Here's a List of Our Emergency Grants Through June 2020

We're leveraging your support to help hungry kids affected by the coronavirus nationwide.

Take a look at this list of emergency grantees by state through June 2020, and find an up-to-date map of these and current grantees here.

NATIONAL

  • No Kid Hungry grant funds will help the YMCA of the USA support 20 communities across the country and provide 7,000 snacks and suppers to children who are missing meals due to school closures.
  • Thanks to your help, Blessings in a Backpack expects to feed hungry kids 240,000 meals by ensuring their local programs across the country have the funds to meet the growing need.
  • Catholic Charities USA is using emergency funds to support and enhance food distribution programs across the nation to support hungry children during this crisis.
  • With your support, The Salvation Army is working to ensure kids in their communities, shelters, KROC centers and beyond have access to the meals they need during this crisis.
  • Thanks in part to your help, the Urban School Food Alliance is able to provide approximately 500,000 meals per day to kids at various locations throughout the country.
  • With your help, the national School Nutrition Association is helping school districts nationwide by providing equipment like food carts and PPE for staff so that kids and families can get healthy grab-n-go meals easily and safely.
  • With support from No Kid Hungry, Covenant House International will provide an estimated 6,650 meals a day to kids all across the country living in its residences.
  • With your help, the National Recreation and Park Association is making sure that parks and recreation centers in underserved communities nationwide have the resources to provide free summer meals at their facilities.

ALABAMA

  • You're helping the Wilcox County Board of Education in rural Camden feed kids an estimated 1,600 meals a day in one of the state’s poorest areas.

  • The YMCA of Greater Montgomery is using your generous gifts to deliver daily snacks and lunches to 19 locations across the city where kids lack transportation to pick up meals.

  • The Boys & Girls Clubs of North Alabama are using funds to deliver an estimated 2,000 nutritious meals and educational activities each day to public housing communities around Huntsville.

  • With your help, Montgomery Public Schools plan to serve hungry kids 2,500 healthy meals a day through meals sites and home deliveries.

  • Cullman City Schools is using grant funds to purchase equipment that will keep safe the meals it delivers to hungry kids by bus.

  • You’re helping Elmore County Public Schools continue serving meals to some 9,000 hungry children each week at five school locations and through eight mobile feeding units.

  • With your help, the Alabama Food Bank Association is using a No Kid Hungry grant to activate feeding sites across the state for children and families impacted by the crisis.

  • You're helping Arab City Schools feed hungry kids affected by the coronavirus crisis.

  • Thanks in part to your support, Gadsden City Schools deliver backpacks full of nonperishable meals and snacks to hungry kids each week.

  • With your help, Alexander City Schools expects to deliver 1,500 nutritious meals a day to hungry, isolated kids across their rural community.

  • Greenville's Butler County Schools is using your support to cover the food and transportation costs of getting some 800 meals a day to kids in their local communities.

  • You've helped Roanoke City Schools purchase three insulated meal delivery carts to deliver some 520 meals a day to hungry kids impacted by this crisis.

  • Thanks in part to you, Tallassee City Schools are feeding kids who can't travel to meals sites, supporting local farmers as suppliers and youth as delivery drivers in the process.

  • Birmingham's National Hook Up of Black Women is using your generous support to serve hundreds of families fresh produce and grab-n-go breakfast and lunch on Saturdays, while also leading a class on food prep, canning and menu planning.

ALASKA

  • In McGrath, your support is helping the Iditarod Area School District purchase food supplies and distribute an expected 400 healthy meals a day.
  • The Juneau School District is using a grant to continue their grab-n-go program that is serving kids some 1,200 breakfasts and lunches per day.
  • The Upper Susitna Food Pantry in Talkeetna is using funds to supplement meals at school feeding sites with boxes of basic breakfast and lunch items for the week.

ARIZONA

  • Gila Crossing Community School in Laveen is using our grant funds to fuel their deliveries of 1,600 meals a day to students and even their siblings. They're following their regular bus stops for drop-offs and are bringing some meals to kids' doors.
  • The Navajo Lutheran Mission in Rock Point offers education, medical care and food to families in the isolated Navajo Nation. Your support is helping them continue to provide daily meals to those in need, when the nearest grocery store is 50 miles away.
  • You're helping the Phoenix Union High School District serve approximately 9,500 nutritious meals a day through seven grab-n-go sites, three existing delivery routes and new bus routes to meet the growing need in their community.
  • With your support, the St. Michael Indian School near the Navajo Nation is feeding children breakfast and lunch every weekday and backpacks of food supplies for the weekend.
  • The Sahuarita Unified School District is using a grant to launch a meal delivery program for those kids who can't reach their grab-n-go sites.
  • A grant is helping the Camp Verde Unified School District provide breakfast and lunch to students in need.
  • Funds are powering deliveries of gardening supplies and some 2,000 meals a day to hungry students in Phoenix's Balsz School District.
  • Thanks to a grant, Phoenix charter school Imagine Bell Canyon can fuel its school bus to deliver healthy meals to students every day.
  • The J.O. Combs Unified School District in San Tan Valley is using funds to purchase equipment to serve kids free curbside meals as the need continues to rise in their community.
  • The Joseph City Unified School District is putting a grant to work to continue feeding hungry students while schools are closed.
  • Thanks to a grant, Lake Havasu Unified School District #1 plans to serve kids 1,500 grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches every day at sites in low-income areas.
  • The Gadsden Elementary District is using funds to serve hungry children an estimated 4,900 meals a day through at least eight feeding sites in San Luis.
  • With the help of funding support, the Chandler CARE Center Children's Medical and Dental Clinic is stocking its food pantry to meet the skyrocketing need in Chandler and serve an expected 12,000 meals a day.
  • The Kyrene School District in Tempe is using a grant to reach those families who don't have transportation to travel to their 25 meals sites throughout the community.
  • With the help of a grant, Phoenix’s high-needs Cartwright Elementary School District will start serving weekend meals, in addition to those they’re already serving Monday through Friday.
  • Globe Unified School District #1 is using a grant to support its meal deliveries across 12 bus stops in Globe, San Carlos, Miami and Claypool.
  • Thanks in part to a grant, Miami Unified School District 40 County of Gila is providing meals to kids in its impoverished community while schools are closed.
  • With your help, St. Mary’s Food Bank in Phoenix plans to expand its weekend backpack and mobile pantry programs to feed kids an estimated 27,500 a day.
  • Phoenix's Desert Mission is using funds to restock its food bank in the face of increased demand and decreased donations from grocery stores.
  • Thanks in part to your support, Window Rock Unified School District #8 in Fort Defiance is serving some 1,300 meals a day to students at three grab-n-go meals sites across their high-poverty community.
  • With the help of a grant, Arizona's Casa Grande Elementary School District is operating 15 meals sites throughout their community to feed children as many breakfasts and lunches as they can.
  • In Tucson, the Community Food Bank of Southern Arizona is using a grant to offer shelf-stable items and fresh produce alongside school feeding sites for kids.
  • In Phoenix, you're helping the Mollen Foundation for Childhood Obesity feed hungry kids fresh produce in nearly 7,000 meals at Garfield and Dunbar Elementary schools.
  • Wittmann's Nadaburg Unified Schools District No. 81 is using a grant to help launch grab-n-go breakfast and lunch sites and school bus delivery routes to reach all hungry students.
  • Native Health in Phoenix is putting emergency funds to work by distributing food and leading virtual demonstrations to help families prepare healthy meals for their kids.
  • Thanks in part to a grant, Salt River Pima-Maricopa Community Schools in Scottsdale can purchase the supplies they need to provide hungry kids about 850 breakfasts and lunches, five days a week.
  • The Scottsdale Unified School District is turning grant funds into an estimated 4,000 meals a day feeding kids at six grab-n-go sites throughout their community.
  • With the support of an emergency grant, the Tucson Unified School District is getting the warmers, coolers and PPE needed to serve an estimated 44,847 kids breakfast, lunch and supper, five days a week.

ARKANSAS

  • In rural Nashville, the Nashville School District is fueling their school bus with No Kid Hungry funds to deliver an estimated 2,000 meals a day to hungry kids throughout the county.
  • Ozark Public Schools will use your support to help feed children and low-income families an expected 4,000 meals a day while classrooms are closed during this crisis.
  • The Clarksville School District is offering free breakfast and lunch to hungry kids in their community. With the help of your generous donations, they expect to provide 1,200 meals a day by school bus delivery and at a drive-thru meals site.
  • Thanks to your help, the Clinton School District expects to offer kids 2,700 meals a day, including breakfast and lunch on weekdays as well as weekend food boxes.
  • The Monticello School District is using your support to feed kids an anticipated 15,000 free lunches and breakfasts a day at eight sites throughout their rural community.
  • Fayetteville Public Schools is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to stock its food pantry as well as fuel its school buses and food truck along 35 stops delivering kids an estimated 1,000 meals each day.
  • The Mountain View School District is providing kids breakfast and lunch for pick-up and delivery across their rural community.
  • You're helping Warren School District 1 operate a drive-thru meals site and send its four school buses out to feed hungry students the only meals they might receive.
  • The Dermott Public School District is putting a grant into preparing and serving healthy, cooked meals for its children while schools are closed.
  • The Jacksonville North Pulaski School District is using your generous gifts to deliver kids approximately 4,000 meals per day by school bus.
  • In Pearcy, you've helped the Lake Hamilton School District get the equipment they need to safely deliver meals to kids and stock their food pantry.
  • With your help, Alma School District 30 expects to serve kids in their rural community 1,000 meals a day, five days a week.
  • In rural Arkansas, Batesville Public Schools are turning your generous support into fuel for their 14 meal delivery bus routes and three curbside pick-up locations.
  • Thanks in part to you, the Cleveland County School District in Rison is serving breakfast and lunch to kids affected by the crisis.
  • No Kid Hungry emergency funds are helping the rural Forrest City School District distribute nutritious meals to kids by school bus and meal truck.
  • You've helped the Hillcrest School District in rural Strawberry purchase equipment to safely prepare meals for hungry kids.
  • In Hot Springs, the Lakeside School District is using your gifts for food, supplies and transportation needed to feed children in need during this crisis.
  • El Dorado Public Schools are using emergency funds to offer some 2,000 free meals a day at drive-thru meals sites and deliveries to those who lack transportation.
  • You're helping the Central Arkansas Library System feed kids and their families nutritious lunches at three library branches in high-need communities.
  • In the Hot Springs, the Cutter Morning Star School District is using a No Kid Hungry grant to continue their program serving children, breakfast and lunch during the week and food bags for the weekend.
  • You helped Little Rock nonprofit FAB44 Basketball purchase critical equipment like a tent, portable food warmers and coolers, and fuel to distribute an estimated 1,420 meals a day to kids at outdoor sites.
  • With your help, the rural Harrisburg School District 6 plans to serve 500 meals a day to kids at 11 different pick-up stations.
  • The Hot Springs Family YMCA is using No Kid Hungry funds to purchase meal trays and other essential supplies to feed at-risk youth approximately 390 meals a day.
  • Thanks in part to you, Little Rock Public Schools expect to serve hungry children 5,000 nutritious healthy meals a day.
  • In Malvern, the Magnet Cove School District is using your gifts to launch a grab-n-go feeding program and deliver meals directly to families in need.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is helping the Prescott School District feed children breakfast and lunch seven days a week during this crisis through door-to-door delivery as well as curbside and drive-thru meals sites.
  • With your help, the rural Booneville School District can purchase the containers it needs to fill its school bus with meals for hungry kids.
  • In Benton, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Saline County is turning your gifts into ADA-approved picnic tables at which socially-distanced kids will eat an estimated 2,400 meals a day.
  • Thanks in part to you, Pine Bluff’s Gould Youth Ministries has the funds it needs to do everything from advertising its free summer meals program to purchasing critical equipment to keep their food safe for kids.
  • The Newport Special School District is using your support to feed more than 700 children some 1,400 breakfasts and lunches a day during this crisis.
  • To feed more children during the pandemic, We Care of Pulaski County is relying on help from No Kid Hungry to purchase needed equipment, including a refrigerator, trash cans and garden supplies.
  • With food supplies turning expensive, you're helping the Mammoth Spring School District feed hungry kids approximately 250 nutritious breakfasts and lunches a day across their rural district.
  • Thanks in part to your support, the Sheridan School District has started delivering weekend meals to their hungry students via school bus routes and two grab-n-go sites.
  • You're helping the Van Buren School District purchase the supplies and food it needs to continue feeding any child breakfast and lunch at their grab-n-go sites.
  • Thanks in part to your generosity, the West Fork School District estimates it serves hungry kids nearly 1,100 meals a day by bus and drive-thru pick-up.

CALIFORNIA

  • In San Francisco, donations are helping the school district purchase equipment for 18 sites where they are distributing meals to kids in need.
  • We’ve sent the Oakland Unified School District funds to hire drivers to stock community food distribution centers where families can pick up free meals for children – ensuring they stay healthy and nourished amidst the crisis.
  • The Rosemead School District is using No Kid Hungry funds to serve kids a free, hot supper at Muscatel Middle School. Kids already receive a free breakfast and lunch and thanks to your support, the District can serve an additional 400 meals a day.
  • Banning Unified School District, near the Morongo Indian Reservation, is using emergency funds to feed children within city limits as well as in the surrounding rural areas where there are few places to buy food.
  • Your support is helping Chino Valley Unified School District serve as many as 8,000 sack lunches a day to children in need through curbside pick-up for families.
  • At seven schools in Lawndale Elementary School District, you’ve helped school staff offer grab-n-go breakfast and lunch to all students, as well as paid meals for parents and adult caregivers.
  • Your generous donations are helping schools in Coalinga Huron Unified School District pack grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches for 4,500 students every day. They’re serving these meals at three drive-thru sites in the community and delivering to children in rural communities.
  • The Robla School District in Sacramento, is using our emergency grant to support meal delivery to 45 locations, including school bus stops, front door drop-offs for special needs students, and alternative deliveries for homeless students. 90% of students in the district rely on school meals for the majority of their meals. 
  • In Spring Valley, local nonprofit Heaven's Windows is using a No Kid Hungry grant to support grab-n-go meal sites, where families can safely pick up meals to take home for their children.  
  • With four schools across San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, REAL Journey Academies is helping families get the food supplies their kids need for up to five days at a time.
  • The Heart Matters Foster Family Agency in Grand Terrace, is using No Kid Hungry grant funds to help feed more than 100 children living in foster care three meals a day, plus a snack.
  • With schools and workplaces closed in their community, the Corona-Norco Family YMCA is using your generous support to help provide 800 free, nutritious meals to kids every day.
  • Thanks to you, the Autism Society of Inland Empire, is helping vulnerable families get the groceries they need to stay safely at home during this crisis.
  • You’re helping Palmdale School District provide 4,000 healthy breakfasts and lunches each day to hungry kids who might not otherwise get the nutrition they need.
  • Donors helped Natomas Unified School District purchase a mobile food truck, which they used at the start of the crisis to deliver warm, free meals for kids in need throughout their community while schools are closed.
  • With your help, the El Monte School District is adding an estimated 2,000 suppers a day to the free emergency meals they're already providing in response to the growing need in their area.
  • Feeding America Riverside | San Bernardino usually feeds about 95,000 hungry kids a month, but with the sudden closures of schools, other feeding sites and workplaces, families are struggling. A No Kid Hungry grant is helping them host safe drive-thru meals sites, bring food to those who can't leave home and purchase much-needed food supplies.
  • The Napa Valley Unified School District is using your generous support to serve an expected 2,400 healthy breakfasts and lunches each day to kids at four free meals sites.
  • With your help, the Azuza Unified School District expects to feed hungry kids 16,000 healthy meals a day during this crisis across the towns of Azusa, Covina and Glendora.
  • The Sacramento City Unified School District is using your support to help feed kids approximately 21,000 free breakfasts and lunches twice a week through 31 meals sites across the California capital.
  • With your support, Twin Rivers Unified School District expects to serve 8,000 meals a day to hungry kids at 19 sites throughout their community of McClellan.
  • With your support, the Boys & Girls Club of Fontana is offering free grab-n-go lunches to kids in need throughout the week.
  • The Boys & Girls Clubs of Kern County is using an emergency grant to expand its meals service to five locations serving an estimated 2,285 breakfasts and lunches a day while schools are closed.
  • Thanks in part to your gifts, the Dinuba Unified School District expects to serve 5,900 nutritious meals a day to kids throughout their rural community.
  • In Lancaster, the Eastside Union School District is using your support to feed hungry kids an estimated 5,000 meals a day.
  • Your gifts are fueling Edison School District's buses as they deliver breakfast and lunch to kids across Bakersfield.
  • Feeding San Diego is using No Kid Hungry support to partner with the San Diego Unified School District and Cajon Valley Union School District to provide lunches for drive-thru pick-up as well as fresh produce and shelf-stable foods to some 1,700 families.
  • With your help, the Fresno Unified School District will keep serving an estimated 42,147 nutritious breakfasts and lunches each day to kids in need while classrooms are closed.
  • Since day one of the crisis, the Hawthorne School District has been providing their students grab-n-go meals. Your support is helping continue that work of an estimated 2,500 meals a day.
  • Nonprofit Hope Through Housing is using a No Kid Hungry grant to partner with National Community Renaissance and feed 5,000 healthy meals to up to 1,000 at-risk youth living in their housing program across five counties in Southern California.
  • Your support is helping the Inland Valley Council of Churches feed hungry kids an estimated 3,600 meals a day through five area food banks across Pomona, where need for food has skyrocketed.
  • San Diego's Kitchens for Good is using our grant funds to help prepare 100,000 heat-and-eat meals to distribute through the San Diego Food Bank during this crisis.
  • The Lemoore Union Elementary School District expects to serve 2,500 breakfasts and lunches to kids, thanks in part to your help.
  • The Oakland Unified School District is already using your support to serve breakfast and lunch at 12 free meals sites across the district, and now they're adding three more sites and a food truck to their efforts – all of which will also serve supper.
  • In Los Angeles, a grant to Operation Progress is helping feed the children of 70 unemployed or low-income families. Many of the parents lost their jobs in the past weeks and don't know how they will pay for rent, groceries and other essentials during this time of crisis.
  • Thanks in part to your help, Pueblo Unido Community Development Corporation in La Quinta is partnering with local organizations in the Eastern Coachella Valley to feed hungry children in the community.
  • Thanks to emergency funds, the Anaheim Family YMCA expects to feed kids 1,500 meals a day through grab-n-go sites in school parking lots and deliveries for families without transportation.
  • With grant support, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Redlands-Riverside will provide food and activity packs for hungry kids in Corona, Riverside, Moreno Valley, Rialto, Loma Linda, Redlands, San Bernardino and Victorville.
  • Crescent Food Bank in Santa Ana is using a grant to fuel its Emergency Food Hub, where families in need can find fresh produce, non-perishables and prepared meals for their kids during this crisis.
  • The Long Beach Unified School District is turning funds into an expected 14,000 grab-n-go meals a day for kids at 34 school locations across Long Beach, Signal Hill, Lakewood and Avalon.
  • Thanks in part to grant funds, the Ocean View School District in Huntington Beach is feeding hungry kids an estimated 4,000 breakfasts and lunches each day at community sites while schools are closed.
  • The San Diego Unified School District is serving breakfast and lunch to students across the city, recently expanding the number of open sites to 13 schools. They're using your support to pay for critical supplies, including tables, canopies, gloves, hand washing stations, signage and bags for the meals.
  • The Redlands Unified School District is using funds to purchase a vehicle and other equipment that will help them feed kids an estimated 160,000 meals a month while schools are closed.
  • With your support, the Rialto Unified School District expects to serve its students 20,000 nutritious meals a day during this crisis.
  • The Fullerton School District is using your generous gifts to work with local restaurants and purchase 14 barbecues to serve hot meals for students across its 17 grab-n-go sites.
  • Thanks to a grant, the Mountain View School District in Ontario is opening its middle school kitchen to serve kids a healthy breakfast and lunch each day.
  • The Pomona Unified School District is using funds to provide an estimated 16,000 nutritious breakfasts and lunches each week to students in their low-income community.
  • With the help of a grant, the Riverside Unified School District is purchasing the meal carriers it needs to feed more than 5,000 students breakfast and lunch to last through the week.
  • In Sacramento, the Natomas Unified School District is providing breakfast and lunch at every school in the district. In addition, the district is providing meals to libraries and community centers through a partnership with the United Way.
  • In northern California, the Elk Grove Unified School District is using funding to provide a drive-thru meals service for students.
  • The La Habra City School District used funding to purchase portable hand-washing stations so school nutrition staff could safely serve meals to children outdoors.
  • In Redlands, the Trinity Community Foundation is supplementing the efforts of local schools and families by providing healthy afternoon snacks to kids from low-income families who normally attend their programs. Funds are also helping them provide dinner for neighborhood families three days a week.
  • Funds are supporting the Child Care Resource Center in Chatsworth to offer drive-by pick-up of nonperishable items for the at-risk families it supports, as well as communities in Palmdale, Victorville and San Bernardino.
  • The El Monte Union High School District is using a grant to distribute an estimated 5,000 suppers to hungry kids, in addition to the meals it already serves.
  • In Kingsburg, you’re helping the Kings River Union Elementary School District provide supplemental food boxes containing shelf-stable foods and even board games, books and activities for families who are struggling with poverty and isolation in their rural area.
  • With the help of a grant, the North Monterey County Unified School District is offering weekly meal kits to families and will expand to suppers for an expected 6,000 meals a day served to their community of Moss Landing.
  • The Parlier Unified School District is using funds to purchase coolers that will keep some 4,000 meals a day safe during curbside pick-up.
  • Thanks in part to a grant, the Vineland School District in Bakersfield is delivering meals by school bus to isolated, hungry children in their rural community.
  • With your support, the YMCA of Superior California is serving hungry kids in Sacramento healthy meals and snacks during this crisis.
  • The Alhambra Unified School District is using funds to feed hungry kids an expected 3,500 meals a day at walk-up and drive-thru meals sites throughout their community.
  • With the help of a grant, the Anaheim Union High School District purchased the canopies, tables, coolers and more to feed kids approximately 12,000 meals a day.
  • Thanks in part to your gifts, the Azusa Unified School District has the equipment it needs to safely bring healthy meals to children in need at its feeding sites.
  • A grant is helping the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Los Angeles Harbor provide an expected 5,000 meals and school supplies a day to kids at six locations in underserved communities.
  • The rural Coachella Valley Unified School District is using funds to serve children an estimated 15,000 meals a day through meals sites and bus deliveries.
  • In Bakersfield, the Community Action Partnership of Kern Food Bank is turning funds into an additional one million pounds of food per month to meet the community's growing need.
  • With your support of the Del Paso Foundation, restaurants are preparing family meal kits to distribute for free at 32 school sites across Sacramento.
  • The Eastside Union School District is using your generous gifts to get the word out about the estimated 6,044 meals a day they're providing for hungry children in Lancaster.
  • With your help, El Rancho Unified School District in Pico Rivera is making sure hungry kids there get some 4,000 breakfasts and hot lunches a day at three middle school sites.
  • The Foodbank of Santa Barbara County is using emergency funding to get food to the most vulnerable and isolated through their 300+ member agency and in coordination with the county emergency management office.
  • The Fullerton School District is using your generous gifts to work with local restaurants and purchase 6 barbecues to serve hot meals for students across its 17 grab-n-go sites.
  • The Kings Canyon Unified School District in Reedley is using your support to coordinate with local farmers to distribute fresh fruits and vegetables to students living in high poverty areas.
  • The Lamont School District is using emergency funding to make sure kids in their community get two meals daily Monday through Friday during the crisis.
  • With your help, the Lennox School District is purchasing critically important washing stations and antibacterial dispensers to ensure that the meal services they provide to kids during the crisis are safe.
  • The Moreno Valley Unified School District is using emergency funding to make sure kids can get healthy meals at their school sites throughout the week, as well as provide some 9,000 weekend meals during the crisis.
  • The Mountain View Elementary School District in El Monte is using emergency funding to make sure kids and families in their community are getting fresh fruits and vegetables during the crisis.
  • The New Haven Unified School District in Union City is using emergency funding to get an estimated 3,000 breakfasts and lunches a day to hungry kids through their four meal sites.
  • With your help, the Oro Grande School District is purchasing critical food preparation and storage equipment and creating banners and flyers, so kids and families know where they can get meals during the crisis.
  • Thanks to you, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping the Palmdale School District serve as many as 538 meals each day to kids in need.
  • A grant to the Panama-Buena Vista Union School District in Bakersfield will help serve up to 13,000 meals a day to hungry kids in the summer heat.
  • You're helping the Paramount Unified School District purchase a freezer that will feed hungry kids some 2,282 meals a day.
  • A grant to the Rotary Club of Sin Fronteras in Riverside will support efforts to provide meals and shelf-stable food to the children of migrant farm workers.
  • With your generous help, No Kid Hungry was able to make a grant to the San Bernardino City Unified School District to provide as many as 10,000 meals each day, more than triple the number of meals usually served at this time.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant to the San Francisco Unified School District will help provide over 100,000 meals per week, including 2,800 meals to kids with disabilities or special dietary needs.
  • Thanks to generous people like you, No Kid Hungry was able to make a grant to the South Whittier School District to serve an estimated 400 meals per day to kids in need.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant to the Tulare Joint Union High School District will help provide as many as 8,000 meals per week to hungry kids in California.
  • A grant to the Tustin Unified School District will help support a grab-n-go site to serve as many as 5,200 meals each day.
  • A grant to the Ventura Unified School District will support drive-thru and walk up distribution of an estimated 7,000 meals each day.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant to the West Contra Costa Unified School District will help provide up to 28,000 meals each day to hungry kids.
  • Los Angeles' Camino Nuevo Charter Academy used a grant to support their grab-n-go meals sites and establish a food pantry to meet their community's growing need.
  • Thanks in part to emergency funding, Catholic Charities of Los Angeles, Inc-San Pedro Region is feeding its impoverished neighbors impacted by this crisis.
  • You're helping the Catholic Charities Diocese of San Diego operate their new Emergency Food Distribution Network to feed hungry families and kids in San Diego and Imperial Counties.
  • The Community Action Partnership of Orange County is using a grant to shore up supplies for its OC Food Bank to feed nearly 200,000 people a month amidst growing need in the community.
  • Thanks in part to a grant you helped make possible, the Compton Unified School District expects to serve 5,000 meals a day to any child who needs food.
  • The Conejo Valley Unified School District's central kitchen in Newbury Park is preparing grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches to be distributed at eight mobile feeding sites throughout the district.
  • In Santa Ana, the El Sol Academy has been serving breakfast and lunch to all children in the district since schools shut down, and are planning to expand to dinner service as well. They're also operating a food pantry along with the Second Harvest Food Bank that's serving 800 local families a month.
  • In Los Angles, Gabriella Charter Schools are using grant funding to advertise and support their program to feed kids an estimated 1,300 meals a day.
  • The Galt Joint Union High School District has been using grant funds to provide meals for 2,500 students, offering both drive-thru services and delivery.
  • You're helping the Heber Elementary School District expand their emergency meals program to include supper, in addition to breakfast and lunch.
  • In Long Beach, local nonprofit Help Me Help You will be using grant funding to feed children from low-income families in the community through a food pantry and groceries program.
  • In Hesperia, the High Desert Food Collaborative is using grant funds for emergency food supplies, as well as transportation, to feed hungry kids.
  • In Los Angeles, KIPP SoCal Public Schools are using grant funds to provide grab-n-go meals at 15 schools across the city. Currently, they are distributing over 50,000 breakfasts and lunches every week, but they expect that need to increase.
  • The LA Promise Fund is using grant funds to deliver more food to local children through their food pantry program.
  • In San Francisco, you're helping Life Learning Academy feed kids this summer by delivering weekly meal preparation boxes. Each box comes with the ingredients to make a meal for a family of four, small instruments that might be necessary to prepare the meal and access to a step-by-step video tutorial led by Chef Derrek, a beloved teacher and mentor. Students are also part of the process, helping to package and deliver the boxes.
  • In Corona, Alvord Unified School District is using grant funding to help serve grab-n-go meals twice per day at two local high schools.
  • In Kings Beach, the Boys & Girls Club of North Lake Tahoe is supplementing the work of the local hunger relief agency and school district by providing grab-n-go dinners for local families during the pandemic.
  • Catholic Charities San Bernardino & Riverside Counties is using grant funding to support their emergency feeding program, which helps local immigrant families with children living in the Coachella Valley. The funds are going to pay for transportation and food costs.
  • The Central California Food Bank in Fresno used grant funding to provide some 8,000+ bagged meals to students over spring break when the local school district was closed and not providing grab-n-go meals.
  • In Buena Park, the Centralia Elementary School District has set up grab-n-go meals services for students. They're using grant funding to help pay for the outdoor equipment, signage, transportation and refrigeration needed to serve meals safely.
  • In Redding, the Columbia Elementary School District is using emergency grant funding to continue providing meals for at-risk students.
  • In Crescent City, grant funds are helping the Del Norte County Unified School District provide breakfast and lunch to local students through delivery along bus routes, a curbside pickup option at the schools and through home delivery by the local Boys and Girls Club.
  • Fallbrook Union Elementary District is serving meals to their students during the pandemic. They're using grant funds to pay for coolers to store and keep the meals safe before they're picked up by parents.
  • In Los Angeles County, Food Forward is using grant funding to help provide fresh fruits and vegetables at no cost to local school districts and community groups feeding children during the crisis.
  • In Anderson, the Happy Valley Union Elementary School District is relying on grants to help provide breakfast and lunch five days a week to local students. The funds are going to purchase packaging materials for the meals.
  • In Pearblossom, where the majority of the school district population is under the poverty line, the Keppel Union School District is providing three meals a day to students during the school week. They're using emergency grants to provide meals on the weekends as well.
  • The Palo Verde Unified School District in Blythe has been providing meals to their students since schools closed because of the pandemic. They've had to transition to individually-wrapped foods and are using grant funds to pay for needed supplies, including a walk-in cooler.
  • The San Marcos Unified School District is relying on emergency grant funds to help provide daily grab-n-go meals to students.
  • In Yermo, the Silver Valley Unified School District is relying on emergency grant funds to help provide grab-n-go meals to students.
  • Temecula Valley Unified School District is relying on emergency grant funds to help provide grab-n-go meals to students.
  • The YMCA of Greater Long Beach is using emergency grant funds to help provide breakfast and supper each day to children in their daycare centers.
  • In Davis, No Kid Hungry is helping the Community Alliance with Family Farmers provide local schools with produce and other food during the crisis.
  • Thanks in part to you, the Marysville Joint Unified School District is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to expand its capacity to meet the growing demand for food in the community.
  • The Mammoth Unified School District is using funds to support its program, providing wholesome, easily accessible and safe meals for any child in need.
  • With the help of a grant, Oxnard nonprofit Nyeland Promise will distribute three meals a week to some 150 children in need.
  • You're helping Ontario-Montclair School District feed hungry kids an estimated 7,500 meals a day at their drive-thru and walk-up meals sites.
  • The Redding School District is using emergency funds to operate a drive-thru meals site and retrofit a school bus with a cooler and warming oven to feed kids some 2,000 healthy meals a day.
  • With your generous support, the San Bernardino City Unified School District expects to serve hungry kids 10,000 nutritious meals a day.
  • The San Leandro Unified School District is turning funds into not just breakfast and lunch for hungry kids, but snack and supper as well, feeding them four meals a day.
  • In Irvine, you're helping the Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County purchase some 30,000 pounds of shelf-stable food to feed hungry kids through its Kids Café Program and beyond.
  • Sustainable Economic Enterprises of Los Angeles (SEE-LA), which operates farmers' markets across Southern California, is relying on grant funding to match benefits dollars spent at their markets, donating fresh farm boxes to residents of public housing and helping local service agencies reach hungry families.
  • The Tahoe Truckee Unified School District has been providing grab-n-go meals to students during the pandemic, and are relying on grants to help pay for packaging materials.
  • The Los Angeles Academy of Arts and Enterprise is using grant funding to provide supper and weekend meals to their students, in addition to the breakfast and lunch they're already providing.
  • In Torrance, the Volunteer Center South Bay-Harbor-Long Beach runs a food pantry called Food For Kids. With the support of a grant, volunteers are assembling and delivering weekly bags of food to their partner elementary schools. The bags are filled with enough items to make six weekend meals for an average family of four. Because schools are currently closed, school staff are making special arrangements for local families in need to get the food each week.
  • In Turlock Unified School District, more than half of the 14,000 students qualify for free or reduced-price lunches, so the district has been using grant funds to provide take-home breakfasts and lunches for them each day.
  • The United Way of Kern County is working to distribute an estimated 60,000 meals in 30 days to COVID-19 victims and essential workers.
  • The Vallejo City Unified School District is using emergency funds to serve breakfast and lunch for all children in the community.
  • The Visalia Unified School District is providing daily grab-n-go meals for approximately 9,000 students. They're using grant funding to continue this needed service through summer months, when they would normally be closed.
  • With your help, the West Contra Costa Unified School District is continuing to provide meals for their students during the pandemic by purchasing needed emergency supplies, including tents and refrigeration containers to store the food.
  • The YMCA of Metropolitan Los Angeles is using grant funds to help operate 13 grab-n-go meal distribution sites with local community partners and schools. The sites distribute free meals to children twice per week, with enough food to last for multiple days.

COLORADO

  • Thanks to your support, Garfield No. Re-2 School District is bringing healthy breakfast and lunch to kids at seven free meals sites across three towns within their district.
  • Thanks in part to your support, Englewood nonprofit Kaizen Food Rescue plans to distribute 270,000 pounds of grab-n-go food boxes over 30 days to families in need.
  • The rural Re-1 Valley School District in Sterling is leveraging an emergency grant to open a free grab-n-go meals site to the many kids in their area who rely on school meals.
  • A grant is helping the Gunnison County Department of Health and Human Services work with other state and local agencies to deliver meals to kids in need, including breakfast, lunch, supper, healthy snacks and grocery items.
  • In Thornton, Adams 12 Five Star Schools are using a grant to distribute meals to kids across five drive-thru meals sites.
  • Thanks in part to a grant, Adams 14 School District is offering emergency grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches to hungry kids each weekday in Commerce City.
  • In Commerce City, the Adams County Emergency Food Bank is using a grant to offer meals to nearly 5,000 hungry children with drive-thru pick-up. They anticipate serving many more people this year because of the pandemic.
  • A grant is helping Aurora Public Schools feed their students while schools are closed. They're serving three meals a day at 16 sites across the school district for an estimated 5,000 meals every day.
  • The Boulder Valley School District expects to serve more than 13,000 healthy meals to kids every day, along with weekend food backpacks, with help from a grant.
  • In Aurora, the Colfax Community Network is relying on a grant to expand their food program to help more children, including grab-n-go sack lunches, food box delivery and food box pick-up at their office.
  • Funds are helping the Eagle County School District provide sack lunch meals to children of all ages at 10 sites across the county.
  • In Denver, a number of local groups created the Denver Metro Emergency Food Network to deliver free, prepared meals to low-income families during the pandemic. Funds to Focus Points Family Resource Center helped launch the emergency network.
  • Project Worthmore provides fresh organic produce to children from refugee families across the Denver metro area. With grant support, they're able to keep operations running during the pandemic.
  • Funds are helping Pueblo School District No. 60 with the tools they need to provide drive-thru meals for their students, including yard signs, marketing flags, traffic cones, pop-up tents and protective equipment for staff.
  • In Las Animas, a grant from No Kid Hungry is helping Colorado State University Extension with a backpack food program for two school districts in their rural area.
  • With your help, the Creede School District in southwest Colorado is providing free grab-n-go lunches to students at two locations, along with free food boxes containing fresh meat and bread, fruit and vegetables.
  • The High Valley Community Center in Del Norte is relying on emergency grant funding to provide free meals to local children and families, using their own kitchen as well as working with local restaurants.
  • The Morongo Unified School District is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to help provide as many as 12,000 grab-n-go meals at 15 different sites in the community.
  • Thanks to your and others' generosity Denver Green Schools is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to expand food deliveries to families in need.
  • In Denver, the ECDC African Community Center is delivering nutritious and culturally appropriate foods to immigrant and refugee families.
  • Mesa County Valley School District 51 is using an emergency grant to deliver as many 4,000 meals each day to hungry kids.
  • Alamosa School District RE-11J is using an emergency grant to provide breakfast and lunch for kids at 15 locations throughout the district, seven days a week.
  • Canon City Fremont RE-1 is using an emergency grant to maintain a mobile grab-n-go program with breakfasts and lunches available for all kids.
  • Metro Caring, a local organization in Denver that helps feed families in need, is using grant funding to experiment with new and creative ways to provide food during the pandemic.

CONNECTICUT

  • After receiving an influx of calls from people needing help, End Hunger Connecticut! is investing a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to help reach more families to get them food they need.
  • With your help, local New Milford nonprofit Camella's Cupboard is offering drive-thru service for families to pick up a week's worth of nutritious, balanced meals for each of their children.
  • Thanks to you, New London Public Schools are purchasing coolers, bins and other equipment that they need to deliver meals to hungry kids who can't reach local meals sites.
  • Bloomfield nonprofit Foodshare is using an emergency grant to provide up to 5,050 meals a day for kids using their Mobile Foodshare and backpack programs.

DELAWARE

  • The YMCA of Delaware is using funding to work with the Food Bank of Delaware to distribute food at seven YMCA locations across the state.
  • The Catholic Charities-Diocese of Wilmington is relying on grant funding to provide emergency food assistance to more than 3,000 children through local daycare centers.
  • In Wilmington, the Latin American Community Center is using a grant to support 300 children from low-income families, providing pick-up meals throughout this crisis.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

  • Bread for the City is using grant funds to purchase food and supplies for low-income clients and their children, including baby and infant food packets.
  • DC Central Kitchen is using your support to serve approximately 3,000 healthy meals a day to kids through mobile feeding sites, schools and creative partnerships with local stores and nonprofits.
  • Local nonprofit Martha's Table is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to feed those in need an estimated 9,000 meals a day.
  • Your help is fueling the Capital Area Food Bank's efforts to distribute shelf-stable meals to families and children at pop-up sites in parking lots, schools and community hubs across the Washington, D.C., region.
  • With your support, Oasis Community Partners is getting personal protective equipment for staff and volunteers and fueling its pop-up food banks and meal deliveries for those in need.
  • The Friendship Public Charter School is offering daily meals for 4,300 students at eight sites throughout the city. They're using grant funds to increase delivery and reach more children.
  • Food Research and Action Center is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to advocate for children-friendly food policies during the pandemic.
  • The YMCA of Metropolitan Washington is using an emergency grant to help provide an average of 7,000 pounds of produce, 960 snack box meals, and 475 meals to kids and families in need in the DC region.
  • In DC, Mary's Center for Maternal and Child Care is using grant funds to help families purchase groceries while also providing food packages for families without transportation.
  • The Young Women's Christian Association of the National Capital Area is using grant funds to support their emergency food pantry, providing local families with enough groceries to prepare ten meals, plus snacks.

FLORIDA

  • The Tampa Bay Network to End Hunger is using your support to deliver weekly meal packs and groceries to kids who can't reach community feeding sites but otherwise might go hungry. They expect to deliver 5,000 meals each week.
  • Jacksonville's Duval County Public Schools is putting a No Kid Hungry grant toward feeding kids healthy lunches and snacks while classrooms are closed.
  • With your help, Hamilton County School District in Jasper will deliver some 1,700 meals a day to kids in need who aren't able to reach meal pick-up sites.
  • The Homestead Soup Kitchen is using your support to ensure that kids in their area can count on three healthy, hot meals a day while school is closed.
  • In rural Immokalee, you've helped the Redlands Christian Migrant Association launch a free meals pick-up site, where vulnerable families can receive bags of vital food staples during this crisis. And they'll also deliver to those who can't make it to the site.
  • Throughout the Florida Keys, Monroe County School District is using No Kid Hungry emergency funds to support a drive-thru meals site and deliver food for kids to additional community centers.
  • With your support, Second Harvest of the Big Bend food bank is distributing food to kids in need across 11 counties in northwest and central Florida.
  • The United Farmers Alliance in Loxahatchee is using our emergency funds to create a farm to family pipeline of local foods that will support farmers and hungry children alike.
  • Central Florida nonprofit 4Roots is putting your support to work by supplementing existing meals sites and building a network of restaurants and caterers to help fight hunger.
  • In Palm Beach Gardens, Little Smiles of Florida is using your support to deliver food to children living in a local shelter or facing other crises.
  • With a No Kid Hungry emergency grant in hand, Meals of Hope in Naples is getting fresh produce, frozen meats and vegetables, dairy and other staples to distribute through eight mobile food pantries across their region.
  • You're helping Central Florida's Orange County Public Schools operate 55 feeding sites throughout the county to provide an estimated 38,500 meals each day for hungry kids.
  • During school closures, the Palm Beach County School District's Food Service Department remains committed to feeding all of its students. They're using grant funds to operate 35 emergency feeding sites that expect to serve kids 40,000 meals a day.
  • Your funds are helping the Salvation Army of Naples expand their work to feed potentially 800 hungry kids that are losing meals due to school closures.
  • The School Board of Miami-Dade County is using funds from No Kid Hungry to purchase and distribute fresh produce to kids and their families as part of their grab-n-go meal program.
  • With your support, the Thomas Promise Foundation is providing backpack meals for kids in need at 28 schools across Pasco County.
  • The Fort Pierce Seventh-day Adventist Church is relying on our grant funds to deliver hot meals and snacks to families without transportation in the hundreds of income-based apartments near the church.
  • Across the state, the Pace Center for Girls has closed all 21 of their centers and are using your gifts to provide daily meals to the nearly 2,000 girls who are part of their program. The majority of the girls live in extreme poverty.
  • The Florida State Alliance of YMCAs Foundation is using an emergency grant from No Kid Hungry to help local YMCAs in 37 counties across Florida provide meals for students.
  • In Kissimmee, the School District of Osceola County is relying on support you made possible to help their staff get the food, supplies and safety equipment they need to feed students.
  • With your help, Leon County Schools in Tallahassee started their summer meals program early, with 16 sites operating across the city serving meals to hungry kids.
  • No Kid Hungry is helping Santa Rosa County Schools get what they need to feed their students, from ice chests to keep food cold and bags to pack it in to funding to deliver the meals.
  • Thanks to generous people like you, No Kid Hungry was able to make a grant to Clay County District Schools in Green Cove Springs to provide an estimated 1,550 meals per day to kids in need.
  • In Boynton Beach, the Early Learning Coalition of Palm Beach County is using emergency funds to support children and their families in need of food during this crisis.
  • The Florida Alliance of Boys & Girls Clubs is using No Kid Hungry emergency grant funds to serve approximately 42,000 meals across rural and low-income communities, ensuring students get the nutritious food they need.
  • In Bradenton, emergency grant funds are helping the School District of Manatee County serve approximately 14,000 meals a day through meal delivery and mobile feeding units.
  • In Gainesville, the Alachua County School District is using a No Kid Hungry grant to provide breakfast and lunch in eight particularly high-need, low-income communities within the District.
  • Orlando's Coalition for the Homeless of Central Florida is using your gifts to feed homeless kids and families. With the theme parks and attractions closed and workers getting laid off, the need is expected to increase.
  • Through your generosity, local nonprofit Farm Share in Homestead is delivering packaged foods to kids and families in need.
  • Thanks in part to you, the Florida Recreation and Park Association in Tallahassee is bringing food to kids in need using their statewide network of parks and recreation areas.
  • In Mayo, you're helping Lafayette District Schools use one pick-up site and school buses to deliver breakfast and lunch to needy kids and families county-wide.
  • Hedges and Highway Outreach Ministries is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide daily grab-n-go meals and weekend backpacks to kids and families in need.
  • Thanks in part to you, Polk County Public Schools is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide an estimated 20,000 meals a day to kids living with hunger.
  • With your help, the School Board of Broward County is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide an estimated 50,000 meals a day to kids and families affected by the pandemic.
  • We Care Food Pantry is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to distribute 20 semi-truck loads of food, water and basic necessities for Florida kids.
  • Madison County Schools are distributing an estimated 1,000 meals a day at meal sites and via a mobile route made possible by grant funding.
  • Across Florida, the Salvation Army is using grant funding from No Kid Hungry to help feed children staying in shelters, while also providing meals to families in 8 local low-income housing communities.

GEORGIA

  • Your support is helping Brantley County Schools in rural Nahunta purchase much-needed coolers to transport 1,800 meals a day to hungry kids along eight delivery routes with five stops each.
  • The Atlanta Community Food Bank is using our funds to purchase and distribute emergency food supplies to support the nearly 300,000 children already living with hunger in the region, as well as those who will likely join their ranks due to the crisis.
  • With your help, Jackson County Schools in Jefferson are ensuring that hungry kids get free, nutritious breakfasts and lunches while schools are closed during the pandemic.
  • The Hispanic Alliance GA in Gainesville is using emergency funds to distribute fresh produce to families and conduct SNAP outreach.
  • Peach County Schools are using your support to fuel an expanded number of mobile feeding sites, ensuring kids in hard-to-reach neighborhoods get the nutrition they need.
  • With your help, rural Tift County Schools are feeding their students breakfast and lunch through walk-up and drive-thru sites, as well as a delivery program.
  • Dublin City Schools are delivering two nutritious meals every day to students with your help. Each week, buses deliver meals to various sites in the community; parents can also pick meals up at nearby schools.
  • Thomasville City Schools are providing weekly meal kits to children, thanks in part to funding you made possible. Each week they deliver a box with enough food to make seven days’ worth of breakfasts and lunches for every child.
  • In Quitman, Brooks County Schools are planning to serve up to 9,000 meals a day for local students in need. They turned to No Kid Hungry for help getting what they needed, including some food supplies that shot up in cost, as well as heavy-duty push carts and coolers.
  • Because of the unexpected extra costs of feeding children during the coronavirus, including food items, as well as packaging, the Thomaston-Upson School System is using a grant to help cover the gap. They're providing kids an entire week of breakfast and lunch for pick-up.
  • In Waynesboro, No Kid Hungry is helping Burke County Public Schools feed more than 5,000 students breakfast, lunch and supper using a fleet of 34 school buses.
  • In Fort Gaines, the Clay County Board of Education is using funding from No Kid Hungry to provide meals for their students during the coronavirus pandemic.
  • The Haralson County School District in Tallapoosa is providing breakfast and lunch to students. They used an emergency grant from No Kid Hungry to buy insulated containers to store the meals on buses as they’re delivered to kids.
  • With your support, the Barrow County School System are feeding kids at drive-thru kiosks at each school and through delivery to families that lack transportation.
  • Fayette County Schools are using a No Kid Hungry grant to provide food to kids and families affected by the pandemic.
  • The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Chattahoochee Valley are using an emergency grant to provide an estimated 340 meals a day to supplement efforts by the local school district.
  • The DeKalb County School District is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to feed kids at schools and at school bus stops, serving an estimated 45,500 meals each day.
  • With your help the Houston County School System is providing food to more than 30,000 school children in the district.
  • With your help, the YMCA of Metro Atlanta is providing drive-thru meals as well as backpacks of foods to kids across the region, serving approximately 5,000 meals and snacks each week.
  • Thanks in part to your generosity, the Polk School District in Cedartown is feeding hungry kids at drive-thru meals sites seven days a week.
  • The Ware County School System in Waycross is using a No Kid Hungry grant to purchase insulated containers to make sure food for kids stays fresh during the hot summer months.
  • With your help, Wheeler County Schools in Alamo are serving hungry kids breakfast and lunch five days a week.

HAWAII

  • Local Hilo nonprofit The Food Basket is using No Kid Hungry emergency funding to provide hungry kids the food they need through two-week supply packages, eliminating the need for families to travel long distances to distribution sites.
  • In Honolulu, food rescue organization Aloha Harvest is collaborating with the Pacific Gateway Center and Chef Hui, a group of local chefs and food service workers, to feed local families. They're using your support for truck rentals, fuel, maintenance, temporary lease of a distribution facility, cleaning and protective equipment for staff and more.
  • Working with the Hawaii Department of Education and the USDA, the YMCA of Honolulu is using support to provide take-away meals for 875 kids across five sites in Oahu.
  • In Kilauea, a community group called Malama Kaua'i is using funds to deliver a box of healthy, local produce every week to struggling children.
  • The Boys & Girls Club of Hawaii-Kauai Branch is using a grant to feed kids and families in need.
  • With the help of a grant, Kama'aina Kids in Kailua and Maui, is feeding kids and families affected by the pandemic up to five days' worth of breakfast, lunches and snacks that can be picked up throughout the week.
  • Lanakila Pacific of Honolulu is using funding from this grant to provide 500+ meals to Oahu’s most vulnerable children.
  • A No Kid Hungry emergency grant is helping Family Support Hawaii Early Head Start provide kids with a nutritious breakfast and snack via delivery, serving approximately 166 meals a day.
  • Maui Hui Malama in Wailuku is using emergency grant funds to offer curbside food delivery for children in need.
  • The Waianae Coast Comprehensive Health Center is using a grant to offer emergency meals, shelf-stable food and fresh local produce to high-needs children and families.
  • Windward Nazarene Academy in Kaneohe is using an emergency grant to feed children in need during this crisis.

IDAHO

  • Murtaugh School District is offering meals for pick up, but they also need to reach isolated children in their rural community. They're using grant funds to purchase equipment like hot boxes, coolers and more that will help them deliver meals directly to these kids.
  • In Jerome, No Kid Hungry funding is going to help Jerome Joint School District 261 provide bagged breakfast and lunch for pick-up at four different schools, as well as delivery from school buses, totaling about 4,000 meals a day.
  • Thanks to your generous donations, the Post Falls School District is increasing their service area, offering meals at additional sites to ensure none of their students go hungry during this crisis.
  • The Cascade School District is using a grant to serve breakfast, lunch and a snack to children while school is closed.
  • An emergency grant to the Homedale School District will enable them to feed kids and deliver meals to isolated families in this largely rural area.
  • The Regional Council for Christian Ministry in Idaho Falls received an emergency grant that will help them serve up to 930 meals a day to kids in need.
  • An emergency grant to Twin Falls School District #411 will help them purchase food supplies and feed kids in need while schools are closed.

ILLINOIS

  • Your gifts are fueling Wheeling Community Consolidated School District 21 work to serve an estimated 3,500 meals a day to kids in need at 13 meals sites across their community.
  • The largest land mass district in Illinois, Jasper County Unit School District #1 is using our emergency funds to serve rural families breakfast and lunch during this crisis.
  • Litchfield Community Unit School District 12 is using your support to offer meals to all students, including breakfast and lunch five days a week and additional food through local churches over the weekends.
  • You’re helping rural Eldorado CUSD 4 pack and deliver as many as 700 breakfasts and lunches for kids in need every day.
  • At Niles Elementary School District 71, a grant made possible by people like you will fund a weekly pickup program consisting of five breakfasts and five lunches for kids living with hunger.
  • With your support, St. Elmo CUSD #202 has what it needs to help cover the costs of delivering meals by school bus to kids who need them.
  • Your generous gift is helping Westchester Public School District 92-5 deliver breakfast and lunch to every child in the school district. School officials estimate kids will receive as many as 500 meals every day.
  • Thanks to you, No Kid Hungry sent a grant to Western Community Unit School District #12 in Barry to deliver or offer for pick-up roughly 540 meals a day for kids in need.
  • Staff at Centralia School District 135 are preparing and delivering breakfast and lunch daily for their students. With your help, they deliver meals to regular school bus stops where kids can receive them.
  • In Minonk, Fieldcrest Community Unit School District #6 is using emergency funding to add a supper to their daily delivery of breakfast, lunch and a snack to hundreds of children across their rural county.
  • In Wonder Lake, the staff at Harrison School District 36 are providing two meals a day for every child in their community through a drive-thru service that a grant helped make possible.
  • Kankakee School District 111 is operating meals distribution sites at four schools. They're using your support to distribute meals to children over the weekend, as well as provide more delivery options and pick-up locations.
  • In Girard, local school district North Mac CUSD #34 is using our emergency funds to set up four grab-n-go distribution sites to provide meals for students.
  • No Kid Hungry made a grant to Steeleville Unit School District #138 to give local children backpacks full of weekend food, including fresh fruits and vegetables.
  • Bluford USD #318 is using an emergency grant to cover meal delivery to 225 students in the district.
  • Thanks to you, No Kid Hungry was able to make a grant to the Champaign Community Unit School District #4 to distribute an anticipated 20,000 meals each week to kids in need.
  • In Palatine, Community Consolidated School District 15 is using your support to deliver an anticipated 3,000 meals a day by school bus to kids in the district.
  • An emergency grant to Community High School District 94 in West Chicago is helping them provide an anticipated 600 meals each day to kids in the district.
  • An emergency grant to DeKalb District #428 will enable them to provide an anticipated 2,250 meals each day for kids in the district.
  • Fairview School District 72 in Skokie received funding to help provide grab-n-go meals to vulnerable kids while schools are closed.
  • A grant to the Northwest Suburban Special Education Organization in Mt. Prospect will help feed kids from vulnerable families.
  • A grant to Waukegan Public Schools/CUSD 60 is helping them provide meals to kids at risk of hunger at grab-n-go sites in the district.
  • West Aurora School District 129 is using an emergency grant to provide meals to all kids in the district, including deliveries to homeless and domestic abuse shelters.
  • Thanks to you, we were able to make an emergency grant to the Beardstown CUSD # 15 to help them provide up to 800 meals a day for kids in need.
  • Cahokia Unit School District #187 is using a No Kid Hungry grant to distribute weekend food bags consisting of non-perishable meals for kids.
  • Carbondale Elementary School is your support to deliver up to 2,000 meals a day to kids by school bus.
  • Thanks to people like you, Christopher Unit School District 99 can deliver breakfast and lunch to every child in the district.
  • Cobden USD 17 is using a No Kid Hungry grant to provide grab-n-go meal sites and school bus food delivery for kids in need.
  • With your support, Danville Consolidated School District 118 expects to serve up to 2,500 a day to kids in need.
  • Harrisburg Community Unit SD 3 is using your generous gifts to ensure kids and their families across the community get the meals they need in this difficult time.
  • Thanks to your support, the Boys and Girls Club of Southern Illinois is continuing to provide nutritious food to kids throughout the community, serving approximately 225 meals per day.
  • Thanks to a No Kid Hungry emergency grant, the United Way of Knox County has scaled up their existing summer meals and delivery programs in order to feed kids throughout their service area.
  • Thanks to your generous donations, the Chicago Park District is continuing its mission to make food accessible to all children in their community, serving approximately 6,500 meals per day.
  • Two Rivers YMCA is, with the help of emergency funds, expanding their outreach and working to serve more meals and snacks, ensuring kids in their community have access to the food they need throughout this crisis.
  • You're helping the Voluntary Action Center of DeKalb County serve kids several hundred meals a day in their rural community of Sycamore.
  • Thanks in part to your kindness, Peoria Public School District 150 is delivering breakfast and lunch to up to 3,000 students, several days a week.
  • With your support, Quincy School District #172 is delivering breakfast and lunch by school bus to children in low-income neighborhoods.
  • Grant funds are helping the Valley View School District in Romeoville serve kids some 50,000 meals a week, primarily via four drive-thru locations.

INDIANA

  • The School City of Hammond is using our emergency grant funds to purchase supplies that will support their drive-thru service in feeding hungry kids approximately 9,300 healthy meals a day.
  • In rural Marengo, the local school system – Crawford County Community Schools – is using funding from No Kid Hungry to provide kids a week's worth of breakfast and lunch every Monday morning. Given how far some families live from the school, that's the best way to reach the most children. Almost 400 children have already signed up.
  • Your generosity is fueling South Bend Community School Corporation's 13 grab-n-go feeding sites and five meal delivery buses to provide an estimated 17,697 meals to kids every day.
  • With your help, a No Kid Hungry grant to the New Castle Community School Corporation will enable them to deliver breakfasts and lunches to children who may not have transportation to grab-n-go sites in the community.
  • A grant to Marion Community Schools aims to provide 8,000 breakfasts and lunches to school children every day.
  • A No Kid Hungry emergency grant to the Martin Luther King Multi-Service Center Indianapolis is delivering meals to kids in distressed neighborhoods in the district.
  • With your help, River Forest Community Schools in Hobart will expand their distribution of meals to meet the growing need.
  • Thanks in part to your support, the West Washington School Corporation in Campbellsburg will deliver food by bus to kids and families in the community.
  • Thanks to your support, Indianapolis Parks and Recreation is serving approximately 1,650 meals a day, through both partner sites and mobile delivery units.
  • In Gary, you're helping the Clark Road Genesis Family Center provide weekend meals for kids in their community.
  • Your support is helping Crawfordsville Community Schools deliver kids breakfast and lunch, serving over 1,600 meals a day.
  • The MSD Lawrence Township in Indianapolis is using your generous support to provide five days' worth of breakfasts and lunches each Monday via five drive-thru locations.
  • MSD Pike Township in Indianapolis is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide up to 16,000 meals a day to kids at local schools and apartment complexes throughout the district.
  • With your support, the Shoals Community School Corporation is delivering up to 800 meals a day to kids 18 and under via three pick-up locations, and in some cases by delivery.
  • You're helping The Patachou Foundation in Indianapolis provide healthy and nutritious meals to vulnerable kids in the community.
  • Warsaw Community Schools are using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to work with local restaurants to produce meals for children in need.

IOWA

  • With many people out of work in rural Lawton, the Lawton-Bronson Community School District is using No Kid Hungry grant funds to provide hungry kids free breakfast and lunch for curbside pick-up.
  • In Des Moines – where many students rely on school meals – the Saydel Community School District is using No Kid Hungry grant funds to expand the number of sites in the city where parents can get free meals for their children. They’re expecting to serve 5,000 meals every day.
  • In the small city of Winfield, school workers in Winfield Mt. Union Community School District need to reach children spread out across a wide rural county. Thanks to you, they're using No Kid Hungry funds to deliver nutritious bagged breakfasts and lunches.
  • Your support is helping Clear Creek Amana School District distribute 800 meals a day to students in the rural town of Oxford.

  • Your generosity is helping Coralville Community Food Pantry provide a weekly bag of food supplies to low-income families to ensure that all children in their town have the nutritious food they need to thrive.

  • The Williamsburg Community School District is putting our grant toward feeding every child a free lunch and breakfast, five days a week. Cafeteria staff are serving meals at feeding sites, while bus drivers are delivering to rural students and those far from town.

  • You're helping Riceville Community School launch a program to feed kids in need free breakfast and lunch throughout their rural area.

  • The West Sioux Community School District is already offering free grab-n-go breakfast and lunch to students, but now they're using your support to expand their weekend food pack program to all students who need it.

  • Emergency grant funds are helping Des Moines Public Schools provide breakfast, lunch and snacks for its students via drive-thru and walk-up sites, serving approximately 12,000 meals per day.

  • In Des Moines, the Saydel Community School District is using an emergency grant to increase its number of meal sites, ensuring kids get the nutrition they need through this crisis.

  • A No Kid Hungry grant is helping United Way of Central Iowa serve grab-n-go meals to kids, providing approximately 10,000 meals per day.

KANSAS

  • Your support is fueling Douglass Public Schools to serve kids free breakfast and lunch at two community sites and a drive-thru option at a local elementary school.
  • Wamego Public Schools is already providing free grab-n-go meals at two community sites, and your support will help them deliver meals to reach more isolated children in their rural area.
  • Emporia Unified School District #253 is serving free breakfast and lunch at six schools across the community, thanks in part to No Kid Hungry donors like you.
  • In eastern Kansas, North Lyon County USD 251 is using your support to feed students both at pick-up sites in several small towns and through delivery services using school buses. They're also planning to provide meals to kids in need through a weekend backpack program.
  • Thanks to your generosity, Ulysses Kansas USD 214 set up a drive-thru meals site for parents to pick up as many as 1,600 breakfasts and lunches for kids every day.
  • Through a No Kid Hungry emergency grant, USD 312 Haven aims to feed schoolchildren in the community up to 700 meals a day.
  • Your support enabled No Kid Hungry to make an emergency grant to Iola Unified School District 257 to get food to hungry kids in this rural community.
  • United School District 494 in Syracuse is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to help deliver breakfast and lunch to kids who can't get their meals at pick-up sites.
  • USD #484 Fredonia District Schools are using emergency funds to serve grab-n-go meals and delivery to kids throughout the district.
  • In Overland Park, Catholic Charities of Northeast Kansas is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide meals to children at nine sites throughout their service area.
  • Your support is helping Leavenworth USD 453 provide meal delivery for kids who are unable to access grab-n-go sites.

KENTUCKY

  • Your donation will help Feeding America Kentucky's Heartland feed children and families cross 34 counties. For the next two months, each family will receive a 30 lb. box of non-perishable food items, including protein, vegetables, fruit and shelf-stable milk.
  • As Livingston County Schools deliver 950 meals a day in their rural community, your support will pay for the equipment, transportation and staff needed to reach as many children as possible.
  • You're helping Williamsburg Independent Schools serve their students breakfast and lunch each day and also extend additional meals to some of their especially needy families during this crisis.
  • Thanks in part to people like you, Jefferson County Public Schools in Louisville expect to provide 15,000 meals a day for local kids via drive-thru and grab-n-go meals sites.
  • In Danville, the Boyle County Board of Education is using your support to provide approximately 1,750 essential meals a day to kids in their community.
  • Lewis County Schools in Vanceburg are using emergency grant funds to deliver roughly 4,000 meals a day across their bus routes.
  • With your help, Metcalfe County Schools in Edmonton are providing a week's worth of meals and snacks each Tuesday, ensuring kids get the nutrition they need.
  • In Campbellsville, Taylor County Schools are using emergency grant funds to get kids the meals they need through delivery and drive-thru pick-up programs.
  • With the support of emergency funds, Trimble County School District in Bedford is providing meals via pick-up and delivery to kids struggling with hunger throughout the district.
  • The Harlan County Boys & Girls Club is using emergency funds to serve supper and snacks to approximately 200 kids a day.
  • In Booneville, you’re helping Owsley County Schools deliver meals to kids across the county.
  • Thanks in part to you, the Barren County Board of Education is delivering nearly 4,000 meals a day, and plan to continue to do so throughout the duration of the crisis.
  • In Paris, a No Kid Hungry emergency grant is helping Bourbon County Schools deliver children approximately 1,000 meals a day.
  • With your support, the Bowling Green Independent School District is utilizing its 13 bus routes to deliver approximately 2,000 meals a day.
  • In Danville, the Boyle County Board of Education is using emergency funds to serve nutritious meals to its students during the crisis.
  • Your support is helping Corbin Independent Schools safely transport and serve meals to children and their families in rural areas.
  • In Louisville, you're helping Jefferson County Public Schools provide their students with the nutrition they need through delivery and pick-up meal service.
  • With a No Kid Hungry grant, Pineville Independent School is providing lunches and breakfasts via bus delivery to its students, approximately 240 meals per day.
  • In Frenchburg, generous donations are helping the Menifee County School District deliver breakfast and lunch to kids throughout their community.
  • With your help, Taylor County Schools in Campbellsville are packaging and delivering meals to kids, ensuring those in even the most food-insecure homes have healthy meals.
  • In Morganfield, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Union County Public Schools feed kids throughout the coronavirus crisis and in its aftermath.

LOUISIANA

  • Second Harvest Food Bank of Greater New Orleans and Acadiana is using No Kid Hungry funds to deliver an estimated 2,000 free meals a day to schools, recreation centers and food pantries.
  • The East Baton Rouge School District is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to feed children 10,000 nutritious breakfasts and lunches a day at nine grab-n-go meals sites.
  • The Joe LeBlanc Food Pantry serves low-income families across the small town of Minden. With your help, they're feeding 418 children and providing emergency food supplies for families in need.
  • Thanks in part to emergency funding from No Kid Hungry, Morehouse Parish School Board in Bastrop is feeding children some 1,300 meals a day while schools are closed.
  • With your help, the Dryades YMCA is using their mobile youth pantry to deliver meals in the evenings and on weekends to hungry New Orleans children.
  • FirstLine Schools are using No Kid Hungry emergency funds to help the local school district feed students by running ten mobile meals sites and offering grab-n-go meals to kids in New Orleans. They expect to serve 4,000 meals a day.
  • In New Orleans, Sankofa Community Development Corporation is using your support to help provide a healthy breakfast, lunch, snack and dinner to some 300 children a day in the Lower Ninth Ward.
  • In hard-hit New Orleans, you're helping Fresh Food Factor provide as many as 4,000 nutritious meals to kids in need every day.
  • Your generosity is helping support a grant to KIPP New Orleans Schools to provide breakfast and lunch to anyone who needs food.
  • In virus-afflicted Houma, a No Kid Hungry grant to the Terrebonne Children’s Advocacy Center will help them deliver as many as 400 meals a day to at-risk kids.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is helping Feeding Louisiana in Baton Rouge distribute food to kids in need throughout the state.
  • Thanks in part to your compassion, No Kid Hungry made an emergency grant to help the city of Monroe provide an estimated 55,000 grab-n-go meals a day to kids.
  • With your support, ARISE Schools in New Orleans are feeding hungry kids an estimated 1,200 healthy meals a day during this crisis.
  • The Sophie B Wright Charter High School in New Orleans is using No Kid Hungry emergency grant funds to continue feeding kids through delivery and grab-n-go programs.
  • In New Orleans, ReNEW-Reinventing Education is using a No Kid Hungry grant to support its community feeding program for the city's most vulnerable youth.
  • The Young Men's Christian Association of Bogalusa is using emergency funds for their meal program, ensuring kids residing in Washington Parish get a nutritious lunch while schools are closed.
  • Thanks in part to you, a No Kid Hungry emergency grant is helping the New Orleans Recreation Development Commission provide supper at 21 sites, including playgrounds.
  • In Shreveport, the Salvation Army is using emergency grant funds to ensure kids continue to receive balanced and nutritious meals.
  • In New Orleans, grant funds are helping local nonprofit Son of a Saint ensure boys in their program continue to get the food they need throughout the crisis.
  • In Marksville, Avoyelles Parish School Board is using emergency funds to serve approximately 5,000 meals a day, ensuring kids and their families get the nutrition they need in this crisis.
  • Thanks to your generous support, the Healthy School Food Collaborative is delivering seven-day meal kits to students across over 15 parishes, ensuring children stay nourished throughout the coronavirus crisis.
  • Shreveport Charter School is using an emergency grant to provide healthy and nutritious food to its students and their siblings, serving approximately 2,000 meals a day.
  • In New Orleans, the Salvation Army is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide three meals plus a snack per day to kids at its Center of Hope Shelter.
  • In Farmerville, Union Parish School District is using No Kid Hungry emergency funds to operate 11 grab-n-go sites serving approximately 1,800 meals a day, ensuring kids throughout the district get the nutrition they need.
  • Richland Parish Schools in Rayville are using emergency funds to deliver meals, ensuring kids whose families lack transportation get the food they need.
  • In New Orleans, your donations are helping Top Box Foods Louisiana get kids and their families the food they need through home grocery deliveries.

MAINE

  • Your generous donations are helping Maine’s School Administrative District 60 in North Berwick serve 350 meals a day to hungry kids affected by school closures.
  • The Hermon School Department serves 1,700 students in Maine and reached out to No Kid Hungry for help to continue providing boxes of food from their school food pantry as requests continue to grow.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant to the Madawaska School Department will enable them to deliver meals by school bus to hungry kids in the community.
  • Thanks in part to you, No Kid Hungry was able to make an emergency grant to MSAD 27 in Fort Kent to deliver meals to kids using school bus routes.
  • You're helping MSAD 33 in St. Agatha deliver hungry kids meals using school bus routes.
  • An emergency grant to MSAD 46 in Dexter will help deliver meals and backpacks filled with food to students in the area.

MARYLAND

  • Manna, a food bank just outside of the District of Columbia, is using No Kid Hungry funds to provide emergency meals for kids in need.
  • Already a source of support for kids living in poverty, Baltimore County's Student Support Network will put your generosity to use by storing and distributing food to kids in need during the crisis.
  • In Prince Frederick, Calvert County Public Schools is using support from No Kid Hungry to provide some 600 meals a day to children in low-income parts of the community.
  • Thanks to you, Cecil County Public Schools can continue to provide as many as 3,000 breakfasts and lunches each day to kids in need.
  • Your support will help Prince George's County Public Schools deliver up to 15,000 meals a day to kids from low-income families.
  • Your support will help St Vincent de Paul of Baltimore distribute as many as 5,000 meals a day to children who are experiencing homelessness or from low-income families.
  • Thanks in part to you, a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to the Maryland Congress of Parents and Teachers in Glen Burnie will help hungry kids in 24 counties across the state.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant to 4MYCITY in Randallstown will support a food rescue program that distributes surplus food to stricken communities.
  • In Westminster, Together We Own It is using emergency grant funds to feed vulnerable children and their families by delivering meals and boxes of shelf-stable goods door to door in some of the community's most marginalized neighborhoods.
  • With the help of a No Kid Hungry grant, the Baltimore Hunger Project is distributing food packages to students throughout Baltimore County, providing approximately 3,000 meals a day.
  • Baltimore nonprofit Next One Up is using emergency funds to provide meals for kids in 122 struggling families in the city.
  • In Baltimore, funds are helping Associated Catholic Charities serve hungry kids approximately 1,200 meals per day.
  • In Baltimore, the Asylee Women Enterprise is using a grant to serve approximately 150 meals a day to children of asylum seekers, refugees and other forced migrants.
  • With emergency funds, Bon Secours Baltimore Foundation is delivering food for five healthy meals a week to at-risk kids and their families in West Baltimore.
  • With your support, CASA de Maryland is providing weekly grocery deliveries and case management support to low-income Baltimore-area immigrant households experiencing food insecurity as a result of the crisis.
  • With emergency funds, Charles County Public Schools in La Plata can support transportation and food storage costs to feed hungry kids from their 38 school cafeteria sites.
  • With emergency grant funds, the Charles Regional Medical Center Foundation is partnering with the Southern Maryland Food Bank to distribute an estimated 7,000 free meals, with a special focus on getting meals to kids over the weekend.
  • The Franciscan Center of Baltimore is using a grant to provide an estimated 300 meals a day to families affected by the pandemic.
  • The Harford County Public Schools Department of Food and Nutrition Services is using their emergency grant to feed kids and families in need due to unemployment.
  • The Howard County Government is using an emergency grant to open the county's Roving Radish program early, which provides families in need with affordable, healthy, easy-to-cook, farm fresh meal kits. Special service for first responders and isolated communities is a priority of the program.
  • The Howard County Public School System is using an emergency grant to serve free grab-n-go packs that include a snack, lunch and dinner, as well as weekend backpacks to students in need.
  • Thanks to your support, Garrett County Public Schools are serving three meals and a snack daily along expanded delivery routes, providing approximately 3,000 meals per day.
  • Montgomery County Coalition for the Homeless is using emergency funds to meet the meal needs of formerly homeless kids and their families, providing approximately 11,465 meals per day.
  • Silver Spring Christian Reformed Church is using emergency funds to expand food pantry operations, providing kids and their families with pre-packed bags of food, ensuring they get the nutrition they need throughout this crisis.
  • The Adventist Community Services of Greater Washington is using emergency funds to ensure kids throughout the region continue to get the nutrition they need through distribution of food packages at multiple sites, serving approximately 1,400 meals per day.
  • With the help of a No Kid Hungry emergency grant, Bnos Yisroel of Baltimore is distributing summer meals across nine sites, serving approximately 1,500 meals per day.
  • In Gaithersburg, Cross Community is working to ensure kids get the food they need. Emergency funds are helping them serve approximately 8,000 meals per day.
  • Deep Launching in Waldorf is using an emergency grant to partner with Charles City Schools to deliver nutritious food to children and families in need or who are experiencing homelessness.
  • No One Left Unhelped Inc is making sure that children and families in need living in Sandtown-Winchester, a Baltimore neighborhood, can get breakfast, lunch, dinner and a healthy snack through its central pick-up location or via delivery.
  • Outcast Food Network is using emergency funds to pack one-gallon mobile food packs filled with healthy snack foods, which can provide sustenance for children who may only get one or two meals per day.
  • Saint Luke Lutheran is ensuring that Silver Spring families in need can access fresh fruits, vegetables and other food items to ensure that they get the food they need.
  • Small Things Matter is using an emergency grant to provide fresh produce boxes and hot meals to more than 1,000 families in Silver Spring, Takoma Park and Rockville experiencing hardship due to the coronavirus.
  • In La Plata, the LifeStyles of Maryland Foundation is using emergency funds to provide groceries and meals to food-insecure kids and their families.
  • A No Kid Hungry emergency grant is helping Montgomery County Food Council ensure all Montgomery County Public Schools students receive three meals a day.
  • The Montgomery Housing Partnership is using emergency funds to help kids and their families get the nutritious meals they need during this crisis.
  • Queen Anne's County Public Schools are using emergency funds to open summer meals distribution sites for kids, serving approximately 3,300 meals a day.
  • Emergency grant funds are helping St. Francis Neighborhood Center in Baltimore provide youth and their families the food they need during the coronavirus crisis.
  • With your help, St. Michaels Community Center is working with other local groups to ensure kids get the food they need, serving approximately 350 meals per day.
  • With your help, Baltimore nonprofit Thread is providing emergency food assistance and grocery delivery services, ensuring kids get the food they need.
  • In Baltimore, UEmpower of Maryland is using emergency funds to provide up to 400 meals a day, ensuring kids get the food they need.
  • The University of Maryland Medical Center’s community outreach programs are using emergency funds to provide weekend meals for kids during the crisis.
  • With your help, Washington County Public Schools in Hagerstown is providing healthy meals to kids living in remote areas of the county.

MASSACHUSETTS

  • Local partner Project Bread is using grant funds to coordinate free meal sites and expand the Food Source Hotline, which connects families in need with food banks, pantries and sites across the state.
  • Millis Public Schools will use grant funds you helped make possible to provide free breakfast and lunch to children already struggling with hunger in their suburban community.
  • With your help, Medway Public Schools expect to provide 1,000 breakfasts and lunches every day to hungry children.
  • The Greater Boston Food Bank is stepping up their efforts to feed children in need across the city, including thousands of children who are no longer getting school meals. Your donations will help them serve kids an anticipated 300,000 meals each day.
  • With schools closed, the YMCA of Greater Boston is serving pick-up meals for children at more than 60 locations across the city. They're relying in part on funding you helped provide to feed these kids an estimated 33,000 meals a day.
  • Wrentham Public Schools are relying on support from No Kid Hungry to operate a regional school food pantry for local families while schools are shut down.
  • The Boys & Girls Club of Greater Westfield is using our emergency funds to serve kids an average of 300 meals a day at seven grab-n-go sites.
  • Heywood Healthcare is turning your support into a local nonprofit partnership that will provide nutritious evening and weekend meals for some 500 hungry children in Gardner.
  • In East Boston, Project Bread is working directly with low-income families to connect them with federal nutrition programs and other feeding programs in the community.
  • You’re helping Chicopee Public Schools feed hungry kids an estimated 6,000 breakfasts and lunches a day at 14 grab-n-go sites throughout the city.
  • The Waltham Boys & Girls Club is using No Kid Hungry funds to provide roughly 600 free and nutritious grab-n-go meals at 11 locations across the city.
  • In Salem, ROOT NS is using your support to partner with Salem Public Schools to give children three meals a day while schools are closed.
  • With your help, Boston Public Schools is providing an estimated 12,000 free breakfast and lunch meals daily to children in need, as well as delivering meals to students with severe mobility issues.
  • With your help, Boys & Girls Clubs of Metro South is getting free grab-n-go meals to kids each weeknight through its Brockton and Taunton Clubhouses.
  • Because of your generosity, Braintree Public Schools is providing breakfast and lunch each day to children, as well as weekend food and food pantry bags to families in need.
  • Thanks to your help, Gardner Public Schools in partnership with Whitsons Culinary Group is providing meals through stationary sites and mobile meal bus routes, as well as expanded weekend meal service.
  • Thanks to your help, Hockomack Area YMCA has been able to transform its branch lobbies into Emergency Food Access centers in the communities of Franklin, North Attleboro and Foxboro, distributing an estimated 2,200 meals in the first week.
  • With your help, Amherst-Pelham Regional School District is providing stigma-free meal access to all children, including those in need who do not necessarily live in high-need areas, such as surrounding rural towns.
  • With your help, Attleboro Area Interfaith Collaborative is harnessing its 35 years of experience in providing emergency food to make sure children and families in need get healthy, reliable food during the pandemic.
  • Greenfield Public School is using emergency funds to make sure their outdoor meal sites are more visible and broadly advertised in the community, as well as to provide site shelter from the elements.
  • With your help, Springfield Public Schools is honoring its hard-working frontline workers serving and delivering meals with grocery cards.
  • Triton Regional School District in Byfield is using emergency funds to provide school breakfast and lunch daily to all families in its district through bus route drop-off, curbside pick-up or in conjunction with the local Boys and Girls Club delivery service.
  • With your help, Merrimack Valley YMCA is getting an estimated 450 grab-n-go meals daily to kids and families in need affected by school and child care closures.
  • North Adams Public School used an emergency grant to establish some five feeding sites offering free breakfast and lunch to any child living in the school district during the week, as well as food packs for the weekend.
  • With your help, Pittsfield School Food Service is providing healthy meals to students in need in their district.
  • With your help, YMCA Cape Cod is making sure the children of healthcare workers – for whom they provide free childcare from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. at their five locations – get free breakfast, lunch, dinner and snacks daily.
  • YMCA of Greater Boston is using emergency funds to provide grab-n-go meals to kids at its 60 locations, while also partnering with the Greater Boston Food Bank to provide food for families in need.

MICHIGAN

  • Each weekday, the YMCA of Greater Grand Rapids (along with local nonprofit Kids Food Basket) is serving a free lunch, snack and dinner at five locations across the city. You're helping them serve these grab-n-go meals in parking lots and other open spaces as they plan to expand to reach more neighborhoods.
  • Though the team at Freeland Community School District was able to quickly set up free meals at their school, they needed our help to also offer a delivery service. They're using your generous donations to pay for insulated bags, cooler packs and more.
  • With your help, Northwest Community Schools in Jackson expect to serve 2,000 breakfasts and lunches to children in two low-income neighborhoods.
  • In Marquette, you're helping North Star Academy feed students from low-income families that lack transportation to get to meals sites.
  • With your help, Sturgis Public Schools are delivering an estimated 3,000 healthy meals a day to hungry kids.
  • Your generous support is helping Waterford School District secure refrigerated trucks that will allow them to safely deliver free meals to kids at five sites and along three bus routes.
  • Zeeland Public Schools are using your support to fuel 13 school buses and a drive-thru meals site to get healthy breakfasts and lunches to kids in need.
  • Oak Park’s Forgotten Harvest is using a No Kid Hungry grant to help them create a food distribution system that keeps families and food workers safe while delivering some 4,000 meals a day throughout the Detroit area.
  • Your generosity helped fund a grant to Thornapple Kellogg Schools in Middleville to provide hungry kids two meals a day, seven days a week.
  • The YMCA of Barry County in Hastings is using your support to deliver suppers and snacks to as many as 900 kids from low-income families every week.
  • With your help, Delton Kellogg Schools expect to feed kids up to 850 nutritious meals a day.
  • Your support will enable the Grand Rapids Youth Commonwealth to deliver as many as 270 hot meals and snacks to hungry kids each day.
  • Your support is helping Richmond Community Schools distribute and deliver breakfast and lunch for kids while schools are closed.
  • In Clinton Township, the Macomb Intermediate School District is using emergency funds to deliver meals door to door to its special needs students.
  • Dearborn Public Schools are using your generous gifts to expand their grab-n-go program while also adding a delivery component.
  • Keys Grace Academy in Madison Heights is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to purchase kitchen equipment, helping them serve roughly 10,000 packaged meals per day.
  • With your support, American Montessori Academy in Westland is able to pay for the extra refrigeration to keep milk and other food cool for their meals service to kids in their community.
  • With your support, Belding Area Schools is feeding 700 students lunch and breakfast a day, as well as a bagged dinner for their 100 neediest students.
  • Bendle Public Schools are using an emergency grant to get meals to its students, all of whom are eligible for free school meals.
  • In Detroit, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Gleaners Food Bank of Southeastern Michigan distribute groceries for families to ensure kids can continue to get the nutrition they need throughout the ongoing coronavirus crisis.
  • In Highland, your support is helping Huron Valley Schools provide meals for kids at three school sites, while using school buses to deliver meals to five sites in the community.
  • With your help, Carson City Crystal Schools is making sure children and families in need can get fresh fruits and vegetables.
  • Concord Community Schools is using emergency funds to make sure their feeding program has critical equipment, such as insulated containers, additional milk coolers and insulted milk bags, food carts and other serving equipment.
  • With your help, Hanover Horton Schools is using emergency funds to make sure their feeding program has critical equipment, such as insulated containers, additional milk coolers and insulted milk bags, food carts and other serving equipment.
  • Kaleva Norman Dickson School District in Brethren is using emergency funds to expand meal pick-up locations and food deliveries to serve an estimated 3,900 meals daily to help more families in need in this rural community.
  • Lapeer Community Schools is using emergency funds to support its curbside meal pick-up and food delivery service to households that don't have transportation, providing an estimated 3,000 meals daily.
  • With your help, the Taylor School District is supporting its emergency feeding program supporting an estimated 3,400 meals daily to children and families impacted by the pandemic and the severe challenges it's causing for the community.
  • With your help, the YMCA of Monroe Michigan is getting grab-n-go meals to those in need in the lowest-income areas of the county.

MINNESOTA

  • Community organization and food bank Second Harvest Heartland is distributing emergency food boxes to families in Saint Paul. Each box contains enough nutritious food for six to eight meals. With your support, they plan to deliver 100,000 boxes over the next six weeks.
  • With your help, Saint Paul Public Schools are feeding kids an estimated 28,800 healthy meals every day.
  • In Morton, the Lower Sioux Indian Community will use an emergency grant to prepare and distribute approximately 4,600 emergency meals over the next eight weeks.
  • With your help, the Yes Network is providing meals in three large neighborhoods in the Saint Cloud area, ensuring kids get the nutrition they need while schools are closed.
  • Holdingford Schools are using funds to serve hearty, shelf-stable sack meals, ensuring kids get the nutrition they need.
  • Jordan Public School District 717 is using a No Kid Hungry grant to serve roughly 1,000 meals per day through grab-n-go, drive-thru and delivery models.
  • In Saint Paul, Lutheran Social Service of Minnesota is using your support to get meals to kids who need them via school-based drop-off, delivery and shipping frozen meals to children across the state.
  • Nicollet ISD 507 is using emergency funds to help provide the best meals possible to children in need.
  • You’re helping Hopkins Public Schools provide weekly meals in bulk, ensuring kids who depend on free and reduced-price school meals continue to get the nutrition they need.
  • With your support, Partners in Nutrition in Saint Paul plan to serve kids approximately 500 meals per day.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is helping Robbinsdale Area Schools District 281 in New Hope serve approximately 7,000 grab-n-go meals per day.
  • The Roseville Area Schools Nutrition Services is turning a grant into approximately 1,500 grab-n-go and delivery meals per day for hungry kids.
  • Across the Saint Cloud area in Minneapolis, The Yes Network is using emergency funding to provide meals for students.
  • Thanks in part to your help, White Bear Lake Area Schools Independent School District 624 can cover the increased cost of food and provide meals and supplies to families at 11 neighborhood sites offering curbside pick-up.
  • With your support, Willmar Public Schools are purchasing critical equipment such as coolers, ice packs and plastic storage equipment to provide breakfast and lunch meals to hungry kids along bus routes.
  • Youthprise in Minneapolis is using a No Kid Hungry grant to help schools in the Twin Cities serve emergency meals to youth who might otherwise go hungry.
  • A grant from No Kid Hungry is helping Hiawatha Academies provide food and essential items for an estimated 1,500-2,000 kids in South Minneapolis, a community that has been hard hit financially by the crisis and the killing of George Floyd.
  • Thanks to your generous support, Hopkins Public Schools are serving meals at six elementary schools and along bus routes, ensuring kids continue to get the nutrition they need during this crisis.
  • Al-Maa'uun is using emergency funds to support families in the Near North who have been disproportionately affected by poverty and unemployment, providing a home meal service for youth and a food shelf delivery service for their families.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is helping Bloomington School District #271 purchase the equipment necessary to safely store and serve bagged meals for kids while schools are closed.
  • Your support is helping Foley Public Schools ISD 51 serve five days’ worth of food for kids, bundled for pick-up two times per week.
  • Sleepy Eye Public Schools is serving breakfast and lunch bags to the entire town, ensuring all kids in its rural community continue to get the nutritious food they need during the coronavirus crisis.
  • Your support is allowing St. James Public Schools to safely deliver meals for children who have been affected by the ongoing pandemic.
  • Loaves & Fishes in Minneapolis is using an emergency grant to make sure kids in their community get the healthy meals they need.
  • With your help, the Lower Sioux Indian Community will distribute an estimated 4,800 meal backpacks to ensure that kids have access to healthy food over the weekends.
  • Minneapolis Public Schools is using emergency funding to shift its meal distribution to weekly food box delivery through 49 sites, increasing food help to families in the community.
  • Robbinsdale Area Schools District 281 in New Hope is using emergency funding to increase its capacity to get healthy grab-n-go meals to as many children as they can.
  • With your help, Saint Paul Public Schools has been able to cover the extra food and staff costs necessary to provide food to kids and families in need.
  • Second Harvest Heartland is using emergency funds to distribute an estimated 100,0000 nutritious, 10-pound emergency food boxes to area households, including those with children.
  • Youthprise in Minneapolis is using emergency funds to purchase cold storage equipment to allow them to provide kids in need with free, healthy summer meals throughout the Twin Cities region.

MISSISSIPPI

  • With schools closed, the Give & Take Kitchen Foundation is preparing, packing and delivering healthy meals to kids in low-income neighborhoods in Hattiesburg, with help from a No Kid Hungry emergency grant.
  • The Girls Club & Learning Center is using emergency funding from No Kid Hungry to provide a free breakfast and lunch every day to kids in their community.
  • Byhalia High School in Holly Springs is using your support to provide some 1,500 meals a day delivered curbside to kids who depend on school meals for food.
  • With your support, EDUCATE Inc. is providing food backpacks for kids living in rural and high poverty areas in Como.
  • In JacksonYouth Improvement Services is using a No Kid Hungry grant to help provide at-risk youth with the nutritious meals they need.
  • With the help of a grant, the YMCA of Metropolitan Jackson is leading emergency feeding sites in their communities to ensure kids continue to get the healthy meals they rely on until schools are able to reopen.

MISSOURI

  • Your donations are helping the Osage Prairie YMCA in the small town of Nevada order weekly bulk food supplies as local grocers in their rural community face food shortages.
  • St. Louis food bank Operation Food Search is using your support to provide free, healthy meals to children in the evening and on weekends while schools are closed.
  • With help from No Kid Hungry, the Adair County Family YMCA in Kirksville is working with the local school district to provide students with meals during the day, supper seven days a week and breakfast on weekends.
  • Family Life Community Services in Springfield is using emergency grant funds to help their ongoing effort to distribute meals to kids in need.

MONTANA

  • Thanks in part to your generosity, Kalispell Public Schools will provide about 1,500 breakfasts and lunches every day for students who are at risk of hunger.
  • Thanks to your donations, Farm to School of Park County is purchasing a vehicle to deliver emergency food supplies to kids across the rural county's 2,800 square miles.
  • The Anaconda School District was already providing kids breakfast and lunch. With your help, they'll also be able to provide a snack and dinner, ensuring kids get the nutrition they need.
  • Box Elder Public Schools are using your support to feed approximately 150 students outside of their school district.
  • Montana’s Butte School District #1 is using emergency funds to serve breakfast and lunch to hungry kids in the area.
  • In WordenHuntley Project Schools are using your generous gifts to purchase equipment and supplies to serve kids healthy, nutritious meals.
  • The Montana Food Bank Network is working to meet the increased demand for emergency food assistance. With your support, they estimate they will get meals to an additional 85,000 kids.
  • MT-0964 Wibaux K-12 Schools are using your gifts to prepare and deliver meals to hungry kids.
  • With your support, the Belgrade School District is providing grab-n-go breakfast and lunch meals while schools are closed.
  • In Garryowen – on the Crow Indian Reservation – your donations are helping community organization Center Pole ensure kids and their families get the nutrition they need during this crisis.
  • The Boys & Girls Club of the Hi-Line in Havre are using emergency funds from No Kid Hungry to feed kids supper and a snack via curbside pick-up and delivery.
  • Your donations are helping Sidney Public Schools serve grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches to as many as 1,000 kids a day.
  • With your help, Bigfork ACES is making sure kids in their community are getting fresh fruits and vegetables along with cooking skills training.
  • The Billings Family YMCA is using your generous support to get the refrigerator, coolers, tables, chairs and more to feed hungry kids.
  • Thanks in part to you, Cascade Public School is providing meals to kids and getting the word out that kids can get healthy meals and enrichment at their feeding site.
  • A grant from No Kid Hungry helped Billings School District equip its mobile food trailer to safely provide meals for kids.
  • In rural Bozeman, you're helping the Human Resource Development Council District IX reach kids with nutritious meals so that, when they do return to school, they're healthy and ready to learn.
  • Thanks to your support, Kalispell Public Schools will be retrofitting one of their food delivery trucks to feed kids, ensuring they continue to get the meals they need.
  • Lewiston Public Schools are using a grant from No Kid Hungry to serve breakfast and lunch for kids along four bus routes, ensuring kids can count on a nutritious meal regardless of where they live.
  • In rural Ronan, a grant from No Kid Hungry is helping the Boys & Girls Club of Flathead Reservation and Lake County provide grab-n-go suppers five days a week to kids across every community on the Flathead Indian Reservation.
  • In Box Elder, your support is helping the Chippewa Cree Tribe of the Rocky Boy's Reservation keep its community pantry stocked with goods and food to ensure kids in its tribal community have healthy food during the coronavirus pandemic.
  • When schools closed for the coronavirus, Dutton/Brady School immediately began serving meals to all students in its small district, but it's considerably more costly than their usual meal service. Your support is helping to cover the added cost of offering grab-n-go meals to all students.
  • Hardin School District 17H & 1 is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to prepare, transport and deliver meals to students in isolated, high-poverty areas of Big Horn County, ensuring students impacted by the coronavirus crisis can continue to access nutritious food.
  • The Missoula Foodbank and Community Center is using an emergency grant from No Kid Hungry to ensure kids in their community who have been impacted by the coronavirus continue to have nutritious food.
  • Your support is helping Plentywood School District #20 ensure kids in their community who have been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic continue to have nutritious food this summer.
  • In Missoula, Target Range School is providing grab-n-go meals for kids during the coronavirus using curbside pick-up and delivery programs.
  • Polson School District #23 is using emergency funds to purchase safety and storage equipment, so they can feed kids safely over summer.

NEBRASKA

  • In Omaha, Food Bank for the Heartland is using grant funding to serve kids five breakfasts and lunches each week at 13 drive-thru sites that mitigate coronavirus exposure.
  • Thanks to your support, Cozad Community Schools are purchasing equipment and supplies for transporting food, allowing them to distribute approximately 1,000 meals a day.
  • Wood River Rural Schools are using funds from No Kid Hungry to purchase equipment for meal delivery, ensuring their students get the nutrition they need.
  • Catholic Charities of Omaha is using your gifts to provide over 46,000 hungry kids and their families a five-day supply of packaged foods and daily access to fresh foods this year.
  • Your support is allowing York Public Schools to extend its summer program so more kids impacted by the coronavirus pandemic can continue to get healthy meals.

NEVADA

  • With support from No Kid Hungry, Three Square is ensuring kids eat by delivering 50 pounds of food each week to families across all parts of Las Vegas.
  • The Churchill County School District is using an emergency grant to get meals to hungry kids through grab-n-go sites along 14 bus routes in Fallon, as well as home delivery in this tribal community.
  • With your help, Equipo Academy in Las Vegas purchased equipment to bring meals to hungry kids in apartment communities where need is high and transportation is limited.
  • In Las Vegas, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Richard J. Rundle Elementary School of Clark County School District provide food and basic necessities for its students, all of whom rely on free breakfast and lunch at school.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

  • The Community Kitchen, a local food pantry and soup kitchen in Keene, has run low on food donations from local supermarkets and restaurants due to the coronavirus. But your support is helping them continue serving children in need.
  • In Langdon, the Fall Mountain Regional School District is offering kids in need free breakfast and lunch pick-up. With your help, they're adding new drive-up locations and extended hours that will, in total, provide 1,600 nutritious meals each day.
  • A grant is enabling Got Lunch! Newport to provide weekly grocery deliveries to hungry kids and their families.

NEW JERSEY

  • Thanks to your support, the Woodbridge Township School District is offering kids free grab-n-go breakfast and lunch every weekday.
  • The Marlboro School District is sending 250 lunches to hungry kids every day. As more families lose income and apply for assistance, they're using funds you made possible to help the program keep pace with the growing need.
  • With schools closed until at least late April, the Florence Township School District is using your support to serve breakfast and lunch to all its hungry students.
  • You're helping the Union City School District provide free breakfast and lunch five days a week at 14 sites to more than 10,000 schoolchildren until schools reopen.
  • Your generosity is helping the Carteret Board of Education establish an emergency commissary through which they'll provide kids breakfast and lunch at three different locations, especially those who are homeless and displaced.
  • With help of emergency funding from No Kid Hungry, the Newark Board of Education expects to serve 7,000 healthy breakfasts and lunches to kids every day at 16 locations across the city.
  • With your support, the Belleville Board of Education is working to prepare, package, serve and deliver some 1,500 meals a day for students.
  • Thanks to your donations, St. John's Pentecostal Outreach Church in Salem is distributing emergency food packages to families in need.
  • In addition to preparing bagged lunches, St. Joseph Social Service Center in Elizabeth is using funds to provide emergency food bags to families in need.
  • You're helping the Barack Obama Green Charter High School in Plainfield offer breakfast and lunch for both its students and other hungry children in the community during this crisis.
  • In Jersey City, the National Sorority of Phi Delta Kappa, Inc. Alpha Chapter is using emergency funds to provide dinner to approximately 1,000 kids a day.
  • Jersey City Public Schools is using your support to operate 20 feeding sites for kids in need as they cope with living in one of the pandemic's hotspots.
  • At Woodstown-Pilesgrove Regional School District, grant funds have helped cafeteria operations shift to meal delivery so that children without transportation don't go hungry.
  • With the help of a grant, the Boys & Girls Club of Paterson and Passaic estimates they will provide nearly 10,000 meals per week by distributing family food kits to local residents through a grab-n-go distribution.

NEW MEXICO

  • Your support will help the Johns Hopkins Center for American Health distribute food boxes to low-income Native American families with children under five years old across the Southwest.
  • The Zuni Youth Enrichment Project works with nearly 3,000 tribal children, many of whom are struggling with poverty. With schools closed, the organization is using funds from No Kid Hungry to deliver fresh fruits and vegetables to these kids as part of the local school district's meals programs.
  • In Thoreau, the St. Bonaventure Indian Mission and School is using your support to feed every child from the isolated tribal area two daily meals, for an expected total of 600 meals a day and, especially, over the summer.
  • In NewcombTohaali Community School is using your support to purchase, prepare and distribute weekend meals for kids in need.
  • Hatch Valley Schools are using an emergency grant to deliver kids approximately 500 healthy meals a day.
  • You're helping Espanola Public Schools distribute a hot breakfast and lunch along ten bus routes, serving an estimated 3,000 meals for kids each day.
  • In Santa Fe, Communities in Schools is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to provide meals for kids whose families have been impacted by the coronavirus pandemic.
  • In New Mexico, you're helping Hobbs Municipal Schools continue to serve nearly 1,000 breakfasts and lunches every day, using six school buses to bring meals to students who may lack transportation to meal sites during the summer months.

NEW YORK

  • The upstate Sandy Creek Central School District is using a grant you made possible to package and deliver more than 500 breakfasts and lunches every day.
  • The Food Bank For New York City is using emergency grant funding that you helped make possible to serve approximately 35,000 free meals to 4,000 hungry children and their families.
  • In hard-hit New York City, you helped make a grant to City Harvest, the city’s largest food rescue organization. Their trucks will stay on the road, rescuing food and delivering it free of charge to soup kitchens, food pantries, mobile markets and other community food to serve some 183,000 meals a day.
  • With your help, the Williamson Central School District is serving two healthy meals a day to hungry children in its area.
  • In Elmira, Catholic Charities Food Bank of the Southern Tier is using your support to design and launch new distribution models that will safely feed hungry children during this crisis.
  • West Side Center for Community Life in New York City is using emergency funds to purchase healthier, shelf-stable products in order to be a reliable resource of healthy food for families and children in need. They except to serve 7,050 meals a day.
  • With support from No Kid Hungry, Long Island Cares is packaging boxes with enough food to feed a family of four to six over the weekend, ensuring kids and entire families can eat during the coronavirus outbreak.
  • Serving 60,000 people across New York City, the Chinese-American Planning Council is providing emergency food and SNAP support to families with children at their 35 locations. With our help, they are providing meals for pick-up so that fewer families go hungry during the pandemic.
  • With your support, the Children’s Aid Society in New York City is providing hungry children and families with boxes of fresh, nutritious food during the pandemic, in partnership with the Westside Campaign Against Hunger.
  • Womankind is using their grant to feed survivors of domestic violence living in their New York City emergency residences, where half of residents are children. This assistance is especially critical for residents now, as many have lost jobs and are ineligible for unemployment.
  • Rochester nonprofit Foodlink is using your gifts to sustain its efforts that have already provided 54,000 healthy meals for hungry kids while schools are closed.
  • With your support, Island Harvest Food Bank is feeding the most vulnerable members of the Long Island community to ensure kids get the meals they need while schools are closed.
  • The Southampton Union Free School District is using a grant to provide pick-up and delivered meals for their students who normally depend on school meals.
  • The Akwesasne Boys & Girls Club is using a No Kid Hungry grant to help serve approximately 200 dinners per day and 400 weekend meals to kids living on or near the St. Regis Mohawk Indian Reservation.
  • With your support, Sherman Central School is providing hot, healthy delivery meals for their students.
  • In Albany, the Boys & Girls Club of the Capital Area is delivering healthy meals to kids who normally depend on the food they get at school.
  • With your support, Auburn Enlarged City School District set up meal delivery in addition to their grab-n-go breakfast and lunch service, bringing an estimated 2,800 meals a day to hungry kids.
  • Holy Apostles Soup Kitchen in New York City is using an emergency grant to expand its Backpack Pantry Program to reach kids with both perishable and non-perishable meals over the weekend, prioritizing over 100 families who are homeless.
  • With your generous support, Fonda-Fultonville Central School District is providing meals for pick up at schools, as well as providing home delivery of meals for families without transportation.
  • Thanks in part to your help, Fort Ann Central School is including fresh fruits and vegetables, as well as hot meals, in its emergency response to the community.
  • Shenendehowa Central Schools is using No Kid Hungry funds to ensure that free grab-n-go meals reach children in Clifton Park.
  • With your help, the Syracuse City School District's healthy breakfast and lunch meals are reaching families living with hunger in food deserts.
  • Together We Can Community Resource Center is using your support to connect families with food assistance and expand meal delivery to kids in Jackson Heights, Elmhurst and Corona.
  • Harlem Village Academies in New York City are using emergency funding to get healthy food to families impacted by the pandemic.
  • In Long IslandBrentwood UFSD is using your support to feed kids three days a week at six sites throughout the community.
  • In Clifton Park, your support is helping CAPTAIN Community Human Services deliver meals to kids using a minivan.
  • In Watertown, the Community Action Planning Council of Jefferson County is using your generous gifts to purchase the equipment necessary to safely deliver meals to kids.
  • With your help, Corning City SD in Painted Post, expects to serve hungry kids over 2,500 meals a day with their door-to-door meals service.
  • The Enlarged City School District of Middletown has used your support to expand an innovative program to feed kids during the coronavirus pandemic, ensuring they stay nourished and healthy.
  • In Albany, No Kid Hungry is supporting Hunger Solutions New York's statewide outreach efforts, helping ensure families are aware of free meals sites and Pandemic EBT.
  • In Bethpage, your support is helping Island Harvest Food Bank partner with local school districts to ensure kids continue to have the nutritious food they need throughout this crisis.
  • Ithaca School Food Service is using your support to prepare and distribute meals to hungry children, making sure students get the nutrition they need.
  • Thanks in part to your help, the Jamestown YMCA expects to serve more than 1,750 meals each day to families in their community.
  • With funds from No Kid Hungry, Food Bank of Central New York will create and distribute emergency food boxes, each of which is specifically designed for a child with easy to prepare foods, drinks, and snacks. These boxes are designed to supplement the free meals provided by school districts and summer meal providers in the area.
  • No Kid Hungry funds will help FeedMore WNY continue their BackPack Program, dropping off 10,000 backpacks of emergency food items to children and their families in need in the Buffalo area.
  • The Freeport Public School system will use funds from No Kid Hungry to operate a curbside pick-up free meals site, with staff bringing grab-n-go breakfast and lunch directly to cars and walk-up visitors.
  • The Friends of Mount Vernon Arts Recreation and Youth Programs will use funding from No Kid Hungry to reach more of the homebound, developmentally disabled students in their area with the free meals they need this summer.
  • Grants from No Kid Hungry will help Hunger Free America reach more families in New York City with information about free meal sites in their communities.
  • Sanctuary for Families in New York City provides services for families impacted by domestic violence, including more than 3,000 vulnerable children each year. Support from No Kid Hungry will help them feed more of these families by fully stocking food pantries in five shelters.
  • With support from No Kid Hungry, the Campaign Against Hunger in Brooklyn will combat the hunger faced by hundreds of homeless children by providing more than 160,000 kid-friendly, reusable bags of nutritious food to kids in need this summer.
  • In Hartford, your support is helping Oneida-Herkimer-Madison BOCES keep kids healthy and fed amidst the ongoing pandemic.
  • In Pine Bush, a No Kid Hungry Grant is helping the Pine Bush Central School District reach kids across the large, rural school district with nutritious meals throughout the crisis.
  • Your support is helping Schenectady Inner City Ministry purchase a truck in order to reach more kids with the nutritious food they need.

NORTH CAROLINA

  • Burke County Public Schools needed emergency grant funding to equip their school buses to safely bring food to kids in their rural community. They estimate that your support will help them deliver 6,000 healthy meals per day.
  • Thanks to your support, local nonprofit Wilson Youth United Inc. is offering kids three meals a day through a drive-thru pick-up site – allowing hungry children to safely get the meals they need while schools are closed.
  • Wilkes County Schools is using a No Kid Hungry emergency grant to serve kids in need breakfast and lunch at 21 community sites while also offering a delivery route to reach children who may not have access to transportation.
  • In the city of New Bern, you're helping the Craven County School District deliver free breakfasts and lunches to hungry kids at least five days a week.
  • Carteret County Schools in Beaufort are using a No Kid Hungry grant to help purchase a mobile feeding vehicle equipped with a hot and cold holding and handwashing sink.
  • At Beaufort County Schools, your generous gifts are helping replenish food stores for the county's vulnerable, low-income families and deliver it directly to their homes – the only way to reach kids who need help in this rural community.
  • With your help, Henderson County Public Schools expects to deliver 4,000 free meals a day to students at school pick-up sites and via bus routes to community stops.
  • Your generosity made possible a grant to the Food Bank of Central and Eastern North Carolina to help get food to 300,000 children who lost the school meals they rely on. The Food Bank is using these funds to support and stock the local pantries, soup kitchens and shelters on the front lines in a 34-county region.
  • Gaston County Schools is using a No Kid Hungry grant to expand outreach to isolated children. Their goal is to establish 21 food sites throughout the county that they expect will serve 6,500 meals a day.
  • With support from No Kid Hungry, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools are upgrading their school nutrition vehicles to increase meal delivery numbers. This support not only allows them to complement their grab-n-go meal service, but also expand free summer meal service, a critical need for when school is on break.
  • With your support, Robeson County Schools is improving their meal delivery program by purchasing an automated, high-speed food packaging system and an additional van. With these additions, they expect to deliver 10,000 meals a day.
  • The Wake County Public School System is expanding its feeding programs to delivery, using No Kid Hungry funds to help serve an expected 11,000 meals a day.
  • Your funds are helping the Durham Public Schools Foundation expand its meal delivery program to feed kids an estimated 5,500 meals per week.
  • With emergency funding, the Alamance Burlington Schools' School Nutrition Program in plans to feed students breakfast and lunch for the duration of the pandemic.
  • Bertie County Schools in Windsor are using No Kid Hungry funds to serve shelf-stable breakfasts and hot lunches to students at their 70 grab-n-go sites.
  • With your support, coastal Currituck County Schools have been able to package and transport an estimated 4,000 meals per day.
  • Edgecombe County Public Schools are using your generous gifts to deliver healthy meals to all students by dropping them at school bus stops. 
  • Franklin County Schools is investing No Kid Hungry funds in expanding mobile meal delivery to rural areas over summer.
  • With your help, Kirk of Kildaire Presbyterian Church is partnering with Western Wake County Food Security Action Group to feed hungry kids over the summer around Cary.
  • Winston-Salem/Forsyth County Schools is using an emergency grant to get breakfast and lunch to hungry kids through 48 school sites and by delivery using 16 buses and nine vans.
  • The YMCA of Western North Carolina is using your support to expand weekend meal and dinner service in a four-county area encompassing Buncombe, Henderson, Haywood and McDowell Counties so that kids receive take-home meals, fresh produce and shelf-stable foods.
  • The Brigade Boys & Girls Club in Wilmington is using No Kid Hungry emergency funding to feed large numbers of youth at their center and teach nutrition and farm-to-table skills.
  • Granville County Public Schools in Oxford are using emergency funding to feed kids and provide summer enrichment activities.
  • Thanks in part to you, Raleigh’s Inter-Faith Food Shuttle can purchase the coolers and trays it needs to deliver hungry kids food.
  • With your help, Lenoir County Public Schools in Kinston is providing transportation for kids to reach their summer meals sites, as well as fun enrichment activities for kids when they get there.
  • With a grant from No Kid Hungry, the Boys & Girls Club of Cabarrus County will be able to serve breakfast and dinner to more than 200 kids in need each day.
  • The Boys & Girls Club of the Sandhills in Southern Pines is serving nearly 150,000 meals to kids in the Moore County School District this summer with your support. Families can safely pick up meals through their new drive-thru service or request no-contact delivery at home.
  • You're helping the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Carolina purchase the new kitchen appliances they need to feed more kids in Sanford. With your help, they will be able to deliver meals to local public housing neighborhoods and offer to-go meals from their local Boys & Girls Club locations.
  • Funding from No Kid Hungry will help Chatham County Schools in Pittsboro get the new tools and equipment they need to serve nearly 4,000 meals each day to kids in their rural community.
  • Clinton City Schools will use your generous gifts to provide some 7,000 grab-n-go meals for curbside pick-up each day to feed kids in need.
  • Thanks in part to you, Davie County Schools in Mocksville will purchase two new vans so they can safely deliver meals directly to children who may be facing hunger in their district. With these vans, they estimate they will be able to serve 3,600 meals a day.
  • With your support, Elizabeth City-Pasquotank Public Schools will be providing kids in need in their town with a full week’s worth of meals that their families can pick up each Friday.
  • The Garner Road Community Center in Raleigh will use a grant from No Kid Hungry to continue to deliver an estimated 250 meals a day to hungry kids.
  • You're helping the Goldsboro Family YMCA partner with local agencies to feed kids in need during this crisis.
  • In ClydeHaywood County Schools will use funding from No Kid Hungry to feed kids in need by using their school buses to deliver meals and create drive-thru meal pick-up locations in their community.
  • Hickory Public Schools will use your generous support to purchase the equipment they need to outfit their school buses to safely deliver much-needed meals to kids in their district.
  • In Jackson, Northampton County School District is using a No Kid Hungry grant to provide hot meals for children across the county via school bus, ensuring they continue to get the nutrition meals they rely on.
  • In Eden, your support is helping Rockingham County Schools reach all kids affected by this crisis. They've even set up a hotline for families who don't have transportation to a meals site to ensure no child misses out.
  • In Winston-Salem, a No Kid Hungry grant has helped Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest NC quickly ramp up its efforts to reach kids during the pandemic, providing healthy breakfasts, dinners and meal boxes.
  • In Lawsonville, your support is helping Stokes County Schools feed kids affected by the coronavirus at nine sites across the rural county.
  • In Durham, the Mustard Seed Project has used a No Kid Hungry grant to reach kids in need of free, healthy meals during the coronavirus pandemic.
  • In Thomasville, many parents don't have transportation to pick up meals, so Thomasville City Schools is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to deliver meals for kids throughout the city using six vans.
  • In Brevard, your support is allowing Transylvania County Schools to provide hot, nutritious meals to kids along its mobile bus routes.
  • In Boone, you're helping Watauga County Schools provide meals for kids at seven drive-thru locations throughout the rural county while using buses and county vans to reach families who can't make it to a meals site.
  • In Wilmington, the YMCA of Southeastern North Carolina is using your support to provide hundreds of meals for kids in need during the coronavirus crisis.

NORTH DAKOTA

  • An emergency grant to Burke Central School in Lignite will help serve breakfast and lunch five days a week to the school's 99 students.
  • With your support, the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians is launching a meal delivery service to feed vulnerable children across the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation.
  • In Fargo, the YMCA of Cass and Clay Counties is using your support to feed kids well-balanced, nutritious meals throughout the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

OHIO

  • To make sure students get dependable, healthy food, Marion City Schools is using your support to drop off an estimated 3,000 meals a day along 82 bus stops so that no child in Marion has to travel more than a quarter mile to pick up the meals they need.
  • With your help, St. Clairsville Richland City Schools are purchasing the supplies and other support they need to feed their hungry kids during this crisis.
  • Thanks to your support, Cleveland's Positive Education Program will mail shelf-stable lunches to over 500 students across 60 Ohio school districts.
  • You’re helping Cleveland Heights University Heights School District provide grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches for their students.
  • The Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development is using their grant to get meals to 240 hungry students in Jackson and Gallia Counties.
  • You're helping Fairborn City Schools provide breakfasts and lunches for kids and their families.
  • Vinton County Local Schools is using your gifts to provide food at five sites to hungry kids in need in the McArthur area.
  • Thanks in part to your support, Ashtabula Area City Schools is providing an estimated 3,000 bagged breakfasts and lunches to hungry students five days per week. With 84% of the student body eligible for free and reduced-price meals, the need for nutritious meals is great.
  • Thanks in part to your support, Euclid City Schools is providing meals to all students and children in the area by offering two-days’ worth of meals for pick up at all their schools.
  • Northeast Ohio Black Health Coalition in Cleveland is using your support to get meals to hungry kids in their community, prioritizing children with disabilities or who come from families where caregivers are disabled.
  • In Portsmouth, the Community Action Organization of Scioto County used an emergency grant to partner with Portsmouth City Schools, New Boston Schools and others to ensure that vulnerable children and youth receive some 2,000 meals a day at distribution sites.
  • In rural Beaver, you're helping Eastern Local Schools provide meals for kids at school, church sites and through individual deliveries for families who can't make it to a meals site.
  • In London, Madison-Plains LSD is using funds to deliver breakfast and lunch at seven locations across the district, ensuring kids get meals while schools are closed.
  • With your help, Connecting Kids to Meals in Toledo is serving grab-n-go breakfast and lunch meals at their 17 sites in libraries, community centers and churches during the crisis.
  • The Delaware City School System will use grants from No Kid Hungry to send boxes of emergency food home for students and families each weekend throughout the summer.
  • No Kid Hungry support will help the Federal Hocking Local School District in Stewart provide free, weekly food boxes containing shelf-stable staples and fresh produce to students and their families through the summer months.
  • The Greater Cleveland Food Bank has seen requests for food assistance more than double since the start of the coronavirus pandemic. Support from No Kid Hungry will help them provide more weekend backpacks, each including six meals for children in need.
  • With support from No Kid Hungry, each Monday, Indian Valley Local Schools will deliver a week's worth of breakfasts and lunches to children in their community throughout the summer months.
  • This summer, with financial support from No Kid Hungry, the Northwest Local School District in Cincinnati will safely provide up to 500,000 meals to children in need in their community.
  • Support from No Kid Hungry will help Northwood Local Schools purchase equipment to safely maintain hot and cold temperatures for the nutritious meals they deliver to families in their area during the pandemic.
  • Perry Local Schools in Lima will use grants from No Kid Hungry to reach more kids with free breakfast and lunch this summer, while also offering take-home bags of nutritious containing grocery staples for their families.
  • Sandusky City Schools will use funding from No Kid Hungry to purchase the coolers and equipment needed to expand their meals program which currently operates in 12 sites across their city.

OKLAHOMA

  • Stillwater Public Schools is using a No Kid Hungry grant to safely serve free grab-n-go meals to kids at 15 sites across the community.
    • "We set up in front of Stillwater High School, the parents drive up and we hand out the sack lunches. They also get a breakfast sack and milk. It is so fun to see the children and get a bunch of 'thank you's.’ Those little children mean it from their little hearts." – Marty, a cafeteria worker
  • In rural Shawnee, your generous support has helped Bethel Public Schools offer a nutritious breakfast and lunch to students while school is closed.
  • First responders and healthcare workers are on the front line of the pandemic in Oklahoma City, but they won't have to worry about their children getting the food they need while they are at work. The Regional Food Bank of Oklahoma is using your support to feed these kids an estimated 300 meals a day.
  • The Chickasaw Nation will use emergency funds to assemble and deliver boxes of shelf-stable foods to families in need, ensuring hungry kids get the food they need.
  • Thanks to your generous support, Glenpool Public Schools is using an emergency grant to serve an estimated 600 meals a day at drive-thru sites.
  • Vian Public School is using your support to provide a nutritious breakfast and lunch for students all across the rural district who have been affected by the coronavirus crisis.

OREGON

  • More than half the students of South Lane School District in Cottage Grove qualify for free and reduced-price school meals. The district sprang into action to deliver breakfast and lunch to kids when schools closed, and with your help, students can get these free meals at ten bus stops and three sites.
  • Many students attending schools in Reedsport live in outlying communities and normally ride long distances to get to school, where they would normally get fed. The Reedsport School District is using their grant to get food to these children, many of whom rely on school meals as a main source of nutrition.
  • In Klamath Falls, you're helping Integral Youth Services provide daily dinners and snacks to kids and coordinate home meal deliveries through a partnership with the local school district.
  • Three Rivers School District Food Services in rural southern Oregon is providing nutritious breakfasts and lunches daily to their 4,500 students who live across 1,200 square miles.
  • Parkrose School District #3 in Portland is using a grant to provide nutritious emergency meals to families living in their school district.
  • El Programa Hispano Catolico in Gresham is running four school-based pantries and delivering food each week to kids who are unable to get to a site for pick-up.
  • In Portland, you're helping the Immigrant and Refugee Community Organization deliver an estimated 5,040 culturally appropriate meals to kids, prepared by minority-owned restaurants and food truck vendors, over two months. The model is a win-win, ensuring kids are fed while schools are closed and supporting local businesses.
  • FOOD for Lane County - in partnership with South Lane Education Services District - is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to operate a mobile pantry across Lane County and distribute culturally appropriate food via home delivery.
  • Thanks to your help, Oregon Food Bank is serving an estimated 1,700 meals a day to families impacted by the pandemic in six rural counties throughout the state via their child hunger programs such as backpack distributions and school pantries.
  • The Fund for Portland Public Schools is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to help the school district serve an estimated 9,000 meals a day - including through meal deliveries to low-income housing facilities.
  • McMinnville School District #40 is using funds to safely serve nutritious meals for kids throughout the ongoing crisis, providing meals at six schools and 35 bus drop locations.
  • Portland Homeless Family Solutions has seen a significant increase in need during the coronavirus crisis, and they're using funds to serve meals to kids to ensure they continue to have nutritious food.

PENNSYLVANIA

  • Lehighton Area School District is using funds to provide more children with backpacks full of food and launch a drive-thru food service option, where kids can receive breakfast and lunch for free.
  • Because of your generous support, Huntingdon Area School District is setting up six sites from which they’ll distribute backpacks full of food every day to students in need.
  • You're helping launch the Clarion-Limestone Area School District's efforts to offer kids meals from their local school and through delivery, providing children and their siblings healthy food for the week.
  • Philadelphia's Association of Child Daycare Providers is using No Kid Hungry funding to serve some 1,900 families the food their children need during this crisis.
  • In Allentown, the Greater Valley YMCA is using their grant to expand their youth feeding program to reach entire families and meet community needs as schools remain closed.
  • The Norristown Area School District is using your gifts to prep and serve hungry kids an estimated 6,500 meals a day.
  • With your support, the Redbank Valley School District in New Bethlehem is delivering healthy meals to kids in the rural corners of their community.
  • The Ridley School District is fueling its three school buses with a grant to deliver breakfast and lunch to kids who need it.
  • The Avon Grove School District is using your support to get emergency breakfast and lunch to students at two sites in the West Grove area.
  • With your support, the Conemaugh Valley School District is reaching children with breakfast and lunch at six sites around Johnstown.
  • Working in partnership with the Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank and Backpacks for Hunger, Volunteers of America of Pennsylvania is using your support to distribute an estimated 800 meals each week to youth and families in Sharpsburg and the surrounding boroughs.
  • Brownsville Area School District is using their grant to provide hungry kids with two meals daily, seven days per week.
  • The Olivet Boys & Girls Club of Reading and Berks County is partnering with the Reading School District, Reading Recreation, Centro Hispano and Helping Harvest Food Bank to provide bagged lunches and boxed family meals to an estimated 2,000 families at five club sites throughout Reading and Berks County.
  • Thanks in part to your support, the YMCA of York and York County is providing an estimated 200 lunches and dinners to kids Monday through Friday at their Wellington Center.
  • In Lansdale, your generous support is allowing the North Penn School District to offer drive-thru and curbside pick-up for families, providing kids with breakfast and lunch six days a week.
  • In Harrisburg, Central Pennsylvania Food Bank is partnering with local school districts to provide grocery boxes to more than 2,600 children and their families who have been impacted by the pandemic.
  • Your support is helping Greater Pittsburgh Community Food Bank fill identified gaps in meal service - including providing grab-n-go meals at more than 10 sites.
  • Keystone Central School District, thanks to your support, is using an emergency grant to provide an estimated 1,300 meals a day to children in the Mill Hall community.
  • In Glenshaw, North Hills Cares is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to serve breakfast and lunch to 200 kids a day, also offering a backpack of food to take home on Friday.
  • With your help, Northwest Tri-County Intermediate Unit 5 is transporting meals to approximately 30 sites in Edinboro and the surrounding area.
  • The YMCA of Greater Erie is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to get an estimated 500 meals a day to kids at sites across the community, as well as through a food bus that visits neighborhoods identified as food deserts.

PUERTO RICO

  • Banco de Alimentos de Puerto Rico is using emergency funds to replenish its Children's Emergency Meal Program, ensuring kids get the food they need.
  • Red por los Derechos de la Niñez y Juventud de Puerto Rico is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to start a program that provides nutritious meals for kids during the ongoing coronavirus crisis.

RHODE ISLAND

  • Thanks to you, No Kid Hungry is helping the City of Providence offer free breakfast, lunch and dinner to kids at 21 school and community sites, in addition to a weekend backpack program. They expect to provide 5,000 meals a day to keep kids nourished all week long.
  • Funding helped Cranston Public Schools provide meals in areas where most children were already eligible to receive free and reduced-price meals when school was in session.
  • Thanks in part to a grant, Highlander Charter School is working with community partners in Providence to provide healthy meals, snacks, fresh fruit and milk to families in need.
  • In Newport County, the Martin Luther King Community Center is using funds to feed low-income children through their food pantry. They’re also providing daily breakfast, a mobile food pantry and food delivery to those who can’t reach the center.
  • Support is helping the Jonnycake Center of Peace Dale offer families weekly groceries equivalent to five days of breakfast and lunch for each child. Groceries include everything from milk, eggs and bread to cheese, fresh fruit, canned goods and more.
  • The Pawtucket & Central Falls Metro Bd. YMCA is using a grant to deliver meals to isolated kids and operate three grab-n-go meals sites where families can get boxes of food.
  • In Providence, you're helping Rhode Island Pride feed kids and families that have been impacted by the coronavirus crisis, delivering meals right to their doorstep.
  • The Warwick School District is using No Kid Hungry grant funding to provide meals for hungry kids at pick-up sites around the district and deliver meals by school bus to families who can't make it to a site.

SOUTH CAROLINA

  • Before the pandemic, Harvest Hope Food Banks fed children throughout Columbia with its weekend BackPack Program. Your donations are helping them feed these kids during the week through a safe grab-n-go site that they expect will serve 25,000 meals a day.
  • The Charleston County School District is using your support to buy shelf-stable foods, coolers, containers and supplies to fill 10,000 weekend packs for kids in need.
  • The Beaufort County School District is using a grant to purchase warming boxes to help them transport breakfasts and lunches to 12 pick-up sites and down bus routes across the county.
  • Thanks to your help, School District Five of Lexington and Richland Counties is getting breakfast and lunch to hungry kids at five school feeding sites, three low-income apartment communities and via home delivery for families without transportation.
  • Your support is helping Greenville County Schools serve kids an estimated 25,000 per day while schools are closed.
  • You helped the Orangeburg County School District purchase coolers and other equipment needed to safely deliver meals using 134 school busses to reach kids across the district.
  • In Rock HillSFE / York #3 - Rock Hill School District is providing some 3,000 meals for kids each day while schools are closed, thanks in part to your generous support.
  • With funding from No Kid Hungry to purchase a mobile freezer and equipment to safely transport hot food items, the Kershaw County School District will be able to provide kids in Camden with the food they need.
  • In Western Horry County, A Father's Place is using an emergency grant to serve an estimated 1,000 meals a day at three large public housing communities.
  • With your support, the Pine Hill Indian Community Development Initiative is helping get food to families in Orangeburg who are impacted by the pandemic.
  • Thanks to your support, Richland School District Two is serving an estimated 8,600 meals a day at schools, trailer parks, apartment buildings and other community sites across Columbia.
  • Across the state's 10 coastal counties, Lowcountry Food Bank is using an emergency grant to provide families with pantry boxes and weekend backpacks alongside meals at grab-n-go school sites.
  • You're helping the Vision Educational Center provide an estimated 3,500 meals a day at grab-n-go sites and through food truck delivery across Dillon and the surrounding communities.
  • You helped Greenwood School District 50 purchase a food truck to safely deliver meals directly to students.

SOUTH DAKOTA

  • With your generous support, tribal nonprofit One Spirit is delivering meals as well as fresh produce, meats, staples and baked goods to families and children in need throughout the Rapid City area.
  • Feeding South Dakota in Sioux Falls is using your support to meet the increased need for emergency food by going to mobile delivery to reach families statewide with food boxes.
  • Thanks to your support, Sioux YMCA has been able to deliver food across the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation four times a week, providing enough food for families impacted by the pandemic to eat on the weekend.

TENNESSEE

  • Your support is helping the Lebanon Special School District serve grab-n-go breakfast and lunch at schools, a public park and low-income housing areas. The district will also deliver food to anyone unable to reach these locations.
  • The YMCA of Metropolitan Chattanooga is partnering with the Chattanooga Girls Leadership Academy and Hamilton County Schools to make sure children in need get fed while schools are closed. You're helping them feed children at 25 community sites and deliver meals at over 90 bus stops.
  • The Cocke County School District in rural Newport is using No Kid Hungry funding to expand their meals service to delivery in order to feed kids who can't reach meals sites.
  • The Generous Life Foundation in Memphis joined with the Mid South Food Bank to launch two mobile food distribution sites, and your support is helping expand that program to feed up to 6,000 families a week during this crisis.
  • With your support, the YMCA of Memphis & the Mid-South is partnering with Shelby County Schools and the City of Memphis to provide up to 10,000 meals a day to children at over 60 meals sites at community centers, public libraries, churches and YMCA branches.
  • Your support helped Clay County Schools in Celina purchase the insulated bags and coolers they need to safely deliver meals to kids.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is allowing Etowah City School to feed kids six days a week, offering meals at a grab-n-go site and along school bus routes.
  • In rural Wartburg, your support is helping Morgan County Schools feed students every single day through grab-n-go meals sites as well as delivery by school bus.
  • With the help of a grant, Dekalb Public Schools are providing an estimated 2,500 breakfasts and lunches a day to children in their community.
  • Haywood County Schools is using their emergency grant to make sure hungry kids in Brownsville get free breakfast and lunch seven days a week at the 16 sites they operate.
  • In Nashville, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Elijah's Heart meet the increased demand for meals amidst the citywide school closures, ensuring kids living in the impoverished community of Napier-Sudekum continue to have the food they rely on.
  • Thanks to your support, Youth Encouragement Services in Nashville is partnering with local vendors, schools and community organizations to provide kids with an estimated 300 to 500 meals each day.
  • Elijah's Heart in Nashville is using emergency funds to deliver weekly food boxes to more than 800 families in need to ensure that kids do not go hungry during the crisis.
  • Nashville’s Youth Encouragement Services is using emergency funding to partner with local vendors, schools and agencies to get approximately 7,500 meals and academic enrichment activities to kids in need.
  • No Kid Hungry is providing grants to the Bledsoe County Board of Education so they can continue to provide breakfast and lunch to kids in need in Pikeville seven days a week.
  • The Boys & Girls Clubs of the Tennessee Valley in Knoxville is using a grant to provide summer breakfast meals to youth at three of their Club sites and summer afternoon snacks to youth at one of their Club sites. They are also using the grant to host three food distribution events to send groceries home with families of youth who attend the Club, so these families—many who have been affected financially during the coronavirus pandemic—have items needed to prepare evening and weekend meals for their families.
  • Boys & Girls Club of the Smoky Mountains is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to provide food to students throughout rural Sevier County who are facing challenging circumstances during the pandemic.
  • With the help of a grant, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Memphis is offering grab-n-go meals at four sites, helping families who are facing hunger during the ongoing crisis.
  • In Ripley and the surrounding area, the Lauderdale County School District is using grant funds to serve meals at fire departments, allowing greater access to food for children who live in more remote areas of the community.
  • Thanks to your support, Second Harvest Food Bank of Northeast Tennessee is helping meet the needs of children and families in Kingsport and the surrounding communities - bolstering the offerings of local school districts with food boxes and backpacks.
  • Tullahoma City Schools is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to serve an estimated 3,000 meals a day to children in this rural community.

TEXAS

  • With your generous support, Feeding Texas will help seven food banks purchase and distribute food to low-income families with children impacted by school closures, reduced family income and/or unemployment as a result of this crisis.
  • Bastrop Independent School District is launching five feeding sites to reach hungry kids with an estimated 9,000 meals per day.
  • Thanks to your support, Killeen Independent School District will respond to the tremendous need in their community by providing an estimated 7,000 meals per day and additional supplies to families.

  • In the rural, east Texas town of Pollok, most families cannot reach school meal sites. Your support is helping the Central Independent School District there purchase temperature-controlled equipment to bring food to safe, convenient locations around the community.

  • A No Kid Hungry emergency grant to Lockhart Independent School District is supporting their work to provide kids in need with a daily breakfast and lunch at nine schools throughout the community.

  • With your generous support, Hitchcock Independent School District is delivering food to more than 1,700 severe-needs students who are struggling with hunger now more than ever due to the crisis.

  • The Angleton Independent School District is using a No Kid Hungry grant to deliver an estimated 3,700 meals a day to hungry children at 45 bus stops across 400 square miles.

  • The Pflugerville Independent School District is using funds you helped make possible to alert low-income and homebound students, as well as those living in remote areas, to the approximately 9,000 healthy meals a day they're serving.

  • Thanks to your support, the rural Sulphur Bluff Independent School District is feeding its students a healthy breakfast and lunch every weekday over a three-week period.

  • With a No Kid Hungry emergency grant, the Corrigan-Camden Independent School District has committed to serving all children breakfast and lunch at five pick-up sites while schools are closed.

  • You're helping San Felipe Del Rio Schools host 29 feeding sites to serve an expected 5,500 free, daily grab-n-go breakfasts and lunches near school bus stops.

  • Nearly 65,000 students lost their daily breakfast and lunch when schools in San Antonio's North East Independent School District closed. Thanks to you, the district is purchasing equipment and other supplies to continue serving kids an estimated 14,000 nutritious meals a day through curbside pick-up at 32 schools.

  • Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District in Houston is using their grant to deliver meals to their students by bus along school bus routes. This support will pay for equipment to keep food at temperature and safe while en route.

  • Your support is helping the nonprofit FJV Foundation provide meals to kids in rural Navarro County and urban Dallas County alike.

  • In Cameron County, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Bright Nutrition deliver two meals a day to 18 low-income apartment complexes for the next five months, making sure kids continue to get the food they need during this crisis and in the recovery to follow.

  • While schools are closed, the Boys & Girls Club in Texas is providing grab-and-go and drive-thru meals at sites across the state, from Bay City to San Antonio.

  • The Carrollton Farmers Branch Independent School District is using its emergency grant to distribute food supplies from 30 school sites, totaling an estimated 8,000 meals a day.

  • Thanks in part to your support, Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston has the supplies and protective equipment it needs to provide an estimated 5,000 meals a day through its drive-thru food pantry services, where families can safely pick up 40 pounds of food and household goods.

  • Discovering Healthy Foods is using its grant from No Kid Hungry to provide an estimated 2,500 grab-n-go meals a day to children living in apartment communities in northern Houston.

  • Good Neighbor Settlement House in Brownsville operates the only community meal program and the only food bank in the area that's open Monday through Friday. With your support, the organization is increasing the meals and food bags it can provide to meet the growing need in the area.

  • With your help, the Laredo Independent School District is offering curbside grab-n-go meals sites, where hungry children are receiving an estimated 12,000 breakfasts and lunches each day.

  • Los Fresnos Consolidated Independent School District is using your support to pay for additional supplies needed to get meals to hungry kids while classrooms are closed.

  • The Lyford Consolidated Independent School District is using its grant from No Kid Hungry to provide grab-n-go meals through curbside pick-up at several sites across Lyford.

  • The McAllen Independent School District is using both grab-n-go sites and deliveries to provide meals to kids in low-income areas. The program has already been widely successful, and thanks to your support, they're expanding to reach more hungry kids.

  • In San Antonio, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping the Northside Independent School District continue to serve an estimated 39,000 healthy meals a day to students during this crisis.

  • With your support, Raymondville Independent School District has been able to deliver meals to neighborhoods and apartment complexes across their rural community.

  • A grant from No Kid Hungry is allowing Richardson Independent School District to serve grab and go meals at 14 schools and deliver meals to 10 apartment complexes that are too far from a meal site for students to walk.

  • Many students in the San Marcos Consolidated Independent School District rely on school for food, and thanks in part to your support, the school district expects to feed them 2,000 meals a day during this crisis.

  • In Amarillo, Snack Pak 4 Kids has seen an increased demand for food assistance as a result of school closures and lost jobs. A grant from No Kid Hungry is helping them meet the increased need for weekend nutrition for students of all ages.

  • In New Braunfels, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Comal Independent School District provide meals for kids five days a week at 10 locations across the district.

  • You’re helping the San Antonio Independent School District provide students with supper throughout the week.

  • A No Kid Hungry grant is allowing the rural Shepherd Independent School District to continue to offer students nutritious meals while schools are closed using curbside pick-up and school bus deliveries.

  • Thanks in part to you, the Texarkana Independent School District expects to feed students more than 6,000 meals a day while schools are closed.

  • With No Kid Hungry's support, the YMCA of Greater San Antonio is feeding kids at five sites that have opened to provide emergency child care for essential personnel.

  • Thanks in part to your help, the Leander Independent School District expects to serve 8,000 meals a day to all children living in Leander and surrounding communities.

  • The Little Elm School District is using your support to provide an estimated 500 daily curbside grab-n-go meals at six sites.

  • Thanks in part to your support, the Abilene School District is expanding its weekend backpack program to reach more than 1,000 hungry students, including kids experiencing homelessness or those in foster care, with healthy meals.

  • You're helping local nonprofit Food 2 Kids Big Spring provide weekend food sacks of kid-friendly nonperishable food to students who need them.

  • The Snyder Independent School District is using their emergency grant to provide grab-n-go meals to hungry kids in need at four sites located throughout the community.

  • With your support, the Garland Independent School District is offering curbside meals at 33 locations so that an estimated 55,000 students in the cities of Garland, Rowlett and Sachse can get the nutrition they need while schools are closed.

  • The Grand Prairie Independent School District is using your generous gifts to help kids get the food they need during the pandemic and help the community bear the strain of the pandemic.

  • Your support is helping Grapevine Colleyville ISD provide kids with breakfast and lunch every single day through delivery and curbside meal service.

  • In Hays County, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping the Hays Consolidated Independent School District provide grab and go curbside pick-up meals at 7 school sites as well as 10 mobile feeding sites throughout the county. They served 15,000 meals their first week and since then have added daily snacks and weekend meals, to serve around 65,000 meals per week.

  • When Texas schools closed for the coronavirus, Magnolia ISD used an emergency grant to start a curbside meals program that provides bagged breakfast and lunch for kids.

  • In Dallas, your support is helping Catholic Charities of Dallas Inc. provide kids and families with emergency food boxes at mobile pantries and drive-thru pick-up locations, offering shelf-stable foods along with fresh fruits and vegetables, eggs, milk and meat.

  • In Fort Worth, the Eagle Mountain-Saginaw ISD is using a No Kid Hungry grant to serve students an estimated 3,500 meals a day while schools are closed.

  • In Midland, your support is helping the Greenwood ISD purchase equipment for school kitchens in order to meet the increased need in the community, ensuring kids can continue to count on healthy meals during the crisis.

  • The Lorenzo ISD is using a No Kid Hungry grant to provide grab-n-go meals for kids, ensuring that the many students who rely on free meals at school can eat.

  • Your support is helping the Lubbock-Cooper ISD provide kids an estimated 2,600 meals a day at eight sites throughout their community.

  • Your support is helping Ralls ISD in rural Texas provide grab-n-go meals for kids, many of whom typically rely on school meals.

  • In Dallas, CitySquare used grant support to launch its mobile summer feeding program six weeks early, delivering breakfast and lunch to kids living in low-income apartment complexes.

  • The Galveston County Food Bank is using your support to provide emergency drive-thru meals to local students, ensuring they can continue to count on healthy meals while schools are closed.

  • You're helping Pharr-San Juan-Alamo ISD feed hungry kids some 5,500 meals a day at seven campuses across the district.

  • Your support is helping Galveston Independent School District provide curbside meals to students, ensuring they can continue to get food safely during this crisis.

  • In Baytown, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Goose Creek CISD provide breakfast and lunch for students at 19 campuses using a drive-thru model that keeps kids nourished while keeping everyone safe.

  • Your generous support is helping the Houston Food Bank continue to provide meals at mobile and community sites, ensuring kids have enough to eat this summer.

  • In Weslaco, IDEA Public Schools will use funds to provide an estimated 1.6 million meals this summer to hungry kids across Texas at nearly 100 locations all across the state.

  • The Midlothian Independent School District will use a No Kid Hungry grant to acquire the equipment needed to serve an estimated 2,000 meals a day to kids during the crisis.

  • In Tyler, your support is helping the Regional East Texas Food Bank with the van rental and fuel costs necessary to reach kids in some of their most rural communities.

  • In Lubbock, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping South Plains Food Bank provide meals for kids at community centers and low-income apartment complexes.

  • In Port Arthur, your support is enabling Triangle Community Outreach to deliver meals to kids during the coronavirus crisis.

  • The Arlington Independent School District is using an emergency grant to provide an anticipated 29,000 meals per day for kids in the district.

  • Your donations are helping the Austin Independent School District cover the increased costs of providing meals to families at over 80 sites across the city during this crisis.

  • With your help, the Dallas Independent School District is operating curbside meals sites, where hungry kids are receiving an estimated 80,000 meals each day.

  • The Del Valle Independent School District is using a No Kid Hungry grant to support the fuel costs needed to make food deliveries to families across the district's 174 square miles.

  • In San Antonio, your support is helping the Edgewood Independent School District get the food, supplies, and safety equipment they need to feed students.

  • With your generous support, the Food Bank of the Rio Grande Valley is helping sites distribute 180,000 pounds of food over 10 weeks to families affected by the pandemic.

  • With your help, the Dalhart Independent School District is offering grab-n-go meals at three locations strategically placed in the community to reach the children with the greatest need.

  • The Denison Independent School District is using grant funding to purchase food and supplies, as well as deliver meals to children and families near the Texas-Oklahoma border.

  • The DeSoto Independent School District is using funds to provide food to families over the weekend to supplement the weekday meal program the school district runs for students in their community.

  • The Fort Bend Independent School District in Sugar Land is using funds to support children in their community by providing safe and nutritious meals at no-cost during the pandemic.

  • During the crisis, Food for the Soul is partnering with local churches and using grant funds to distribute food and offer drive-thru pick-up at sites across the Dallas-Fort Worth region.

  • The Keller Independent School District is using grant funds to distribute breakfast and lunch at drive-thru school sites to their students affected by the crisis.

  • The Mesquite Independent School District is continuing to serve kids in their community during the pandemic, using funding to support the purchase of equipment to keep meals, staff and students safe.

  • Thanks to your support, the San Antonio Food Bank plans to provide more than 150,000 meals to children affected by the crisis during the summer months.

  • Grant funds are enabling the Boys & Girls Club of Central Texas to continue to provide meals to children and teens throughout their region during the summer.

  • Monte Alto Independent School District is using emergency grant funds to provide an estimated 1,200 meals a day to families in the community who are impacted by the pandemic.

  • Your support is helping Pasadena Independent School District serve over 870,000 meals across our community during the spring and summer months of the COVID-19 school closure.

  • In El Paso, Sacred Heart Church is using an emergency grant to provide dinners five days a week to 100 families in the community.

UTAH

  • Local nonprofit Friends of Switchpoint is using a grant from No Kid Hungry to establish a project to prepare and distribute evening meal boxes to more than 400 kids in Washington County.
  • In Springville, your support is helping Merit College Preparatory Academy deliver meals to families who cannot get to a grab-n-go location, ensuring students get the food they need while schools are closed.
  • In Salt Lake City, you’re helping the Salt Lake Education Foundation ensure children and families continue to get food during the coronavirus crisis.
  • In Bicknell, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Wayne School District deliver sack lunches to students, a vital resource in this small, rural community where many parents have lost jobs as a result of the crisis.
  • When schools closed in Salt Lake CityGuadalupe Center Educational Programs Inc. stepped up to make sure kids continue to get the meals they need. With your support, they're serving an estimated 300 meals a day.
  • In Provo, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping the Boys & Girls Clubs of Utah County provide grab-n-go dinner and snacks to an estimated 1,500 hungry kids.
  • The coronavirus has meant lost jobs and wages for many parents in Washington making it harder to feed their kids. With the help of funding, Dixie Montessori Academy is providing breakfast and lunch for students while schools are closed.

VERMONT

  • In Swanton, your support is helping the Missisquoi Valley School District provide meals for all students in their rural community, where many families have experienced hardships as a result of the coronavirus.

VIRGINIA

  • In Stuart, many families don't have the funds to make up for the school meals their children are missing. Your donations, though, are helping the Patrick County School District ensure that each student there can receive at least two nutritious meals a day.
  • No Kid Hungry grant funds are helping King William County Public Schools provide two healthy meals a day to all students at a drive-thru pick-up site, while also ensuring all school nutrition staff are paid.
  • Your generous support allowed the Dickenson County School District to buy equipment and supplies to safely feed as many kids as possible while schools are closed.
  • In Christiansburg, No Kid Hungry grant funds helped Montgomery County Public Schools' School Nutrition Program ensure kids can consistently count on meals while schools are closed.
  • Thanks to your support, local nonprofit Mercy Chefs expects to serve 2,000 meals a day to the many low-income kids in Hampton Roads who depend on school meals.
  • In the city of Bowling Green, No Kid Hungry grant funding has supported innovative meal delivery models that are safely connecting kids with the meals they need. Caroline County Public Schools is offering curbside grab-n-go meals sites, with bus runs to help feed kids in the harder to reach areas of the county.
  • Local Charlottesville nonprofit The PB&J Fund is teaming up with partners to distribute weekly bags of fresh produce and shelf-stable products to families and kids. Thanks to your support, they're able to provide home delivery.
  • Richmond Public Schools is using your support to ensure all students who need them can receive at least two meals a day, helping to ensure families don't go hungry during this difficult time.
  • In Warrenton, a No Kid Hungry grant is supporting local nonprofit Fauquier FISH in its efforts to provide emergency, weekend food supplies for families in need during the crisis.
  • A grant from No Kid Hungry is allowing Bland County Public Schools to serve meals to hungry kids from two schools and twice a week at bus stops in rural Bastian.
  • In Falls Church, your support is helping the Dar Al-Hijrah Islamic Center to operate a drive-up, weekly meal distribution site as well as volunteer-run meal deliveries for families that are homebound or don't have access to transportation.
  • No Kid Hungry is helping rural Cumberland County Public Schools provide meals for students at three pick-up locations throughout the country, in addition to offering a delivery option for families who lack transportation.
  • Fairfax County Public Schools are using a No Kid Hungry grant to make sure kids stay nourished while schools are closed, feeding students some 20,000 meals a day through curbside pick-up and bus route delivery.
  • With your generous support, Virginia Beach Public Schools are continuing to offer free breakfast and lunch to their 73,000 students, serving meals at more than 40 school and community sites.
  • In Fincastle, Botetourt County Public Schools are using No Kid Hungry grant funding to provide pick-up and delivery meals for students while schools are closed.
  • The Fredericksburg Public School District is using a grant to provide meals for kids at four grab-n-go sites throughout the community, while also using their food trucks to deliver meals to 14 additional mobile sites.
  • Chesapeake Public Schools are using a No Kid Hungry grant to purchase the equipment necessary to safely deliver meals to kids at 10 community meal sites.
  • Thanks to your generous support, Danville Public Schools are delivering an estimated 3,500 meals a day along its bus routes, ensuring kids stay healthy and nourished during this crisis.
  • You’re helping rural Galax City Public Schools deliver students hundreds of breakfasts and lunches.
  • Your support is helping the Goochland County School District provide kids with the food they need during the ongoing crisis.
  • Funds are supporting Feeding America Southwest Virginia as they operate programs to feed hungry kids in Salem and Abingdon.
  • In rural Pearisburg, your generous support is helping Giles County Public Schools operate their summer food program.
  • The King and Queen County Public Schools is using an emergency grant to support meal distribution at a total of five sites across the rural county - including at two fire departments.
  • Hampton City Schools is using funds from No Kid Hungry to purchase shelf-stable milk and meal distribution supplies to continue to reach children in their community with meals during the crisis.
  • Martinsville City Public Schools is using No Kid Hungry funds to purchase coolers and insulated bags and offer more meals to children at more community locations during this summer.
  • Funds from No Kid Hungry are supporting Prince George County Public Schools in purchasing coolers and insulated milk coolers to provide safe and nutritious meals to children throughout their community during the crisis.
  • The Staunton City School District is using No Kid Hungry grant funds to support their curbside and meal delivery program for children throughout their community.
  • Thanks to your support, the Virginia Peninsula Foodbank in Hampton is providing healthy food for weekends at school drive-thru sites throughout their community during the pandemic.
  • You're helping Louisa County Public Schools feed hungry kids an estimated 260 healthy meals a day in their rural community.
  • Your donations are helping the Lynchburg City School District purchase equipment to feed kids safely this summer.
  • In Lebanon, Russell County Public Schools is using a No Kid Hungry grant to serve an estimated 1,140 meals a day to kids affected by this crisis.
  • Thanks to your support, Warren County Public Schools is able to ensure kids in Front Royal have access to nutritious food this summer.

WASHINGTON

  • In rural Amanda Park, your support is helping the Lake Quinault School District run a van along its normal bus route, offering meals to any student who needs them while school is closed.
  • Your support is helping the Taholah School District deliver emergency meals to two locations - reaching families with the meals they need while schools are closed.
  • The Grandview School District is providing meals at three sites and using its buses to deliver food to families in harder to reach parts of the community. Thanks to your support, the district expects to provide more than 4,000 meals a day.
  • With your support, the St. Leo Food Connection has partnered with Tacoma and Clover Park School Districts to offer six nutritious meals a week, along with fresh produce over the weekend, for an estimated 900 hungry students.
  • The YMCA of Greater Seattle is using a No Kid Hungry grant to provide meals for kids impacted by coronavirus-related school closures, while also expanding the meal program to serve the children of first responders and other essential employees.
  • Seattle nonprofit FareStart is preparing and delivering nutritious meals to help fill the gap while schools are closed. Thanks to your support, they've been able to scale up production in their three kitchens to produce an estimated 15,000 meals a day.
  • In rural Washington, the Oakville School District is using No Kid Hungry grant funds to provide two meals a day for children every single day of the week.
  • In Seattle, El Centro de la Raza is using a grant to help families feed their young children during this difficult time.
  • Ferndale School District #502 is using your support to purchase the equipment they need to safely feed kids delicious, nutritious meals.
  • The Shoreline School District is providing meals for students at nine distribution centers, ensuring kids stay nourished during school closures.
  • Your generous support is helping the Mead School District provide grab-n-go breakfast and lunch for kids at eight schools and 12 community sites.
  • The Squaxin Island Tribe is using an emergency grant to serve approximately 1,000 meals per week to help feed kids in the tribal community, which has been under a shelter-at-home order and closed to non-residents.
  • The Union Gap School District is using an emergency grant to expand their capacity to store and distribute meals for hungry kids over the summer.
  • In Lynnwood, the Edmonds Food and Nutrition Department is using funds to feed kids at 12 school sites and 15 community sites, while also providing home delivery for families who cannot make it to a meal pick-up location.
  • The Ellensburg School District is providing grab-n-go meals at two school sites and seven bus pick-up sites, ensuring kids have enough to eat during this ongoing crisis.
  • With your help, the Granite Falls School District is serving an estimated 1,700 meals per day, more meals than the district was serving during the regular school year.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is helping Byrd Barr Place support the Seattle community with expanded food bank services throughout the pandemic, including an expanded delivery service and meals served at community centers across the region.
  • Spokane International Academy is using grant funds to support children and families throughout their community with meals during the pandemic.
  • A grant from No Kid Hungry is supporting the Urban League of Metropolitan Seattle to provide grocery delivery to 50 children and families each week during the pandemic.
  • Lind School District #158 is using your generous gifts to serve meals at a town park and via bus routes in this large rural county.
  • Thanks to your support, North Beach School District is serving meals via daily bus deliveries to students across this expansive community.
  • Thanks to support from No Kid Hungry, the Orcas Island School District in Eastsound is serving kids breakfast and lunch at drive-thru school locations and by delivery through their bus routes.
  • With a No Kid Hungry grant for food supplies and delivery expenses, Pe Ell School District #301 plans to provide more than 500 meals a day to children in their rural, southeast Washington community.
  • You're helping the Port Angeles Food Bank increase the number of Friday Food Bags they provide to hungry children and their families throughout Clallam County.
  • With your help, the Sedro-Woolley School District will continue serving breakfast and lunch to their students in northwest Washington, through grab-n-go and neighborhood pick-up sites.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is supporting the Sequim Food Bank's weekend meal bag program, which delivers meals to children and family in partnership with the Sequim School District and other community organizations.
  • With the help of a grant, the rural Snohomish School District will continue to serve children breakfast and lunch five days a week using bus routes as well as school and community pick-up locations.
  • West Valley School District 363 in Spokane is planning to serve 1,600 meals daily, with funding for six school drive-thru locations where students can pick up breakfast and lunch.

WEST VIRGINIA

  • In Oak Hill, Coda Mountain Academy is operating nine meals sites and going door to door to ensure all Fayette County kids can get the hot meals they need. Thanks to your support, they're able to feed 900 to 1,100 meals a day while schools are closed.
  • In Mt. Zion, Calhoun County Schools is using a drive-thru model to provide fresh food and recipes to families while schools are closed. Thanks to your support, these students can continue to depend on healthy meals, staying both nourished and safe during the ongoing crisis.
  • When schools closed in Weirton, the Weirton Christian Center sprang to action, using your support to ensure kids in their preschool and afterschool programs continue to get the free meals they rely on by delivering meals directly to students.
  • In rural Gilbert, the Larry Joe Harless Community Center has stepped up to ensure kids have enough to eat while schools are closed, providing grab-n-go lunches for students of all ages at five sites across the community.
  • With your help, Fayette County Schools expect to serve kids 5,400 meals a day in the county's high poverty areas through meals sites and delivery to families without transportation.
  • In rural Maysel, the Risen Lord Parish Activity Group is using emergency grant funds to provide backpacks of food to students from Clay County Schools.

WISCONSIN

  • Thanks to your support, Palmyra-Eagle Area School District is launching a second free lunch site to reach hungry kids in far-away Eagle.
  • No Kid Hungry grant funding is helping the School District of Fort Atkinson feed any student who needs meals through pick-up sites and a bus delivery route while school is closed.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is allowing the Hudson School District to purchase the equipment necessary to safely transport food to families while schools are closed.
  • In Milwaukee, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Hunger Task Force, Inc. convene and support local partners who are providing meals for kids during the coronavirus crisis.
  • You're helping Lancaster Community Schools provide grab-n-go meals on rural bus routes and via pick-up at sites, ensuring students have enough to eat while schools are closed.
  • Your support is helping the Tigerton School District provide meals for students while schools are closed due to the coronavirus.
  • In Keshena, No Kid Hungry is helping the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin provide grab-n-go lunches for kids, distributed in collaboration with the Menominee Indian School District and local community organizations.
  • Thanks in part to your support, Big Foot Union High School is delivering meals to families facing hunger in rural Walworth.
  • Madison Metropolitan School District is using your support to provide some 4,000 free grab-n-go meals to hungry kids for both breakfast and lunch from 15 food truck sites per day.
  • The Montello School District is using your generous gifts to deliver sack lunches and breakfasts to 150 students each day at four different community locations.
  • With your help, the Necedah Area School District is delivering breakfast and lunch to all children in the district, providing two-days' worth of food with each delivery, and they're expanding a snack-pack program for particularly vulnerable children and families.
  • Oshkosh Area School District is providing free breakfasts and lunches to all children and their families throughout the city, thanks to a No Kid Hungry emergency grant.
  • Your support is helping the School District of Arcadia deliver meals to children throughout their rural community and distribute food to families at drive-thru locations.
  • A No Kid Hungry grant is supporting the School District of LaCrosse in serving meals to children throughout their district, funding transportation costs to deliver meals to sites in the community as well as farther outside the city limits.
  • Your support is helping Sheboygan Area School District cover the increased supply and food costs of providing an estimated 4,000 meals daily to children in the community.
  • The Winter School District is planning to continue to serve two meals a day, five days a week, to students and families throughout their rural community thanks to support from No Kid Hungry.

WYOMING

  • In Cheyenne, your support is helping Laramie County School District 1 provide bagged breakfasts and lunches while schools are closed using a drive-thru model.
  • In Jackson, your support is helping the Children's Learning Center provide meals for an estimated 150 kids a day, seven days a week during the coronavirus pandemic.
  • With the help of an emergency grant, Action Resources International - Feeding Laramie Valley is providing grab-n-go meals every day of the week throughout rural Albany County.
  • In Lander, your generous support is helping Fremont County School District Number One serve hungry kids an expected 1,300 meals day.
  • Your donations are helping Fremont County School District #25 purchase equipment to feed kids safely in rural Riverton.
  • Washakie County School District #1 in Worland is serving meals during the pandemic thanks to a No Kid Hungry grant for coolers and hot holding equipment.
  • In Green River, a No Kid Hungry grant is helping Sweetwater County School District cover the costs of a reach-in fridge and freezer, helping serve an estimated 345 free meals a day to children in their community.
  • Uinta School District #1 is reaching more kids this summer with free meals thanks to support from No Kid Hungry to purchase coolers that will keep meals safe as buses deliver them to sites throughout the rural community of Evanston.

 

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