Grandmother: I’ve been waiting for food help since last year

By EARYEL BOWLEG

Tribune Staff Reporter

ebowleg@tribunemedia.net

WHILE the coronavirus pandemic has led to a downturn in fortunes for many, others who were struggling even before COVID- 19 say they are having a hard time making ends meet.

Grandmother Caroyln Brown says she has yet to receive food assistance from the Department of Social Services and has been waiting for help since last year.

The 57-year-old has to take care of her granddaughter as the girl’s mother was murdered several years ago.

“Every time you put your name down they say they’re gonna call and they ain’t calling,” she told The Tribune while outside the Department of Social Services’ Baillou Hill Road office.

“It’s really poor. It’s poor you have to keep running them down just for help and people who don’t need it, getting it.”

She said she is tired of coming to the office continuously to appeal for assistance and is frustrated with the process.

“They tell me I have to get interviewed to get this (done). I don’t see why I have to get all this done to get that food assistance. I don’t think it’s fair.”

Her granddaughter tragically lost her mother around the age of three years old.

Mrs Brown said whatever little she has, she still gives to her granddaughter. Although retired, the 57-year-old is still looking for a job. Her husband works sporadically, she said.

She claimed the government was supposed to be helping the child due to the way her mother died, but “they are not helping her”.

“I went to Robinson Road and they told me that whatever they’re supposed to give to her they could add that on to me and make it as one.

“The lady… told me the place I was living in is not in a good condition. So she said if I look for a place, they’ll help, you know, how to pay and then I pay afterward.

“They tell me they cannot help me until I find a sensible place to live because where I was living they’ve been there and they say the place was not in no kind of condition.”

The retired government worker said she has been trying not to depend on people to make ends meet, but has had to seek help from local charities such as Great Commission Ministries.

Comments

SP says...

This is so heartbreaking! If this lady was a dog, people would be falling over themselves to help "rescue" her and posting it all over facebook.

There are many things drastically wrong with this!

Posted 28 January 2021, 9:38 p.m. Suggest removal

tribanon says...

What does Minnis care? He doesn't see these situations as his problem.

Posted 29 January 2021, 10:54 a.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

It's a conundrum. Govt says they don't have money to help everyone. I can believe that, so some people who need help wont get it. What they probably need is a dragnet, an assessment of everyone who needs assistance whether the govt can pay or not. Then we'll know the size of the problem and the resources people, food, distribution needed to address it. Where the govt can't pay you engage community. You could have an adopt a family program. There are plenty people who are eating lobster and steak straight through the pandemic they could probably adopt 200 families for a year. The people who eating chicken might be able to adopt a single family.

Posted 28 January 2021, 11:02 p.m. Suggest removal

GodSpeed says...

Food Distribution should be easy to organize but I suspect there is a lot of theft going on by those who are in charge of giving out the food, that's why you never get phone calls lady. They could even text or email people when it's time for distribution if there was anyone with some basic organizational skills in charge.

Posted 29 January 2021, 10:25 a.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

the people giving out the food are not stealing it. Thats the absolute ladt explanation. The real issue is logistics. How the govt selected the software vendor is a mystery

Posted 29 January 2021, 2:53 p.m. Suggest removal

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