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Plentiful
potatoes
38 tons of
donated potatoes will feed hungry around Oregon
BY JILL AHO,
Herald and News 2/18/10
H&N photo by Jill Aho - An
Oregon Food Bank truck picks up the second half of a
38-ton potato donation made by Staunton Brothers. The
potatoes are headed to Roseburg, Eugene and Corvallis
food banks. Pictured from left: Sid and Ed Staunton,
John Hughto of Cal-Ore Produce and Frank King, member of
the Klamath Falls Rotary Club.
People
in the Klamath Basin know their neighbors are generous,
and the farming community is no exception. Basin potato
farmers keep the Klamath-Lake Counties Food Bank
supplied with potatoes throughout the year, but this
year, a potato donation will benefit people in need
elsewhere.
Ed, Sid
and Mitchell Staunton, of Tulelake-area potato grower
The Staunton Brothers, made their largest ever donation
this year, Sid Staunton said. On Wednesday, an Oregon
Food Bank truck picked up the last of a 38-ton, or
76,000-pound, potato donation from Cal-Ore Produce that
was headed to food banks along the Interstate-5
corridor.
Rotary
First Harvest helped the Staunton brothers find a way to
transport their excess potatoes, which were delivered to
Roseburg, Eugene and Corvallis.
“The
Staunton Brothers are being very generous in sharing
their harvest this way,” said Rotary First Harvest
co-founder Sharon Parks.
“There is
tremendous surplus within our nation, and if all the
surplus was used to feed the hungry, there would be no
food insecurity.”
Food security low in state
In the
U.S. Department of Agriculture’s annual food security
assessment only Mississippi had more households with
very low food security than Oregon. One of the issues
always has been getting the food to those who need it,
Parks said.
“We have
surplus on one hand and we have need on the other. The
key is transportation and distribution,” she said.
Sid
Staunton said the donation was a team effort.
“Rotary
First Harvest has given us an avenue where we can touch
food banks,” he said.
“It’s a
really nice product to give to a food bank because it’s
nutritionally high in value.”
Sid
Staunton said the market for those potatoes wasn’t good
and the brothers didn’t want them to go to waste.
David
King, president of the Tulelake Rotary Club and Rotary
First Harvest director, said the potatoes weren’t the
only donation since Cal-Ore Produce washed and bagged
them for distribution.
“They’re
donating that value as well,” he said. “Through their
generosity, they got the potatoes trucked to the shed,
packaged and stored them while we arranged a place for
them to go.”
Working with potatoes
Frank
King, David King’s father and a member of the Klamath
Falls Rotary Club, said together he and David keep the
Klamath-Lake Counties Food Bank stocked with potatoes.
The two work with area
potato sheds to donate two pallets each a year.
“I don’t
think we’ve ever been turned down,” he said. “I’m
impressed with the willingness of people to give
potatoes to the system, especially in these times.”
The
Kings sometimes trade Basin potatoes for pears and
peaches from Medford, Frank King said.
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Page Updated: Friday February 19, 2010 03:20 AM Pacific
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