Showing posts with label food banks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label food banks. Show all posts

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Kroger Co. Launches Two-Week 'Bringing Hope to the Table' Campaign; Commits $4 Million to 'Feeding America'

Food & Grocery Retailing and Society

Although the positive trend towards an improving U.S. economy and job growth continued in May, albeit with a very sluggish private sector job gain of just 41,000, America's food banks continue to see record numbers of people in need of food assistance, including numerous working people who are having a struggle making ends meet because of reduced hours on the job, stagnant wage growth and rising expenses.

For example, in a November 2009 study (its most recent), the The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service (USDA) reported that 49 million Americans, including nearly 17 million children, are food insecure. That's about 15% of the total U.S. population.

This is an increase of 36 percent over the numbers released in 2008 by the USDA, which found that 36.2 million American were at risk of hunger at that time.

The November 2009 USDA report mirrored the findings in late 2009 of a research study conducted by Feeding America, the nation’s leading hunger-relief organization, reflecting a dramatic increase in requests for emergency food assistance from food banks across the country. Feeding America was formerly called Second Harvest.

Conducted in September 2009, the Feeding America study shows that its network of food banks throughout the U.S. were experiencing an average increase in need from Americans of nearly 30 percent. In addition, some of Feeding America's 200 U.S. food banks reported increases in requests for food aid of more than 50 percent over a year prior. The same percentage increases have been reported by faith-based and other community food banks and organizations not affiliated with Feeding America.

According to Feeding America, that increase in need has not decreased in 2010. In fact, Feeding America-member food banks and local food pantries throughout the U.S. are currently reaching out to the U.S. food industry, other businesses and groups, and individuals, for added assistance, as requests from unemployed and working Americans alike continues to increase despite the positive signs that the economy might be on the mend. Unemployment remains at near 10% nationally, and in parts of the U.S., like California, Nevada and Arizona, its in the 12% -to- 13% range.
Below are some stark facts as of January 2010, according to the USDA and Feeding America:

For 1 in 6 people across our country, food insecurity and even hunger is a reality.
• 37 million Americans don’t know where they will get their next meal.
• 14 million of them are children.
• 3 million of them are senior citizens.
• 36% of these households have one or more working adults.
• 48% of these households are in rural and suburban areas.

Kroger Co.'s 'Bringing Hope to the Table' campaign

Food, Grocery and general merchandise retailer Kroger Co. said today it's responding to the needs of Feeding America and other local food banks by launching a two-week campaign it's calling "Bringing Hope to the Table," in its 2,468 supermarkets and superstores nationwide, which runs through June 19.

Kroger Co. has pledged to donate $4 million dollars - $3 million in cash and $1 million in product - at the end of the two-week campaign. Feeding America will use the $4 million in cash and food donations from Kroger to assist 80 local food banks in communities where the retailer's customers and associates live and work.

The "Bringing Hope to the Table" campaign is being held in all of Kroger's Kroger, City Market, Dillons, Jay C, Food 4 Less, Fred Meyer, Fry's, King Soopers, QFC, Ralphs and Smith's banner supermarkets and superstores.

Here's how the two-week campaign works, according to Lynn Marmer, Kroger's group vice president of corporate affairs: "Every time customers purchase participating national and corporate brand items in any of Kroger's family of stores through June 19, they will be showing their support for food banks in their own community. Participating items will be marked with yellow shelf tags to indicate their pledge to support 'Bringing Hope to the Table.'"

"Through 'Bringing Hope to the Table,' our customers, associates and vendors can drive funds to food banks that feed hungry people in their own communities," says Marmer. "In 2009, Kroger stores partnered with customers and vendors to donate enough food to serve 40 million meals to feed hungry families in the communities we serve."

Kroger Co. operates the Ralph's Supermarkets chain in Southern California, and in California's Bakersfield and Fresno Metro regions, in the Central Valley. Additionally, it operates the Food 4 Less discount warehouse store chain in Southern California and southern Nevada, Smith's Foods & Drug throughout Nevada, and FoodsCo banner warehouse stores in Northern California. In Arizona the company operates the Fry's chain of supermarkets.

Kroger Co. is the number one traditional supermarket chain in the U.S. and the third-largest overall food and grocery retailer, after leader Walmart and number two Costco Wholesale.

The retailer says it currently employs more than 334,000 associates in 2,468 supermarkets and multi-department stores in 31 U.S. states under two dozen local banner names including: Kroger, City Market, Dillons, Jay C, Food 4 Less, Fred Meyer, Fry's, King Soopers, QFC, Ralphs and Smith's.

Cincinnati, Ohio-headquartered Kroger Co. also operates 777 convenience stores, 374 fine jewelry stores, 893 supermarket fuel centers and 40 food processing plants in the U.S.

Even if the positive trend of economic improvement holds in the U.S., it's unlikely we'll see much improvement in the jobs picture until at best mid 2011. Additionally, the Federal Reserve and nearly every economic analysts in the country says wages are likely to remain stagnant for at least that long, and probably longer. As a result, its doubtful that America's food banks will see any reduction in requests for food assistance from unemployed and working Americans. In fact, with events like the BP oil spill putting so many additional Americans out of work in the gulf states, we can expect the numbers of those in need of help to increase throughout this year.

Initiatives like Kroger Co.'s "Bringing Hope to the Table" campaign and similar efforts by numerous other grocery chains and food retailers are vital to helping the thousands of local food banks and pantries in the U.S. meet the needs of those needing assistance during these tough economic times. And in a country of food abundance like the U.S., we all should do our fair share to help.

If you want to help Feeding America and its 200 local food banks, go to its website here. Additionally, for more information about Kroger Co.'s efforts in partnership with Feeding America click here.

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Fresh & Easy and Arizona's St. Mary's Food Bank Network Partner to Help the Hungry; U.S. Food and Grocery Industry Stepping Up Aid; You Can Help Too

Hunger in America and the World: Arizona USA Market -- and Beyond

Arizona's St. Mary's Food Bank Alliance, which provides emergency food assistance to people throughout the state, and Tesco's Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market jointly said last week the Southern California-based small-format grocery and fresh foods chain, which operates 28 stores in the Phoenix region, has donated a quantity of food products over the last year to the Arizona group's food bank network that equals 705,300 meals.

According to Fresh & Easy's chief marketing officer Simon Uwins and Mary Shannon, the CEO of the St. Mary's Food Bank Alliance, the grocer and the non-profit group struck-up a relationship shortly after Tesco opened its first Fresh & Easy stores in the Phoenix Metro region market in November-December 2007. The Fresh & Easy markets have been donating fresh food , including produce, and grocery products to St. Mary's since then.

"Our relationship with Fresh & Easy Neighborhood Market is unique and particularly valuable because it has allowed us to enhance the amount of fresh produce we are able to distribute," St. Mary's CEO Terry Shannon says.

"Because of the unprecedented need for food, particularly in the last four months, everything Fresh & Easy is able to donate to us through their 28 Arizona stores, has fed many Arizonans we would otherwise not be able to serve."

Numerous other supermarket chains and independents in Arizona, such as Wal-Mart, Bashas, Safeway, Albertsons, Fry's and others, donate food to the food bank alliance, as well as conduct in-store food drives for the region's food banks and other emergency food relief groups.

Corporately, Wal-Mart recently donated $2.5 million to Feeding America, the national food bank network in the U.S., and pledged to give at least 90 million pounds of food to the organization each year over the next few years.

This unprecedented need for food by food banks and organizations feeding the hungry -- who are looking more like all of us every week -- has grown dramatically over the last few months as the recession has worsened and the unemployment ranks continues to swell.

For example, Feeding America (formerly America's Second Harvest Food Bank) says demand for food and groceries from the thousands of food pantry and related community organizations it provides food to is up by about 50%. Local food programs report similar numbers, some even saying the number of people seeking help from their programs has far more than doubled in just the last few months.

The food and grocery retailing industry, along with food manufacturers, has stepped up its giving to Second Harvest and other groups as well. Numerous retail chains like Wal-Mart, Kroger and Safeway Stores, Inc. recently announced they will be giving what totals millions of dollars (collectively) worth of turkey's, hams and other holiday food items to Feed America next week, for example.

In California, Nevada and Arizona (where Tesco's Fresh & Easy has its 104 fresh food and grocery markets), three of the U.S. states hardest hit by the housing foreclosure crisis and high unemployment (for example, California's unemployment rate soared from 7.4% in October to 8.4% in November, it was reported by the state government yesterday) the increased demand for food assistance is particularly strong -- and growing.

For example, last week food pantries in San Francisco and Los Angeles said the demand is so strong for food assistance that they are about 40% behind (supply) the ability to meet the needs of the growing number of people seeking even short-term assistance. They are sending out an emergency SOS for donations.

St. Mary's Food Bank Alliance head Mary Shannon says the demand for food assistance in Arizona is up a whopping 70% this year. For example, the food bank network distributed its highest number of emergency food boxes in history during the November Thanksgiving holiday weekend this year, according to CEO Shannon. [11/26: Food Bank Delivers RECORD-BREAKING AMOUNT OF FOOD BOXES.]

Ways You Can Help:

To our readers: We encourage you to donate what you can, as we are doing, to your local community food bank or programs that help those who need emergency food assistance.

If you live in the U.S. and are looking for a central place to donate, you can do so to Feeding America at its Web site here. Feeding America provides food grants free of charge to food bank and emergency food programs throughout the U.S.

Arizona's St. Mary's Food Bank Alliance also excepts donations via its Web site here.

The United Nation's World Food Programme, which provides food assistance to people in developing and underdeveloped countries, also is in need of help. You can learn more at its Web site here.

You can also help provide food to the hungry in underdeveloped nations without spending a dime. Go to the FreeRice.com Web site here, play the vocabulary game, and for each answer you get right, participating companies will donate 20 grains of rice to the United Nation's World Food Programme. It's a fun and simple way to help the hungry -- and it only takes a few minutes of your time. For example, we just spent 10 minutes playing the vocabulary game and ended up donating over 1,000 grains of rice in that short amount of time.

>Click here for a list of various hunger relief organizations and programs in the U.S.

>Click here for a list of global hunger relief organizations.

>Click here to read about ways you can donate food for the holiday season.