Food Bank of Central & Eastern NC

 

FoodBankRep

Everyone can help feed the Hungry. Hunger exist all over the world including Wake County NC. Sign-up  Genius Our Goal is to feed a least 5000 people  and gather 2 tons of food 4000 lbs. Sign up on Sign- up Genius and Allen Gibson will get what ever you need to start gathering food. If you need  boxes, bags and flyers even suggestions of places to place boxes. Or design your own Boxes. Challenge your friends to gather more food than you. You are challenged to gather more than me 820 meals and 2000 lbs. Good Luck and have fun with it. Make new friends, meet your neighbors.

RALEIGH BRANCH HOME

The Raleigh Branch of the Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina serves 13 counties in central North Carolina. They are Duplin, Franklin, Halifax, Harnett, Johnston, Nash, Sampson, Wake, Warren, and Wayne counties. Edgecombe and Wilson counties are shared with the Greenville Branch. Lee county is shared with the Sandhills branch.

Last year over 21.2 million pounds of food was distributed to 318 agencies in those counties. The Food Bank at Raleigh operates 8 trucks that traveled over 299,689 miles last year. Volunteers donated over 45,160 hours of their time last year, equivalent to over 21 full-time employees.

In the counties served by the Raleigh branch, over 264,012 individuals are at risk of hunger; 93,533 are children and over 8% are 65 years and over.

History of the
Food Bank of Central & Eastern NC

The Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina was founded in 1980 as the Community Food Bank, the first food bank in the state. The Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina provided start-up funds prompted by its concern about an increasing problem of homelessness and hunger in Raleigh and its surrounding communities.

Since its founding, the Food Bank has expanded services in an attempt to keep pace with a growing demand for emergency food, distributing more than 236 million pounds of food in the process. In 1984, the Food Bank gained affiliation with Feeding America (formerly America’s Second Harvest).

On three separate occasions, the Food Bank has outgrown warehouse space. In 1985, the organization distributed just under 1 million pounds of food to a network of nearly 100 agencies. In 1996, distribution rose to 6.5 million pounds of food to a family of 480 private, emergency feeding programs and sister food banks (1 million pounds of which was disaster relief in the wake of Hurricane Fran).

1999 brought Hurricane Floyd to eastern North Carolina, and with it, the Food Bank’s largest distribution ever. The devastation caused by the flooding after Hurricane Floyd was identified as the worst ever in North Carolina’s history. The Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina distributed 18.8 million pounds of food in fiscal year 1999-2000.

Today, the Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina is a nonprofit organization that has provided food for people at risk of hunger in 34 counties in central and eastern North Carolina for more than 30 years. The Food Bank serves a network of more than 800 partner agencies such as soup kitchens, food pantries, shelters, and programs for children and adults through distribution centers in Durham, Greenville, New Bern, Raleigh, the Sandhills (Southern Pines), and Wilmington. In fiscal year 2012-2013, the Food Bank distributed nearly 52 million pounds of food and non-food essentials through these agencies. Sadly, hunger remains a serious problem in central and eastern North Carolina. In these counties, more than 560,000 struggle each day to provide enough food for their families.

30 Years of Fighting Hunger

 

 

 

 

 

Comments are closed.