EVENTS HAPPENING IN YOUR AREA.
BMAC, SPOKANE PACKAGING, MOBILE MARKETS, MAYOR NADINE WOODWARD – APRIL 24
BLUE MOUNTAIN ACTION COUNCIL GOES MOBILE
COVID-19 has had unimaginable impact on hunger across the Inland Northwest. Second Harvest is providing additional food supplies to longtime partner Blue Mountain Action Council (BMAC) in Walla Walla to fill serious gaps in southeastern Washington because of the pandemic. BMAC has taken the lead on three weekly drive-thru distributions to ensure that people facing so many uncertainties right now get the food they need.
With a local church pantry closing temporarily due to COVID-19, BMAC has been hosting a drive-thru food distribution on Saturdays. More than 600 Walla Walla families have been served each week in BMAC’s parking lot. BMAC also added a drive-thru distribution in Burbank, Washington that’s serving more than 130 families weekly. In rural Columbia County, the local food pantry also had to close temporarily to protect its vulnerable elderly volunteers. On Tuesday, April 14, BMAC provided food to 158 families during the first of what will be weekly drive-thru distributions at the Columbia County Fairgrounds.
Thank you, BMAC, for going the extra mile to get food to where it’s needed most during this crisis.
Prepacked emergency food boxes are the new normal now and for the foreseeable future to help protect food bank clients from coronavirus. Shout out to Spokane Packaging, who donated 34,000 boxes to package emergency food as part of Second Harvest’s COVID-19 response efforts.
“Our company has been privately owned by a family in Seattle for 53 years. Since its founding, the original owner and now his sons have always taken pride in taking care of their employees and in addition have used their resources to help others outside the company in the communities we serve,” said Craig MacDonald of Spokane Packaging.
Mike Thomsen, Second Harvest’s vice president of food sourcing, has high praise for Spokane Packaging. “They stepped up without any hesitation whatsoever and responded with generosity far above our expectations.”
MOBILE MARKET PICKS UP PACE
Second Harvest’s Mobile Market continues to find ways to get more emergency food boxes directly to people struggling through the unstable COVID-19 economy.
It wasn’t easy for a Spokane woman to ask for help for the first time, lining up with 49 other cars at West Central Community Center in Spokane on Tuesday afternoon. Cecelia teared up as a volunteer loaded an emergency food box into her car for her and her husband. “I just appreciate everything everyone is doing for everybody. I just pray that it’s over soon,” Cecelia said of life during the pandemic.
SPOKANE MAYOR VISITS
Spokane Mayor Nadine Woodward visited Second Harvest on Tuesday. She thanked the National Guard for their essential role in helping to meet basic food needs in the community during the COVID-19 crisis.
Gonzaga’s Dusty Stromer and Zilch: Teaming up to end hunger – March 29
Dusty Stromer understood from a young age that while his family had enough to eat, others in his circle were not so fortunate. Dusty had a courtside seat to food insecurity — he says that by age 10, he knew some of his friends came from households where food was not reliably available.
A freshman shooting guard on the men’s basketball team at Gonzaga University, Dusty recently got a close look at the fight against hunger by touring Second Harvest’s warehouse and helping to distribute free food through its Zilch program.
Grocery Rescue: Changing lives daily – March 22
Your visit to a local grocery store may seem like a routine, unimportant chore. That perfect strawberry, tomato or apple you select is made possible because different departments of your neighborhood store carefully maintain a standard for each product. But what happens when the banana is too green, or the strawberries are too ripe? That product is stranded and without rescue would find its way to the landfill. Thanks to stores partnering with Second Harvest’s Grocery Rescue program, that nutritious food is shared with partner agencies throughout the 26 counties in Eastern Washington and North Idaho served by Second Harvest.
Winter 2024 Newsletter – March 15
Check out the latest news from Second Harvest. Serving people facing hunger across the Inland Northwest.
Feeding Eastern Washington and North Idaho
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