co-workers.
"All of those guys were struggling," said Turner. "Some of them didn't even know how to read or write. Furniture was all they knew."
Spencer Bakalar
Edward
McClatchen, left, and Mike Turner, right, pray with Frank Hill, center.
Frank lives alone, but looks forward to seeing Turner every week. "No
matter when I see him, no matter what is happening to him, he is always
smiling," said Turner.
And despite the best efforts of Turner, and other local organizations, sparse food donations, unapproved grants, and inadequate funding have made it difficult to provide enough food for the growing number of needy families.
Changing face of hunger
Terri Nelson has seen a huge increase in the number of people coming to Thomasville’s Fairgrove Family Resource Center: from 50 people a month to more than 1,000 in the decade she has worked there.
"The face of hunger has changed,” she said. “Children are most affected because of the economy. Their parents can't find jobs, and if they do find jobs, they work as hard as they can and never make enough."
It’s a feeling Jennifer Beck Powell knows well. A 34-year-old single mom with four kids, Powell lives in Thomasville, where the grim employment prospects forced her to look elsewhere.
Like Turner, she found another job 10 miles away, in High Point.
Spencer Bakalar
Jennifer takes a break during her shift.
At the end of the day, after 11 hours on her feet, she picks up her kids from daycare and goes home to help them with homework and cook. Because Powell often works through her 10-minute lunch break, dinner is the first big meal of the day.
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