Some are holding potluck dinners instead of
springing for the entire feast. Others are staying home rather than flying. And
a few are skipping the turkey altogether.
On this the fourth Thanksgiving since the economy
sank, prices for everything from airline flights to groceries are going up, and
some Americans are scaling back. Yet in many households, the occasion is too
important to skimp on. Said one mother: "I don't have much to give, but
I'll be cooking, and the door will be open."
Thanksgiving airfares are up 20 percent this year,
and the average price of a gallon of gas has risen almost 20 percent, according
to travel tracker AAA. Rail travelers were also affected, with fares on most
one-way Amtrak tickets up 2 to 5 percent.
Still, about 42.5 million people are expected to
travel, the highest number since the start of the recession.
But even those who choose to stay home and cook for
themselves will probably spend more. A 16-pound turkey and all the trimmings
will cost an average of $49.20, a 13 percent jump from last year, or about
$5.73 more, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation, which says
grocers have raised prices to keep pace with higher-priced commodities.
In Pawtucket, R.I., Jackie Galinis was among those
looking for help to put a proper meal on the table. She stopped at a community
center this week seeking a donated food basket. But by the time she arrived,
all 300 turkeys had been claimed.
So Galinis, an unemployed retail worker, will make
do with what's in her apartment. "We'll have to eat whatever I've got, so
I'm thinking chicken," she said.
Then her eyes lit up. "Actually, I think I've
got red meat in the freezer, some corned beef. We could do a boiled
dinner."
Galinis has another reason to clear out her
apartment's freezer: Her landlord is in the process of evicting her and her
3-year-old son. The unemployment rate in Pawtucket, a city struggling with the
loss of manufacturing jobs, is 12.1 percent, well above the national average.
Carole Goldsmith of Fresno, Calif., decided she
didn't need to have a feast, even if she could still afford it.
Goldsmith, an administrator at a community college
in Coalinga, Calif., said she typically hosts an "over-the-top meal"
for friends and family. This year, she canceled the meal and donated a dozen
turkeys to two homeless shelters. She plans to spend Thursday volunteering
before holding a small celebration Friday with soup, bread "and lots of
gratitude."
"I think everybody is OK with it," she
said. "They understand. Everybody is in a different place than they were a
year ago."
In suburban Chicago, the Oak Park River Forest Food
Pantry got rid of turkey altogether. Last year, the pantry had a lottery in
October to distribute 600 turkeys between almost 1,500 families.
The pantry's management has decided to give all of
its families a choice between other kinds of meat — ground turkey, sliced
chicken, fish sticks and hamburger patties — along with the other trappings of
a Thanksgiving feast. The decision will save $16,000, money that can go to
feeding the hungry for the rest of the year.
"Do we give turkeys and hams to half of the
people or do we give them to none of them and put that money back in the
general food budget?" said the pantry's executive director, Kathy Russell.
The Greater Chicago Food Depository is paying more
for many basic items. Executive Director Kate Maehr said she recently ordered
peanut butter that cost 38 percent more than just six months ago. And the
increase comes at a bad time, when the economy has forced more families to
resort to food pantries, she said.
Andrew Thomas, a mailroom worker for a Washington,
D.C., law firm, had hoped to take his two children to see his grandmother in
North Carolina. But with Christmas around the corner, Thomas concluded he
needed to save money.
"We're just going to eat real good and stay
home for this year," he said.
But George Gorham and his fiancé, Patricia Horner,
weren't deterred. They flew across the country to visit Gorham's son at North
Carolina's Fort Bragg.
They used frequent-flier miles and planned to visit
tourist attractions in the nation's capital along the way. Horner said they
still would have made the trip without the miles, but "it would have been
more painful."
Thanksgiving travelers were also at the mercy of
the weather. Forecasters warned of rain and scattered thunderstorms in much of
the Northeast, with a mixture of snow and freezing rain expected in upstate New
York and northern New England. Mountainous areas could see 4 to 8 inches of
snow.
In Juneau, Alaska, the Rev. George Silides and his
wife will bring turkey to a church potluck, but not much more. Like millions of
others, Silides said, the couple was "feeling the economic pinch."
Juneau, Alaska's capital, is an expensive place to
live. The only way in or out is by air or boat. Silides' wife now works as an
English teacher to support their family of six.
In previous years, Stacy Hansen would either host a
large Thanksgiving meal or fly from her Florida home to be with family in
Minnesota. Not this year.
Hansen and her teenage son are staying home in
Tarpon Springs, Fla., near Tampa. They picked out a 10-pound turkey and two
frozen, buy-one-get-one-free pies at the supermarket. She can't afford to fly
herself and her son north, and her two grown children can't afford to fly back
to Florida.
"It's going to be a quiet Thanksgiving,"
she said. "We're going to be thankful for what we do have."
Galinis plans a similar holiday using whatever she
can find.
"Even if I only had two nickels to rub
together, I'd do something," she said. "I don't have much to give,
but I'll be cooking and the door will be open."
Associated Press writers Deanna Bellandi in
Chicago; Becky Bohrer in Juneau, Alaska; Jeff Karoub in Brandon Township,
Mich.; Tamara Lush in St. Petersburg, Fla.; Carolyn Thompson in Lackawanna,
N.Y.; Eric Tucker in Washington; and Gosia Wozniacka in Fresno, Calif.,
contributed to this report.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.






