Erie, Pennsylvania: A swing county Biden and Trump can’t ignore
A locked door at the back of a welcoming house opens and a long line of people, spanning the yard, move forward, each person showing a small ticket as they enter.
This is the Home House of Erie, a food pantry that gives out food three mornings a week in a neighbourhood on the edge of Erie, Pennsylvania.
At the back of the queue, Megan pushes her 18 month-old daughter in a pram while trying to wrangle her three-year-old twins, who are still in their pyjamas. Her five other children are at school.
“I come almost every time they’re open,” says 31-year-old Megan, who is unemployed and single. “It’s a lot of good nutritious food in here.”
Inside the house, which is laid out like a supermarket, she will pick up fruit, vegetables, meat, bread and other staples.
While she receives food stamps and Medicaid health insurance, getting free food is a “godsend… it would be a bigger struggle if they weren’t here,” she says.
Her circumstances will resonate with many Americans hit by a cost of living crisis and stubborn inflation. But here in Erie, there is extra reason for both presidential candidates to take heed.