Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Here's a look at some of the upcoming food banks: Friday, Dec. 15: Three events throughout the day in Detroit, Garden City and Wyandotte. 9-11 a.m. at the Yack Arena, 3131 3rd Street, Wyandotte; 9 ...
The organization has reported that they annually serve 560,000 individuals while also supplying 228,000 people with food and clothing in the Detroit area through programs and services. Approximately 2,000 hot meals are served each day and 300,000 pounds of groceries, 30,000 pieces of clothing, and over 500 pieces of furniture and appliances are ...
To apply, call Focus: HOPE 313-494-4600, email food@focushope.edu or visit the following distribution sites. Dates for distributions are subject to change. Those who need home deliveries can call ...
Forgotten Harvest is a non-profit food rescue organization that collects food that would otherwise go to waste and delivers it free of charge to organizations feeding the hungry in Metro Detroit. In 2015, the nonprofit distributed more than 40 million pounds of food to more than 260 emergency food providers. [1]
With the end of COVID-19 pandemic-era safety net programs and high grocery prices, more families are seeking ways to put food on the table, nonprofits say.
Indigenous farmworkers are more susceptible to food insecurity because they often don't have access to government services that help food insecure families. [14] The counties with the most agricultural workers and operators were Fresno (5,838 people total), Tulare (4,931 people total), and Stanislaus (4,143).
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
The Farm Bill, signed into law by President Reagan in 1985, made the "Food for Seniors" program a permanent part of the Commodity Supplemental Food Program. [26] Focus: HOPE currently operates four food distribution centers, with supermarket-style checkout aisles, throughout the Detroit area.