Every day, across the United States, food banks and pantries serve as lifelines for millions of individuals and families struggling to put meals on the table. At Mount Carmel Guild, we witness the stark realities of food insecurity firsthand: parents forced to skip meals to feed their children, seniors choosing between groceries and life-saving medication, and hardworking individuals trapped in a cycle of poverty despite their best efforts.
For decades, food distribution has been the primary response to hunger in America. In 2018 alone, the country distributed a staggering 4 billion pounds of food through food banks and pantries. Yet, that same year, 37 million Americans remained food insecure, including one in nine adults and one in seven children. The numbers tell a sobering truth - while food pantries provide a critical safety net, they do not address the root causes of hunger.
If we are serious about ending hunger, we must move beyond food distribution. We must shift our focus from short-term relief to long-term empowerment. The future of hunger relief lies in strategies that promote social justice, economic stability, and self-sufficiency for which food banks and pantries must take the lead.
The Freshplace Model: A New Approach to Hunger Relief
Dr. Katie Martin, author of Reinventing Food Banks and Pantries, argues that hunger relief organizations must evolve to address poverty, unemployment, housing insecurity, and other systemic issues that keep families reliant on food assistance. One of the most innovative models she highlights is Freshplace, a groundbreaking food pantry in Connecticut that goes beyond distributing groceries.
At Freshplace, clients don’t just pick up food - they work with a case manager twice a month to set personal goals and identify barriers holding them back. These case managers connect clients with critical services such as:
SNAP (food stamps) and other government assistance programs;
Utility and rent assistance to prevent homelessness;
GED programsand job training to improve employment opportunities;
Financial literacy classes to help families build stability.
The results are striking. Families who engage with Freshplace, experience greater food security, higher employment rates, and improved financial independence compared to those relying solely on traditional food pantries. The lesson is clear: food alone is not enough. If we want to close the hunger gap, we need to provide individuals with the tools to escape poverty permanently.
MCG’s Commitment to Breaking the Cycle
At Mount Carmel Guild, we understand that food is only part of the solution. According to Mary Inkrot, Executive Director, “while we remain committed and prioritize feeding those in need, we continue to take steps toward a future where families rely less on food assistance and more on their own stability.”
Expanding Referral Services
“For a long time, we have been incorporating referral services to ensure that our care-receivers obtain more than just food when they come through our doors,” she continued. The Guild’s growing network of partners helps connect families to:
Housing assistance programs to keep a roof over their heads;
Healthcare access to address medical needs before they become financial crises;
Employment and skills training to open doors to better-paying jobs.
She notes that these referral services are an important first step and that continued impact will require diverse engagement.
Mount Carmel Guild as a Resource Center
Imagine a future where Mount Carmel Guild is not just a food pantry, but a full-service resource center - a place where families can access case management, career counseling, financial assistance, and educational programs all under one roof.
This vision is not a dream - it is a necessity. With federal funding for nonprofits increasingly under threat, organizations like Mount Carmel Guild must prepare to fill the gaps left by a shrinking social safety net. If government programs are reduced, where will struggling families turn? We must be ready to step up and offer real, sustainable solutions.
Building a resource center will require investment from our community. But the return on that investment is immeasurable. When families move from surviving to thriving, the entire community benefits - less reliance on emergency services, a stronger workforce, and children who grow up with hope instead of hunger.
The Political Reality: Why We Must Act Now
The fight against hunger does not exist in a vacuum. It is shaped by policies on minimum wage, affordable housing, healthcare, and government assistance programs. As political uncertainty grows and budgets for social services face cuts, food pantries and food banks such as Mercer Street Friends, who do so much for us, will be called upon to do even more with less.
Late last month one of our Mission Members, Carol Olivieri reached out to me with concern about looming cuts to federal grant programs and whether the Guild would be affected. I shared that though there was no certainty at the present time, we should make our voices heard on behalf of organizations such as ours that remain relentless in support of the most vulnerable. Carol wrote to Senators Corey Booker, Andy Kim and Rep. Bonnie Watson-Coleman, in part saying:
“I am writing concerning the cruel and inhumane actions taken...to threaten the work of so many organizations and government agencies that assist those in need in our communities...It is Congress that allocates this funding. I urge you to take action to re-affirm the will of the people to fund these programs as Congress intended.”
How You Can Help
1. Advocate
Like Carol, your voice to support policies that address poverty, housing, and fair wages is vital. Contact your representatives, support local initiatives, and spread awareness about the realities of food insecurity.
2. Donate
Your financial support will help us expand our referral services, case management programs, and future workforce development initiatives. Every dollar goes beyond food - it creates real, lasting change.
3. Volunteer
Contact us to learn about ways you can volunteer - offering not just meals, but potentially mentorship and referral support to those in need.
4. Partner With Us
Are you a business owner, educator, or healthcare provider? Let us discuss pathways out of poverty through job training referral services, scholarships, and/or financial planning for those in need.
Closing the Hunger Gap Together
For too long, we have treated hunger as a problem to be managed rather than solved. Handing out food, while essential, does not break the cycle of poverty. The real solution lies in empowering families to achieve stability, independence, and dignity.
Will you help us build a future where food assistance is no longer a necessity, but a stepping stone to a better life?