By Catherine Wilson As a nation, we spend a lot of time talking about what doesn’t work. While that’s necessary, it can overshadow what does work and hamper our ability to strengthen and expand policies that make a difference in the lives of New Jersey residents. In New Jersey, 800,000 people are food insecure and an alarming 200,000 of them are children, according to the Community Food Bank of New Jersey. Additionally, a 2021 study by Legal Services of New Jersey’s Poverty Research Institute shows a staggering 3 million people in our state, including 800,000 children, were living in poverty e…