They are going to suffer, these children.

They are going to be hungry. They are going to be in danger. They are going to fall behind in school.

Like it or not, these students and their parents greatly depend on the free meals served in our schools and the items sent home for weekends … and who is going to watch them during these days when the single-parents or both have to work to live paycheck-to-paycheck?

It’s terrific that folks with local school systems are working on supplying more online materials, but what if a child lives in a home that doesn’t purchase access to broadband?

And by the way …  what about that 180 days mandate for Mountain State schools? Well, that’s an issue that remains unresolved, according to Ohio County Superintendent Dr. Kim Miller.

“The Governor has instructed us to work in the food aspect, and to the mental health issues some of our students experience,” she said. “As far academics, we’ve been told that will not be addressed until a re-opening date is established.”

So, what can we do to help the efforts?

Donate food to a local collection?

Be neighbors to those in the child-at-home situation?

Offer up your Wi-Fi password to in-need students who live in your neighborhood?

Just spit balling really, but such an exercise helps to recognize what someone can do for the good of these kids. It’s not a liberal or conservative thing, either, but instead the reality of survival.

Call it a community thing.

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Steve Novotney
Steve Novotney has been a professional journalist for 33 years, working in print for weekly, daily, and bi-weekly publications, writing for a number of regional and national magazines, host baseball-related talks shows on Pittsburgh’s ESPN, and as a daily, all-topics talk show host in the Wheeling and Steubenville markets since 2004. Novotney is the co-owner, editor, and co-publisher of LEDE News, and is the host of “Novotney Now,” a daily program that airs Monday-Friday from 3-6 p.m. on River Talk 100.1 & 100.9 FM.