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Monday, December 22, 2008

Wanted: Generous souls in tough times

From the BCCT.

Yes, times are tight. You can still do some good. Give at that office collection, the Salvation Army bell ringer, your church, the local food bank, or even your neighbor you know is having a hard time. This is not a specific endorsement of any specific way to help: There's plenty of outlets where your generosity can be used.

Maybe this year, the tables are turned. You've always been the generous giver. This year, you need to be the receiver. Reach out. It's hard to extend a helping hand when only one is reaching.


Wanted: Generous souls in tough times
The faces of the unemployed, the foreclosed upon and those in poverty in Bucks County demonstrate how much your help is needed.
By CARL LAVO
STAFF WRITER

The economy sputters on Wall Street and Main Street. Fortunately, the spirit of giving continues to burn bright in Lower Bucks County.

For 50 years and counting, you and your neighbors have contributed everything you can to the annual Give-A-Christmas fund sponsored by the Levittown-Bristol Kiwanis Club and the Bucks County Courier Times. Your generosity has made a difference to those who are crushed by circumstances during the holiday season.

This year, the heartbreak of families in trouble continues and is all around us.

Here’s just a sampling:

“I am a single mother with breast cancer. I have 2 daughters, ages 4 and 6. I am not working due to my illness and have no way to provide Christmas to my girls. If there is any way you could help, it would be greatly appreciated.” — Northampton

“This family has always donated to the needy but now finds themselves in desperate need. The husband and wife, both injured, are barely surviving on a fraction of their original income while trying to support their children, as well as their 20-year-old daughter who had to drop out of college when they couldn’t afford her tuition. They’re struggling to just keep a roof over their heads.” —
Levittown

“I have two children and receive $650 a month to live on from Social Security. God bless what you’re doing.” — Langhorne

“I am writing to you about a family in great need. They just lost their apartment and they have two children, ages 3 and 2, and the mother is expecting any day. The father was working 2 jobs when he lost one of them. … They aren’t having Christmas this year due to no money. They have no tree, no gifts for the children. Please help.” —
Northampton

“Mom and 4 boys — She has cancer and no money to get the boys anything for Christmas. Please help.” —
Levittown

“I work so hard to take care of my son and I. One of the Grey Nuns in Yardley gives me her old things and I sell them at flea markets to make ends meet. Please help make Christmas possible.” —
Bensalem

“I am writing for a friend who could use some holiday cheer and a touch of kindness this Christmas season. … He has been laid off several weeks ago, cannot collect unemployment or find a fulltime job. He has worked for some temp services but only gets two to three days a week. I know he could use a little help but would never ask.” —
Morrisville

These are just some of the faces behind sobering statistics in Bucks, where poverty is mostly hidden behind an aura of affluence. Here, where the average household income is a comfortable $88,888, others struggle just to get by:

Nearly 5 percent of workingage adults in Bucks are unemployed, up 1.5 percent from last year. That translates into more than 31,000 county residents out of work — from Morrisville to Quakertown, Bensalem to Riegelsville.

More than 5 percent of county residents live below the poverty line. That’s at least 32,000 people earning less than $22,200 a year, the federal poverty threshold. One county official estimates the number is far higher in Bucks because it requires $33,000 to $37,000 a year for a family of three just to afford basic necessities here.

One house out of every 1,868 homes in Bucks County is in foreclosure. People also are being evicted from apartments for failure to pay their rent.

So here’s your chance to help.

Give these families a little hope in these final days leading to Christmas. Give them something to smile about. Give them something to be thankful for — a reminder that there are neighbors like you out there who care.

Contribute what you can to Give-A-Christmas. Every penny, every nickel, every dime, quarter and dollar will mean a lot.

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