Hidden Houston
The city that loves to give: Food Bank president lauds the helping spirit of Houston
For a city that stakes claim to boasting one of the strongest economies in the country, the number of residents that experience food insecurity are surprising. More than 900,000 people in southeast Texas face hunger, about 66,200 every day.
"The U.S. may be a wealthy country, but it's an expensive country to live in," Brian Greene, president and CEO of the Houston Food Bank, says. "One of the mistakes that charities make is they treat the world as if it's the world of scarcity when in fact it's a world of plenty.
"If you can just set a vision, you can attract resources to help embrace that vision."
That is an attitude he learned from a nun, whose positive mindset mirrors the get-to-it spirit of Houstonians, Greene says. And that giving thinking is not universal.
In this Hidden Houston video interview, Greene talks about the challenges of feeding thousands of hungry folks in the community — many of whom are children. Greene shares how Houstonians, in partnership with the Houston Food Bank, have responded to the spiking need to feed locals in this unsure economy.
Click on the photo (above) or here to watch the video, produced by Kim Hogstrom.
Editor's note: Hidden Houston is interactive multimedia series that aims to reveal the many things that are unique about the Bayou City and its surrounding areas.

Handies will occupy 2,000 square feet at 1107 Hutchins.Courtesy of Pagewood