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More American families struggling to afford food. Can food banks cope?

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Michael Wyke/AP
Volunteers load bags of food into the bed of a client's pick up truck in the drive-thru line at the West Houston Assistance Ministries on Oct. 14, 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a sharp rise in the number of families that are food insecure.

To Marquitta White, cooking is less about preparing calories and more about painting a canvas.

Take her home-cooked Thanksgiving meal. The turkey, garnished with apples, peppers, and onions, was so tender that it fell off the bone. Her deviled eggs shined with decadent, colorful fillings of chicken and crab salad. And, as she and her two daughters helped themselves to a buffet of yams, greens, macaroni and cheese, potatoes, cranberry sauce, and sweet potato pie this year, Ms. White wanted to express gratitude.聽

The feast before them was provided using ingredients聽from their local food bank. Ms. White is a full-time student in Norfolk, Virginia, and works two jobs, including as a personal chef. When times get tough, no one complains. But turkey helps.聽

Why We Wrote This

The holidays are traditionally a time to focus on people experiencing hunger. This year, the social safety net designed to counter food insecurity is starting to fray.

鈥淚 was definitely grateful,鈥 says Ms. White. 鈥淚f it wasn鈥檛 for [the food bank this Thanksgiving], we would鈥檝e been eating whatever we had.鈥

The economic fallout brought on by COVID-19 put millions of families in Ms. White鈥檚 shoes. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture,聽 were food insecure before the pandemic, a number that may rise to 50 million by the end of the year, says聽Zuani Villarreal of Feeding America, a nonprofit that supplies food banks.聽

On the front lines are food banks and food pantries. Adjusting to the pandemic has demanded long hours and new models to meet their communities鈥 changing needs, and to make sure families like Ms. White鈥檚 don鈥檛 go hungry.聽

鈥淚t's flipped our world upside down since March,鈥 says Karen Joyner, CEO of the Virginia Peninsula Foodbank (VPFB) in Hampton, Virginia. 鈥淚f I ever questioned the work ethic of my staff prior to 2020, I really don't right now. They're getting it done and there's not a lot of drama about getting it done.鈥

鈥淥n the cusp of tragedy鈥

Those who have suffered most of the pandemic鈥檚 economic costs also tend to be those who are the most food insecure, says Craig Gundersen, an expert on food security at the University of Illinois, Urbana鈥怌hampaign. Working-class families in service-level jobs often had an unstable foundation before this year; COVID-19 was an earthquake.聽

鈥淧eople don't realize how many families, even though they may have a good life and be living well, [are] living on the cusp of tragedy,鈥 says Ms. Villarreal,聽director of communications for Feeding America. 鈥淛ob loss, reduction in hours 鈥 something can happen that can put them in the situation where they are looking to the food bank for help.鈥

Expanded, and more accessible, benefits from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program and government stimulus have stabilized many families in need. But there are always holes in such broad safety nets, leaving some ineligible or in need of more assistance. Much of this relief 鈥 particularly that allocated by the CARES Act 鈥 is set to expire at the end of the year.

Kevin Mohatt/Reuters
A staff member at Food Bank of the Rockies stacks boxes of food in their warehouse in Denver to be distributed to people in need in time for Thanksgiving, Nov. 25, 2020.

For example, of the 5.2 billion meals that Feeding America distributed in the year to June 30, about 1.7 billion came from the USDA, says Ms. Villarreal. Without government action, that source of food will shrink by half come January.聽

鈥淲e're looking at a sustained increase in demand, potentially even more so with some of these programs expiring, and then a potential shrinkage in supply,鈥 says Ms. Villarreal. 鈥淭he reality is that as dedicated as food banks are to their communities ... we can't do it alone.鈥

Adapting to the pandemic

Meanwhile, the threat of coronavirus has forced food banks to transform their operations.聽

Bob Biedron, a recent retiree and volunteer at the VPFB since March, has a four-step checklist: Mask on, temperature checked, hands washed, and gloves worn. He and other volunteers must stay socially distanced, so fewer can work at the same time in their cavernous warehouse.聽

鈥淲e have a lot of people who are food-challenged at this point in time,鈥 says Mr. Biedron. 鈥淪o it's very rewarding to give out food to people who need it.鈥

The VPFB almost always has enough volunteer labor, but nationwide around two-thirds of food banks face volunteer shortages, says Ms. Villarreal.

And for volunteers to work at all, there has to be food. Donations plummeted earlier in the year as corporate partners grappled with slower supply chains and fewer disposable items, and while things have improved since, food banks are now buying more food than ever before.

Then there are issues of delivery.聽聽

Before March, the VPFB delivered truckloads of food into mobile pantries, where residents could walk inside and pick up food. Now residents congregate in car-filled parking lots, with masks on and trunks open so volunteers can load boxes, sometimes playing 3D Tetris to make everything fit.聽

Other communities are less accessible. From March to September, more than a dozen low-income senior communities the VPFB serviced wouldn鈥檛 accept donations due to fear of transmitting coronavirus. Serving them required partnerships with other charities in the area. All in all, feeding the area has been a village effort.聽

Rising costs聽

The same is true for Ruth Jones Nichols, president and CEO of the Foodbank of Southeastern Virginia and the Eastern Shore. Demand in her area skyrocketed after March, and initially, they didn鈥檛 have enough cash in reserve.

鈥淎lmost overnight, we went from an average cost per meal of $0.40 to $3.50,鈥 says Ms. Nichols via email. 鈥淔ortunately, the community helped us get through the first several months by giving more to support 鈥 our neighbors in need.鈥

A mix of staff dedication, public generosity, nonprofit partnerships, federal relief, and local government assistance has helped them rebound. Serving is still a work in progress, but Ms. Nichols finds joy in the support of local communities. One locale gave her food bank more than $2 million in funding. Another 鈥渓everaged local funds to help us serve one neighborhood that became a food desert,鈥 she writes. "Who could have imagined this moment?鈥

Perhaps Ms. White, whose Thanksgiving meal came with donations from Ms. Nichols鈥 food bank. The leftovers became meals for the week ahead 鈥 stew, sandwiches, and a rich broth聽鈥 which meant that Ms. White's two daughters could eat healthily.聽

鈥淚鈥檓 not one of those noodle moms,鈥 she says.聽

But Ms. White doesn鈥檛 stray from noodle soup for the soul. Like at every other Thanksgiving meal she asked her daughters to list what they were thankful for this year. The full plates in front of them were a given.聽鈥淚 always teach my kids it鈥檚 not about the holiday or the food," she says.聽

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