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The place where you can stay up to date with the latest events, stories, news, and opportunities for our City Relief community.

Hunger Doesn’t Have to Win
Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti

Hunger Doesn’t Have to Win

All month, we've looked at the invisible crisis of hunger in our cities—how it intersects with homelessness, health, access, and affordability. We've talked about people eating dollar meals because they have no kitchen, skipping food to pay for transit, and developing chronic illnesses from diets shaped by scarcity.

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The Exponential Impact of Higher Food Costs
Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti

The Exponential Impact of Higher Food Costs

If you've walked through a grocery store or ordered takeout recently, you've felt it. Our fridge broke down a few weeks ago, and we had to order food for three days while waiting on a replacement part. Nearly $70 for some Chinese takeout for a family of four, and that was just dinner! Prices like that aren't just inconvenient. They’re unsustainable.

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The High Cost of Cheap Food
Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti

The High Cost of Cheap Food

A while back, I met a woman who had just moved into a shelter after months of living in her car. She told me she'd been eating fast food almost every day, not because she liked it, but because it was the only thing she could get. No kitchen. No fridge. No place to store leftovers. She was working odd jobs and surviving day-to-day, so anything that required prep or cleanup was off the table—literally. That left her with the dollar menu.

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“You get what you get and you don’t get upset” … even if your health depends on it
Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti Weekly Newsletters Elizabeth Fischetti

“You get what you get and you don’t get upset” … even if your health depends on it

I have a friend I met on the streets years ago who I'll call Sean. He's a short man in his fifties with dark hair and a joy that radiated love and warmth to everyone around him. Every time I saw him, Sean would call my name and insist on a hug (I'm not a hugger, but I made an exception for Sean). His smile could lift your whole day.

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