Showing posts with label welfare. Show all posts
Showing posts with label welfare. Show all posts

Friday, September 13, 2013

In The News: How The LDS Bishop's Storehouse In Columbus, Ohio Provides Aid To The Needy And Increases Self-Reliance

To counter propaganda questioning how much the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints invests in helping the needy, the Columbus Dispatch has published a story about the operation of a Bishop's Storehouse near Columbus, Ohio. The food pantry, which is actually located in the suburb of Groveport, distributed about $960,000 worth of products during 2012 in nine southern Ohio stakes representing about 22,000 Church members, and is part of a network of 140 storehouses in the U.S. To address criticism about restricting access to Church members, the storehouse provides food donations valued at $1,000 each to other nonprofit agencies where Church members volunteer, at least 15 such donations have been made so far in 2013. News video embedded below:



The primary difference between Mormon assistance and other assistance is workfare; the Church welfare program is not intended to be a way of life, but to provide a hand up rather than just a handout. Church members not only provide needy families with food, but also visit their homes to help them plan menus and teach them how to cook healthy meals. Recipients also might be asked to do work within a stake or take part in job training or counseling services. The latter requirement can also serve to provide a work history which can be used to flesh out resumes when applying for jobs. In addition, LDS members using the storehouses are encouraged to strive for full activity within the Church and to pay tithing on whatever wages or compensation are received; some members even insist upon paying tithing under these circumstances to increase their sense of personal empowerment and self-worth. The Church welfare program is far more than just "free food", visit the Church's Welfare Page to find out more about the holistic approach used.

Note that the LDS Welfare Program is separate and distinct from the Helping Hands Program, which is a priesthood-directed Church program to provide community service and disaster relief to all in need regardless of religion.

One person posted the following comment to the Dispatch story:

Gregori Steinway (PaxChristi) 2013-09-13 04:50:06
Wonderful mission to provide food to the needy and hungry. However, I still prefer the mission of those soup kitchens and food pantries that are open to all, regardless of church membership. But better to give to the needy members of your faith than to no one at all.

Understandable, but perhaps Steinway ought to consider that if the number of Mormons who use the Church's welfare system increases, the number using other resources will decrease. This means other resources will be able to provide MORE to their clientele.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Did The FDA Really Shut Down All LDS Canneries East Of The Mississippi River? LDS Church Says No

Update June 18th: LDS Church issues official statement confirming that self-canning will end at 89 of their 101 Home Storage Centers; updated post HERE.

Update May 7th: In response to a query by Times & Seasons, the LDS Church sent the following statement: "The Church is not closing canneries and is not limiting the variety of goods available to Church members. Over time, we will be reducing the number of facilities where the packaging of dry goods occurs. Instead, Church home storage centers will offer the same or additional commodities in pre-packaged form, at no additional cost".

Upon opening one of my e-mail accounts on May 4th, I found a message entitled "FDA Shuts down LDS Canneries", and sourcing the Wiseprepper website. In turn, Wiseprepper cites a report from the Preparedness Pro Facebook page (which is available only to Facebook members), which states "All LDS Canneries east of the Mississippi will no longer be canning any food. The FDA, in their infinite, expert opinions –- said with the greatest of sarcasm –- has managed to FINALLY create such a set of conditions which are impossible for the LDS Church to comply with". Locations of LDS Welfare Centers can be found HERE.

Further investigation reveals a discussion thread on The Tree Of Liberty, where a copy of a letter produced by the LDS Home Storage Center in Greensboro, NC is posted. The letter is re-published below:

Click to enlarge or go HERE for original

In the letter, the HSC confirms that they will be no longer canning at their facility effective on June 26th of this year. But they will be receiving canned goods from elsewhere. What's interesting is that they say they cannot sell existing stock after July 1st. But there's no mention of any involvement by the Food & Drug Administration (FDA). Furthermore, neither the Provident Living website, the official Mormon Newsroom website, nor the FDA website mention any FDA interaction with LDS canneries. Discussion on the LDS Freedom Forum indicates confirmation from the Atlanta area, however.

One poster on Tree Of Liberty hints that this might have been an economic retrenchment decision by the LDS Church. Snowbandit writes "The western ones are described as more 'robust' and will continue to produce. Product from the west will be available in the eastern stores with the addition of transportation costs and now unused equipment from the east will be available to loan for home canning projects. I don't agree with the LDS on much but this is still a good project". Unfortunately, the supporting link referenced by Snowbandit does not load. But this sounds like a more plausible explanation; regardless of how much in the way of financial resources the LDS Church receives, they will always look for additional ways to economize.

However, output from Snowbandit's supporting link was published on MS Gun Owners, and they insist there's a secret FDA plan to shut down all LDS Canneries nationwide in two years by inflicting "death by a thousand cuts" through excessive regulation and punitive enforcement. Here's the key excerpt:

Will the LDS Canneries Be Shut Down?

What’s a cannery that doesn’t can anything? Well, apparently it’s just a center now in which people will be able to check out the #10 canners for a few days at a time and can dry goods in their own home now or they’ll be able to purchase pre-packaged goods that will be canned in the more robust facilities in the Western States which will no doubt bear the burden of the cost to be shipped now to the Eastern states. However, several interviews made it clear to me that there’s an active intent by these government entities to shut down ALL LDS Canneries ALL over the U.S. including the ability to purchase foods in bulk and that there’s a targeted time table by the government entities to have this accomplished at the end of the next two years. We’ll just have to see who wins that little challenge.

Read what they also say about LDS orchards:

However, the feds have upped their regulations this year and are requiring every volunteer to be (specially government) trained. They have made it clear that we could be audited, and the volunteers could be asked by Gov’t officials on-site (at any time) if they have been ‘trained’. If we are not in compliance, the orchard could be shut down. So after Sacrament meeting today they had a Stake member come and pass out a ‘training’ sheet and gave adults a card that people are supposed to sign and take with them out to the orchard when we work to show that we have been trained. The wards now have to have an orchard coordinator that will be on site to ‘train’ those people who fall through the cracks and missed the training.

The training includes on-site cleanliness (washing hands, etc. and using the toilet facilities that the church has always provided (us) before ‘they’ said anything); another item was that if fruit touches the ground we are to not put it in the bins; we can’t use it for use at the cannery. However, that fruit is good enough for me to pick up and take home to eat, hmmmm. Moving on….

Another item–That children are watched carefully so they don’t pick fruit with unclean hands, (seems to me that the canning process would kill any bacteria that a child or adult might have on their hands); that each volunteer record their hours, and that we provide proof of training to any official who may want to see it on demand.

Summary:

-- We know the Greensboro HSC will no longer be canning on their premises after June 26th. They will continue to sell canned goods shipped in from elsewhere, and they will allow patrons to check out their canning equipment as needed.

-- There's a good chance that every LDS Welfare Center east of the Mississippi will stop canning on their facilities effective June 26th, but they will also remain open.

-- There's insufficient evidence of FDA involvement at this time.

The Federal government has undeniably become an oppressive entity, but it's not helpful to blame them for sins they may not have committed. The Feds have committed enough other sins we can highlight. Times And Seasons is now discussing this issue.

Monday, April 4, 2011

LDS Church Observes The 75th Anniversary Of The Church Welfare Program In 2011; Promotes Self-Reliance And Preserves Human Dignity

During the just-concluded 181st Annual General Conference of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, the Church's Welfare program took center stage. In part, that's because on April 6th, 2011, the Church observes the 75th anniversary of its welfare program. First known as the Church Security Plan, the program was introduced on April 6th, 1936 by then-President Heber J. Grant to help Saints cope with the raging Depression. Since then, the program has affected virtually every member of the LDS Church, especially through its primary principle of fostering self-reliance. Most have been either a contributor or recipient of the program's goods and services that support individuals and families when their needs outstrip self-reliance. It is financed by the fast offerings of Church members, who contribute the money they would have spent on the three meals they voluntarily give up once per month. All the aspects of the Church's welfare program come together on the Provident Living website. KSL news story embedded below:

Video Courtesy of KSL.com


The nerve center of the Welfare Program is in Utah, where the program is anchored by Welfare Square in Salt Lake City. The facility includes a cannery, milk and cheese processing facility; a landmark 16-million pound grain elevator that can been seen for miles; and a bakery, storehouse, thrift store and employment center, all of which are run mostly by volunteers serving church missions. The thrift stores are run under the auspices of Deseret Industries at 45 location in seven Western states.

The Church's Welfare Program promotes self-reliance by asking recipients to give back labor in exchange for aid. President Thomas S. Monson said, "The purpose of church welfare assistance is to help people to help themselves. Recipients of these resources are given the opportunity to work, to the extent of their ability, for the assistance they receive." This preserves basic dignity; for a family breadwinner, taking charity can be an emasculating experience. At the local level, bishops administer the welfare program with the assistance of the ward's president of the Relief Society.