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NY Times, March 21, 2020
Coronavirus and Poverty: A Mother Skips Meals So Her Children Can Eat
By Manny Fernandez
BRENHAM, Texas — With her six hungry children in the car, Summer
Mossbarger was one of the first in line for lunch at the drive-through.
Not at a fast-food restaurant, but outside Alton Elementary School.
Alton was closed — all the public schools in Brenham, a rural Texas town
of 17,000 about 90 miles east of Austin, have shut for the coronavirus —
but one vital piece of the school day lived on: free lunch. Ms.
Mossbarger rolled down the window of her used, 15-year-old S.U.V. as
school employees handed her six Styrofoam containers.
Even as the carnival aroma of mini corn dogs filled the vehicle on the
drive back home, and even as the children sat on the porch and ate from
their flipped-open containers with the family dogs running around, Ms.
Mossbarger ate nothing.
She skipped breakfast and lunch, taking her first bite of food —
food-pantry fried chicken — at about 5:30 p.m. All she consumed from the
time she awoke that morning until she ate dinner were sips from a cherry
Dr Pepper.
Money was tight. Ms. Mossbarger, 33, a disabled Army veteran, does not
work. Her husband’s job as a carpenter has slowed in recent days and
gotten more unpredictable as people cancel or delay residential
construction jobs. She had plenty of worries — paying the $1,000 rent
was at the top of the list — but lunch for her children was not one of them.
“If we didn’t have this, I probably would have a mental breakdown with
stress,” she said of the free meals at Alton. “I’m not going to let my
kids go hungry. If I have to just eat once a day, that’s what I have to do.”
The power of the coronavirus to produce upheaval in people’s lives
depends in part on income. Americans with fewer financial resources have
fewer options as they navigate the new normal of school closings,
shuttered businesses and shelter-in-place orders.
Poverty experts said that in times of natural disasters and large-scale
emergencies, low-income families who are already living on tight budgets
with overdue bills, unstable housing, poor health care and unsteady
employment often bear the brunt of the pain.
“They tend to be the first hit when things go wrong and then also to
take the longest time to recover,” said H. Luke Shaefer, a professor of
social work and public policy at the University of Michigan and the
faculty director of its Poverty Solutions initiative.
Ms. Mossbarger’s self-imposed starvation was one quiet, anonymous moment
amid a national crisis, and one sign of the depth of the virus’s impact
on the working poor.
The Brenham Independent School District’s free-lunch drive-through was
one of many underway this week in Texas, Florida, Pennsylvania, Oregon
and other states attempting to ensure that schoolchildren continue to
receive free meals Monday through Friday during weekslong virus-related
closures. Educators and school nutritionists said that for some
impoverished children, the free breakfast and free lunch at school are
the only substantial meals they will eat in a day.
Albuquerque Public Schools, New Mexico’s largest district, where about
69 percent of students receive free or reduced-price meals, began
passing out free breakfasts and lunches at dozens of its schools
starting Monday. In California, the Elk Grove school system in
Sacramento has since last week provided nearly 11,000 students with two
daily meals, lunch and tomorrow’s breakfast.
In Brenham, where 60 percent of the 5,000 public school students qualify
for free or low-cost meals, the school district handed out more than
1,000 lunches and more than 800 breakfasts to children over the
program’s first three days this week.
Brenham is a working-class town, known in Texas as the home of Blue Bell
ice cream. Cattle and horses graze in the pastures that line the roads
and highways, and the cowboys do not bother to take off their hats when
they climb into their trucks. The town is the uncredited backdrop of
countless postcards, posters and Instagram accounts — the bluebonnets
are bright and ubiquitous, and even color the grassy medians. But
beneath its rustic beauty and ice-cream-company charm lies financial
hardship. Brenham has a median household income of roughly $44,000, and
a poverty rate of 18.6 percent.
On Tuesday, the long, tranquil driveway outside Alton Elementary was the
coronavirus equivalent of an old-fashioned soup line, roughly 10 cars
deep. District employees who volunteered to pass out meals recognized
some of the drivers — they worked for the district, too, and had brought
their children to get a free lunch.
The nation’s free or reduced-price lunch program has long been used as
an indicator of a community’s poverty level, but there was no sign of
embarrassment, resentment or shame in the drive-through line. Some
drivers hollered a loud thank you to the volunteers as they pulled away,
and most didn’t even bother to ask what was inside the lunch containers:
mini corn dogs, baked beans, baby carrots, an orange. People seemed more
concerned with social distancing than any social stigma. One woman kept
her driver’s side window rolled up as she interacted with the
volunteers, to avoid having them get too close to her.
They pulled up in beat-up cars with rattling engines, newly washed
trucks, sleek Cadillacs, old minivans. They were white, black, Hispanic.
Mothers were behind the wheel of most of the vehicles, but there were a
few fathers, too, and high school students with their younger siblings
inside. The only requirement was that children under 18 had to be inside
the vehicle to receive the meal, but no one was asked to prove that the
children attended a district school.
For many of the families, the free meals were not the difference between
their children eating or not eating. Instead, they said they viewed it
as a way to stretch their budgets a little longer, so that the money
they would have spent on that day’s lunch could instead go to tomorrow’s
dinner or next week’s bill. Word had spread while families idled in line
that the Texas governor was activating the National Guard, that some of
the shelves at a local grocery store were still barren. The
drive-through at Alton was one small bright spot at an anxious time,
even though their county had no confirmed cases of the coronavirus.
Gabbie Salazar, 28, made two trips to the drive-through, each time with
different sets of nieces, nephews and cousins in her car. She knows
Alton well: She manages the school cafeteria. She is a single mother who
works two jobs, at the school and at a day care, and makes a total of
about $2,000 a month, with a rent of about $800 monthly.
“Save a little money, you know?” Ms. Salazar said of the free meals.
“I’m a single mom. I only have to do one meal at night, so that helps a
lot.”
Before Ms. Mossbarger pulled up in the drive-through line on Tuesday,
she took her six children to the H-E-B grocery store. She went to the
aisle for paper towels and toilet paper, but there was nothing left —
the shelves were empty, and customers were crowding around to grab
whatever they could. She gathered the children, left the cart in the
middle of the aisle and walked out, frustrated that she had wasted gas
in her Chevrolet Suburban.
“I couldn’t deal with it,” she said of the grocery store. “It stresses
me out. Because me as a mother, it makes me feel like I’m not going to
be able to provide for my kids.”
Her husband, Jordan Spahn, 47, said they do not have the luxury of
stockpiling. When he found out he did not have any carpentry jobs on
Tuesday — usually, he makes about $180 daily — he worked on a friend’s
patio-furniture set to make a few extra dollars.
“We live check to check,” Mr. Spahn said. “We’ve seen those that have
more than others be the first ones to get everything they could get
their hands on. It shows a little bit of the state of society these
days. What if it gets 20 times worse next week, and now we don’t have
nothing to get?”
The family moved into a rental home a few weeks ago. Empty fields
sprinkled with bluebonnets gave the children space to run around, ride
their bicycles and swing from the tire hooked to a tree branch and from
the hammock on the porch. Ms. Mossbarger thinks of her military training
when she thinks about mealtime for her four boys and two girls — Tristan
Spahn, 5; Layla Ray, 6; Stasy Spahn, 7; Hayden Brown, 9; Gavin Brown, 9;
and Joseph Brown, 10. “I was a cook in the military, so I’m used to
feeding the masses,” she said.
Ms. Mossbarger was raised in Brenham. Years ago, her father was one of
her husband’s high school teachers. They laugh about it now and said
that is just how things work in a small town. She wears her devotion to
her children on her skin. The tattoo of the Teddy bear on her arm was
for 10-year-old Joseph, the initials on her chest for 6-year-old Layla,
who is named for the famous rock song.
The spread of the virus, for Ms. Mossbarger and Mr. Spahn, was one
struggle in a lifetime of them. Ms. Mossbarger said that years ago,
there was a time when she was homeless. Two of Mr. Spahn’s older sons —
Matthew, 21, and Jonah, 24 — were both struck and killed by vehicles in
separate accidents in the past year and a half. Their pictures and track
jerseys cover the walls of the living room.
“We’ve been through some hard times in these past 16, 17 months,” Mr.
Spahn said. “We’ve had heartache, heartbreak and now with this coming
on, it’s kind of like, all right, bring it.”
Dinner, like lunch, was served on Styrofoam.
The entire meal was provided by Ms. Mossbarger’s sister-in-law and by a
food-distribution nonprofit organization, Bread Partners of Washington
County. The children ate leftover spaghetti, canned vegetables,
microwave biscuits and Goldfish crackers. Ms. Mossbarger and her husband
ate fried chicken with rice and the canned vegetables. The children said
grace before their parents even sat down.
Ms. Mossbarger hardly mentioned it, but she was starving. “I honestly
wasn’t going to eat, but Jordan was like, ‘You got to eat something,’”
she said.
The next morning, she again skipped breakfast and was sipping a Monster
Energy drink. She was tired and her head hurt.
“I feel it,” she said.
Her husband’s job was called off yet again, heightening her financial
concerns about the coming days and weeks. “I’m constantly thinking
what’s the next move going to be,” Ms. Mossbarger said. “Basically, if
he’s not working, I’m going to eat as little as possible because I know
that’s less food in my kids’ mouths.”
Soon, it was almost 11 a.m. She packed the children into the Suburban.
She was headed again to the drive-through at Alton.
Simon Romero contributed reporting from Albuquerque.
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