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Wednesday, December 18, 2024

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Push for paid parental leave for KY state employees; Trump sues Des Moines Register, top pollster over final Iowa survey; Doula Alliance of AR works to improve maternal health; MT wildland firefighters face a drastic pay cut.

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The government defends its drone responses, lawmakers debate anti-Islamophobia and transgender policies, a stopgap spending deal sparks tensions, and Trump threatens more legal actions against the media.

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School vouchers were not as popular with conservative voters last month as President-elect Donald Trump, Pennsylvania's Black mayors work to unite their communities, and America's mental health providers try new techniques.

Supports available for migrant workers' families during peak harvest in OR

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Wednesday, July 17, 2024   

A program in the Columbia River Gorge helps migrant farmworkers' families during harvest season.

The Resources Available for Migrant Access to Services group is led by the Oregon Child Development Coalition in Hood River and Wasco Counties. It provides support during a four-week period of peak harvest time, including food boxes to families.

Leah Hall, community philanthropy manager for the Columbia Gorge Food Bank in The Dalles, said migrant workers follow the harvest and often bring their families with them.

"We provide culturally appropriate and shelf-stable food boxes to distribute to families when they arrive during this transitional time," Hall explained. "These direct distributions just allow for an efficient use of time and resources for families while also reducing some of the pressure on our public pantry partners throughout the region."

Harvest season in the Columbia River Gorge typically happens between June and October, with cherries in season during July.

Hall pointed out the group provides more than food boxes.

"Through the coordination of all these partners that work in this RAMAS collaborative, the communities of migrant farmworkers and families receives education, nutrition, health, social services, mental health and disabilities, and family engagement education services," Hall outlined.

Coordination from the group is key for another reason. Hall noted they work with orchardists and farm owners in the region to determine when workers are expected to arrive.

"We're able to pack our boxes on our end as close to the harvest date as possible and get it in the hand of those who need it as they're arriving," Hall emphasized. "The timing is really quite amazing and efficient just based on the communication of everyone working in this program."

Disclosure: Oregon Food Bank contributes to our fund for reporting on Community Issues and Volunteering, Education, Health Issues, Hunger/Food/Nutrition. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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