Voices

The time for giving is every day of the year

The start of the holiday season is traditionally a time that people become aware of the need to give to others.

The food collection bins for Project Feed the Thousands showed up earlier this month at local grocery stores.

The two biggest food shelves in Windham County, Our Place in Bellows Falls and the Brattleboro Drop-In Center, are distributing food nearly as fast as they receive donations.

And it's clear that the Deerfield Valley Food Pantry, the Townshend Community Food Shelf and churches such as Community Bible Chapel in Brattleboro and the Second Congregational Church in Londonderry are gearing up for another challenging year.

The Windham County Heat Fund also got off to an early start this year and the Reformer Christmas Stocking, which provides winter clothing to local children in need, will kick off its annual appeal later this week.

Warm Hands Warm Hearts, the Masons' annual project that collects used winter clothing, blankets, and sleeping bags, is also about to begin.

And with the arrival of cold weather, the Brattleboro Overflow Shelter at the First Baptist Church has opened for the season, as has the Greater Falls Warming Shelter in Bellows Falls.

It's good that so many organizations in our area are helping people through one of the bleakest economic times in decades, and we encourage our readers to support these efforts.

But private charity can only go so far in dealing with a government that has failed too many of our fellow citizens.

Listening to the incoming members of the 112th Congress, we can hear that providing help and hope for people in need is not a high priority. And, given the ongoing financial woes in Montpelier, we can't expect state government to pick up the slack.

But it is time we asked the following questions of our representatives in Montpelier and in Washington.

With nearly 1 in 5 adult Americans either unemployed, underemployed, or having given up looking for work entirely, why is there so little willingness to deal with chronic joblessness?

Is the fear of raising taxes or increasing deficits more worrisome than dealing with the human costs of this recession?

If we truly are a compassionate people, why are the demands of the haves being put ahead of the needs of the have-nots?

It is right to think of those in need during the holidays, but poverty and joblessness are with us 24/7. We can't solve the long-term economic problems of our nation with holiday alms-giving. We can only solve our endemic problems with a commitment to creating a just and fair economy for all.

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