United Relief

PODCAST · society

United Relief

In Portage County, Ohio—like so many places across the country—food insecurity isn’t just a statistic, it’s a lived reality. This podcast follows two brothers as they return home to uncover the complex web of causes, challenges, and grassroots solutions shaping the fight against hunger in their community.Through intimate interviews and on-the-ground reporting, we explore the local food ecosystem—from county officials and food bank leaders to rural mutual aid groups and policy influencers. Along the way, we ask: What does it really take to make sure everyone in our community eats?

  1. 5

    Hunger and the Work Ahead in Portage County

    What now? From a county treasurer’s “Hunger Run” to co-ops and community gardens, from civic focus to shared goals—how ordinary neighbors can move a county toward no child hungry.You’ll hear from:John KennedySabrina Christian-BennettBen Wolford, Publisher of The PortagerBen and Patrick Childers, co-founder Odd Conduit MediaIn this episode:Why focus matters: align orgs and volunteers on a single north star—no child hungry in Portage County—and measure every effort against it.What stuck from COVID (drive-through access) and what didn’t (emergency dollars)—and why stigma still shapes the user experience.A hard update: Rural Relief’s closure (funding + health) and what that signals about fragility at the last mile.Practical on-ramps: join a local board, keep 211 listings accurate, start/expand a garden plot, organize quarterly cross-org huddles.Resources mentioned:Hunger NetworkAkron-Canton Regional FoodbankUnited Way Portage County211 (call or 211.org) for local servicesFeeding AmericaCredits:Reporting/hosting by Ben & Patrick Childers. Editing/mix/master by Patrick. Fact-check by Dash Lewis. Story edit by Jenna Marson. Artwork by Miggs Sonny. Original music by L.T. Headtrip.Mentioned in this episode:Neighbors In Need: Portage County Emergency Support DriveNeighbors In Need

  2. 4

    Hunger at the Last Mile in Portage County

    A day with Rural Relief Mobile Food Pantry shows what it takes to move food the final mile into rural communities—real-time shortages, handwritten intake logs, and intimate acts of neighbor-to-neighbor care.You’ll hear from:Jason & Rena, Rural Relief Mobile Food PantryDennis, a neighbor on fixed incomeBecky Lehman, Portage County Health Commissioner (drive-through pop-up)Bill Childers, United Way Portage CountyIn this episode:Loading the bus: ordering “the menu,” filling gaps in the Foodbank marketplace, tossing spoiled produce, pivoting on the fly.Why the bus matters: 80% first-time users; reaching people who can’t get to town pantries.At Atwater Park: personalized dignity (snack packs for kids, ramen for a teen), and how the food always runs out right on time.Real stories of our neighbors: A grandmother raising four grandkids; Dennis choosing between utilities and dinner.Funding in motion: United Way connects Rural Relief to stable micro-grants mid-distribution.Credits:Reporting/hosting by Ben & Patrick Childers. Editing/mix/master by Patrick. Fact-check by Dash Lewis. Story edit by Jenna Marson. Artwork by Miggs Sonny. Original music by L.T. Headtrip.Mentioned in this episode:Neighbors In Need: Portage County Emergency Support DriveNeighbors In Need

  3. 3

    Hunger Across the Network in Portage County

    Inside the organizations that stitch the safety net together—United Way Portage County and the Akron-Canton Regional Foodbank—where logistics, dignity, and scarcity collide.You’ll hear from:Bill Childers, President & CEO, United Way Portage CountyHeather Rainone, United Way Portage CountyRaven Gayhart, Akron-Canton Regional FoodbankBrooke Durow, Akron-Canton Regional FoodbankIn this episode:What “Change Hunger” is and how emergency food dollars flow across a county.211 by the numbers: (calls, searches, 700+ local programs) and why discoverability still fails many families.Foodbank 101: the hub-and-spoke model; client choice vs. drive-through boxes; why kids and seniors dominate the lines.Post-COVID realities: supply shortfalls, purchased food up 40%, pantry visits up double digits.The dignity piece: letting neighbors “shop the shelves” vs. the anonymity and convenience of drive-through.Resources mentioned:Akron-Canton Regional FoodbankUnited Way Portage County211 (call or 211.org) for local servicesCredits:Reporting/hosting by Ben & Patrick Childers. Editing/mix/master by Patrick. Fact-check by Dash Lewis. Story edit by Jenna Marson. Artwork by Miggs Sonny. Original music by L.T. Headtrip.Mentioned in this episode:Neighbors In Need: Portage County Emergency Support DriveNeighbors In Need

  4. 2

    Hunger in Plain Sight in Portage County

    A ground-level primer on Portage County’s hunger crisis—how the pandemic exposed long-standing gaps, what ALICE reveals that federal poverty stats miss, and how county leaders tried to plug holes with ARPA funds.You’ll hear from:John Kennedy, Portage County TreasurerSabrina Christian-Bennett, Portage County CommissionerIn this episode:The moment hunger got personal: families living in cars at a single pantry stop.Kent vs. Ravenna: visible prosperity, hidden need—and why Portage is a microcosm of the country.ALICE vs. poverty rate: why 23% under ALICE (and 60%+ in Kent City) reframes the scale of hunger locally.What ARPA enabled (and couldn’t): rapid grants, pop-up pantries, moving dollars to the Foodbank to cut red tape.Rural barriers: food deserts, no transit, the cost of distance.The collaboration problem: breaking “silo mentality” so people actually find help.Resources mentioned:ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) methodologyAkron-Canton Regional FoodbankUnited Way Portage County211 (call or 211.org) for local servicesCredits: Reporting/hosting by Ben & Patrick Childers. Editing/mix/master by Patrick. Fact-check by Dash Lewis. Story edit by Jenna Marson. Artwork by Miggs Sonny. Original music by L.T. Headtrip.Mentioned in this episode:Neighbors In Need: Portage County Emergency Support DriveNeighbors In Need

  5. 1

    Introducing United Relief: Examining Food Insecurity in Portage County Ohio

    In Portage County, Ohio—like so many places across the country—food insecurity isn’t just a statistic, it’s a lived reality. This podcast follows two brothers as they return home to uncover the complex web of causes, challenges, and grassroots solutions shaping the fight against hunger in their community.Through intimate interviews and on-the-ground reporting, we explore the local food ecosystem—from county officials and food bank leaders to rural mutual aid groups and policy influencers. Along the way, we ask: What does it really take to make sure everyone in our community eats?If you have an untold story about community impact and are looking for help telling it via podcasting, contact us at [email protected]. You can learn more about us at oddconduitmedia.com.

Type above to search every episode's transcript for a word or phrase. Matches are scoped to this podcast.

Searching…

We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.

No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.

Showing of matches

No topics indexed yet for this podcast.

Loading reviews...

ABOUT THIS SHOW

In Portage County, Ohio—like so many places across the country—food insecurity isn’t just a statistic, it’s a lived reality. This podcast follows two brothers as they return home to uncover the complex web of causes, challenges, and grassroots solutions shaping the fight against hunger in their community.Through intimate interviews and on-the-ground reporting, we explore the local food ecosystem—from county officials and food bank leaders to rural mutual aid groups and policy influencers. Along the way, we ask: What does it really take to make sure everyone in our community eats?

HOSTED BY

Odd Conduit Media

URL copied to clipboard!