15:18 | 01/04/2025 Print
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How to Get Free Food as Food Bank Funding Crumbles |
With federal funding for food banks collapsing in 2025, hunger relief organizations are overwhelmed. Here's a detailed, step-by-step plan for how to access food assistance quickly and reliably in this crisis:
Go to www.feedingamerica.org/find-your-local-foodbank and enter your ZIP code. You’ll see a list of nearby food pantries, mobile food stops, and their hours.
Dial 211 from any phone. It connects you to local services: emergency food, rental help, shelters, mental health services, and more. Free, confidential, 24/7.
Many school districts continue to provide free meals even when schools are closed. Ask about:
Grab-and-go meals
Summer food service programs
Weekend backpack food programs
Mobile food trucks bring groceries to underserved neighborhoods. Check your local food bank's website or social media for schedules. No car? Many allow walk-up service.
Faith-based groups are essential partners in hunger relief. Even if you’re not a member, churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples often run:
Weekly food giveaways
Hot meal nights
Food boxes for pickup
Search Facebook, Reddit, or Google for "[Your City] Mutual Aid." These grassroots groups offer:
Free groceries and toiletries
Meal drop-offs
Rides to pantries or SNAP offices
Despite federal cutbacks to other programs, SNAP is still active. Benefits load monthly on a card you can use at most grocery stores.
Apply at www.benefits.gov
Or visit your local Department of Human Services office
Eligible seniors, WIC participants, and low-income households can get vouchers for fresh food at farmers’ markets. Ask local markets about:
SFMNP (Senior Farmers Market Nutrition Program)
WIC Farmers Market benefits
Many local governments have launched pop-up food sites or used leftover pandemic funds to support hungry residents. Look for announcements on city hall, county, or health department websites.
Contact local media or hunger advocacy groups if you’re affected. This brings awareness and can lead to community action and direct aid.
The first food bank opened in 1967 in Phoenix, Arizona, founded by John van Hengel. His mission to rescue surplus food and deliver it to the hungry has grown into a nationwide network. Today, over 200 food banks and 60,000 partner pantries distribute more than 6 billion meals each year across the United States.
Food banks primarily help:
Low-income families
Seniors on fixed incomes
Veterans
Unhoused individuals
Children facing food insecurity
Eligibility usually centers on households earning under 200% of the federal poverty level, but many programs have flexible or emergency exceptions.
Support comes from a mix of:
Corporate donors (Walmart, Amazon, Kroger)
Philanthropic foundations (Gates Foundation, local charities)
Community donations
Federal programs like TEFAP, SNAP, and (formerly) LFPA
In early 2025, the USDA slashed over $1 billion in funding to two major programs:
Local Food for Schools Cooperative Agreement
Local Food Purchase Assistance (LFPA) Program
Both programs funded local farms to supply food to schools and food banks, bolstering rural economies and improving food quality. Simultaneously, TEFAP deliveries were canceled or cut, with many food banks losing 25% or more of expected supplies.
Iowa: Lost $11.3 million in food purchases
Arizona: Cutbacks totaling $21 million
Delaware: Over 900,000 meals canceled
Vince Hall of Feeding America warned, “Rural communities will be hit the hardest,” as these areas rely heavily on USDA-funded food deliveries.
Food insecurity affects over 34 million Americans, including more than 9 million children. Cuts to programs like LFPA and TEFAP remove critical lifelines just as inflation and economic instability push more families into hardship.
Food banks aren’t giving up. They’re turning to communities, volunteers, donors, and local governments. But they can’t do it alone.
Donate: Money goes further than canned goods. Donate directly to your local food bank.
Volunteer: Sort food, pack boxes, drive mobile deliveries.
Advocate: Contact your representatives to restore federal food program funding.
Share Resources: Post this guide or share links with anyone who might need food.
Editor Note: Even as funding dries up, communities are stepping up. Share this article. Help a neighbor. And remember: you are not alone.
Ngosugar
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