It’s whether they’ll eat at all tonight

Subscribe today for full access on your desktop fake oakleys, tablet, and mobile device.Already a print edition subscriber, but don’t have a login?Activate your digital access.Manage your account settings.My AccountView the E NewspaperView your Insider deals and moreIn Asbury Park, NyJohn Kirkpatrick enjoys a sandwich at Kids Cafe, the meal program offered by the Boys Girls Club of Monmouth County.)Buy PhotoASBURY PARK Kevin Oakley comes to the Boys Girls Club to play ping pong and video games with his friends.For him, the sloppy Joes are just a bonus.”They’re my favorite,” said the 15 year old from Asbury Park, who also touts the baked ziti in the menu rotation at Kids Cafe, the meal program offered at the after school club.Oakley said he can have dinner at home if he doesn’t like what’s offered.But for many Shore area kids one in five in Ocean County and one in six in Monmouth County it’s not a question of whether the meal they’ll eat is something they like.It’s whether they’ll eat at all tonight.”The idea of hunger is such an abstract idea to many people https://www.oakleyagent.com/>,” said Douglas Eagles, executive director of the Boys Girls Club of Monmouth County, which offers the meal program at its Asbury Park and Red Bank sites.”When you come into an under resourced area, hunger is a reality that threatens the ability to achieve all of those things we all strive for. It creates a vortex of destruction.”Efforts like the Kids Cafe, offered in partnership with the FoodBank of Monmouth Ocean Counties, as well as school lunch programs and backpack initiatives, which give children food for the weekend, help bridge the gap.The FoodBank has been working with the Boys Girls Club of Monmouth to offer Kids Cafe for the last eight years.On a typical week, students training to be chefs in the FoodBank’s culinary program prepare dinner that will be served in Asbury Park and Red Bank. Last week, Kids Cafe offered breakfast and lunch to coincide with the Boys Girls Club’s daytime programs for spring break.”Just the fact we have the hot meals sells to the parents and the community,” said Ebony Holloway, child care director at the club.Meanwhile, the BackPack program, which is entirely funded by private donations, provides breakfasts, lunches and snacks that schools hand out to children at risk of going hungry over the weekend.

COLUMBIA State Transportation Secretary Janet Oakley on Tuesday apologized for delays in paving a stretch of Interstate 85 in Spartanburg County because of a canceled $44 million contract.DOT officials said when the contractor began removing asphalt in preparation for resurfacing the interstate, the underlying surface “began to deteriorate under traffic” and the agency decided to put down 2 inches of asphalt to stabilize the pavement. Officials decided the project had to be changed after studying the underlying pavement.”SCDOT, with approval of (the Federal Highway Administration), determined that the original scope of work was not viable due to the unexpected performance of the underlying existing pavement,” the agency said in a statement.The project covered 10 miles of northbound and southbound lanes of I 85 in Spartanburg County. The contractor, the Rogers Group, Inc., has been paid $5 million for the work performed through the contract’s termination on March 31, DOT said.”We anticipate that the revised design and alternate paving will be completed by the end of May for a planned August construction letting,” DOT said in its statement.

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