According to the 2015 research data from Northwest Harvest.org, Washington state is the 23rd hungriest state in the nation—one in five Washingtonians relies on food bank; one in seven Washingtonian relies on SNAP (food stamps). Moreover, hunger is affecting children, adults, and seniors. The overall food insecure number is nearly 50,000,000 people and over 15,000,000 are children based on the 2013 research of Feeding America. As USA Today shows off, 43% of food bank users are white and 26% are black, 33% of households have at least one family member with diabetes, and 65% of households have a child under 18 or someone older 60. These findings are alarmed—Foodinsecure affects people’s life, health, and future. “…Both food insecurity and obesity can be independent consequences of low income and the resulting lack of access to enough nutritious food or stresses of poverty. More specifically, obesity among food insecure people – as well as among low-income people – occurs in part because they are subject to the same often challenging cultural changes as other Americans.”, according to the article published by the Food Research and Action Center in 2015. Therefore, UDFB should act out to cooperate with other charity unions and civil institutions in order to provide people the completed …show more content…
As UDFB stated, “Our mission is to provide individuals and families who are in need with food and access to a network of community resources that help them achieve self-sufficiency”, we can classify their mission into short term (in order to solve the hunger issue) and long term (assist people to achieve self-sufficiency). Food bank is the place to distribute food to the need people in order to avoid any needless wastes. Despite UDFB have accomplished their short-term mission, their long-term mission is failed because they don’t provide any support to help the food insecure people become self-sufficient. UDFB should build up more strong relationship with other charity organizations and government institutions. In order to compensate what they miss, UDFB isplanning a new food bank, cooperating with Seattle library, youth care, and low-income housing institute, generate an integrated big picture that connect people to the needed resources include the food and community