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Canalside Chronicles

The Student News Site of Canalside Chronicles

Canalside Chronicles

The Student News Site of Canalside Chronicles

Canalside Chronicles

A second chance
May 7, 2024

Closing the gap

By Lainey Porter

Volunteers getting together packages for clients at The Community Food Cupboard of Rochester | Photo Credit: Meribeth Weed

The United States wastes 108 billion pounds of food each year. According to Feeding America, this equates to 130 billion meals wasted. In a nation with this degree of food waste it could be assumed the food insecurity levels are low­­—but an estimated 13.5 million U.S. households were found food insecure in 2021. Locally in Monroe County, there are 86,040 individuals unable to feed all members in their home.

Food insecurity is defined by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) as a household-level condition of limited or uncertain access to adequate food. It is becoming a critical public health issue many are suffering from due to unemployment, poverty and income shocks.

Although there is no true solution to food insecurity, many food insecure individuals benefit from resources such as food pantries. The Brockport Ecumenical Food Shelf (BEFS) and The Community Food Cupboard of Rochester are just two of thousands providing food relief to those in need.

BEFS is a nonprofit emergency food pantry partnered with Foodlink in Rochester. The organization has been in existence for almost 50 years providing food relief to eligible residents in the Brockport community.

Jake Straub has been volunteering at the BEFS since 2018 and was voted Board President in 2020. As a volunteer and board member, he partakes in multiple tasks in order to guide and run the food shelf.

“As a volunteer, I primarily help clients shop for food. This includes helping them select food items, answering their questions and then getting food to their vehicles or doing home deliveries,” Straub said.

The first four Thursdays of every month the shelf is open, allowing clients to come in and shop by the size of their household with a volunteer.

“If someone does not live in our serving district, our policy is to serve them one-time and then refer them to a food shelf in the district they live in,” Straub said. “Because we are an emergency food shelf and partner organization for Foodlink, we are allowed to provide food to households one time per month and we follow their guidelines for food distribution.”

Inside Brockport Ecumenical Food Shelf | Photo credt: Lainey Porter

Straub notes that although food pantries are not a solution, they help immensely in providing healthy food to those who need it. 

Administrator for The Community Food Cupboard of Rochester Maribeth Weed has a similar outlook.

“Food pantries are most definitely not the solution, it’s much bigger than this. No one wants to go to a food cupboard or pantry, but for the short-term solution of keeping people from being hungry it works,” Weed said.

The Community Food Cupboard of Rochester is a nonprofit organization that also partners with Foodlink.

The Community Food Cupboard of Rochester receiving a grant | Photo credit: Mariibeth Weed

Similarly to BEFS, the cupboard requires clients to live within certain zip code areas in order to receive prepackaged bags according to family size. Clients can then go to the cupboard and may choose from a variety of frozen meats and proteins dependent on what’s in stock.

The cupboard serviced 3,021 food insecure individuals in Irondequoit and the greater Rochester area in 2021 along with an average of 150 households for deliveries and an average of 214 emergency household deliveries. Weed expects to see much larger numbers for 2022.

The public health implications of food insecurity are significant, and the lingering effects of COVID-19 have sustained a higher demand for food pantries. Foodlink is a Rochester-based nonprofit serving as “the hub of emergency food system across a 10-county service area.” 

Foodlink is partnered with both BEFS and The Community Food Cupboard of Rochester. It is one of the leading public health organizations providing food assistance through distribution of food, to food bank members and community partners. The organizations’ response to the pandemic is still progressing.

As of 2021 (July 2020 through June 2021), they distributed 25.8 million pounds of food and 723,534 meals and snacks to those in need. The impact of this non-profit has provided more than just food though. 

In Foodlinks 2021 Impact Report it states, “while food banks often measure “success” in pounds distributed – we take a different approach. Our ultimate success will only come when we eradicate poverty in our region.” 

With organizations like these, closing the gap on food insecurity is made possible each day. Although these resources are not flawless, they have become an essential part of our society as this public health issue still affects millions in the U.S. today.

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