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FOOD FOR THOUGHT 

Letter From Our President & CEO- September 10th, 2023

September is Hunger Action Month. It’s time for me to resume my annual quest of wearing orange every working day of September. I have had several folks ask me why I established my “orange challenge.” To restate, orange is the color representing food insecurity. Our NWAFB logo, “No kids Hungry”, The Arkansas Hunger Relief Alliance and Feeding America all have orange as an integral color. Any opportunity I get to bring attention to the need is a success. Monetary donations help pay the bills. Money helps put food on the tables of those in need. Advocacy is equally as important. Too many people are hungry and too few people realize the need is a great as it is. I have been proud to wear orange every day in past Septembers, and I am looking forward to putting my orange on. I even have some new orange shirts to add to the rotation. I invite you to accept this as my challenge to you to wear orange also. Please snap a selfie of you in an orange shirt or blouse and email it to me at kent@nwafoodbank.org and I will share it on our social media platforms. Well, technically I will have Julie or Catherine share the photos.


On August 25 we celebrated some of our recent successes at our Jewels of Giving Celebration. The biggest part of that night of celebration was the announcement that the new facility in Lowell was to be named the Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief. The Harris family have been supporters of our Food Bank since the beginning and were one of, if not the first donor to the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank.

Don Harris, the Harris Foundation Board Chair, stated: “As a Foundation it's been a blessing to support the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank over the years. The new facility in Lowell launches the next chapter of programming and services to address food insecurity in a vibrant, growing region of the country. We are humbled that the organization is honoring our Founders, Claude and Betty Harris, in conjunction with the new operating space. We also believe this is only one small part of what it takes to impact feeding those in our community. A building is nothing without leadership, staff, volunteers, corporate sponsors, churches, donors, food pantries and all the other tentacles of support needed to serve those most vulnerable here at home. It is those people and organizations that are the real key to success and we are so appreciative of what they do."

Please join me in expressing our deepest appreciation to the Harris family for all of their support over the years.

Speaking of the Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief, construction progress is really picking up. After a significant number of down days due to wet ground, we have dried out and picked up the pace. It remains our goal that we will celebrate our 36th Anniversary in the new facility in June of 2024. Please take a few moments and drive by the intersection of Pleasant Grove Road and Highway 71B in north Lowell and see what your support is building for tomorrow’s needs.

Thank you all so very much for your support. Whether you are a monthly donor, a once a year donor, contribute to a food drive, support our efforts through advocacy, use our services, or simply remember we are there for those who need our help, you make us better today than we were yesterday.

Because of you, someone will eat today.

K

The entire Eikenberry family wearing their orange in support of Hunger Action Month.

Jewels of Giving Celebration Held on Friday, August 25, 2023

Northwest Arkansas Food Bank Announces New Campus Namesake

Honoring one family’s legacy in the movement to end hunger, the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank announced the namesake of its new campus – the Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief.

The Harris family joined Kent Eikenberry, President/CEO of the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank, in making the announcement Friday during the Food Bank’s annual Jewels of Giving Celebration.

“Speaking for the staff and board of directors for the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank, we could not be any prouder than we are at this moment,” Eikenberry said. “The Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief will allow us to serve our neighbors in need not only today but for decades into the future. It is only fitting that one of our first donors, if not the first, stepped up to make our dream a reality.”

Claude and Betty Harris were posthumously awarded as the Northwest Arkansas Food Bank 2023 Hunger Heroes. They were represented by their family and the Harris Family Foundation: Gayla Harris, Gary Harris, Theresa Moore, David Harris, Paula Stansell and Don Harris.

To learn more about the Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief, visit hope.nwafoodbank.org.

We Love Our Volunteers

Neighbor’s Story – Robert

Neighbor’s Story – Robert

When Robert first moved to Fayetteville last year, finances were tight. With the low availability of affordable housing, he and his spouse were living in their car, trying to make ends meet.

It wasn’t until they drove by Trinity United Methodist Church and saw the sign for the We Are Nourished Food Pantry that they found some stability. The Northwest Arkansas Food Bank supplies food to the We Are Nourished Food Pantry, one of 110+ agency partners across the region.

“We had no money and no food, so we relied on food pantries to help us out,” Robert said. “This is the first one we came to, and we’ve been coming ever since.”

At We Are Nourished Food Pantry, neighbors can pick the food and household items they want directly from the shelves in a shopping-like experience.

Robert’s family now has a place of their own, and he shares the support he’s received with others. He invited his next-door neighbor to join him on a visit to the pantry when he discovered they needed help with food.

“All of the stuff that we can choose from – light bulbs, toilet paper – stuff that you can’t get at other food pantries,” Robert said. “It really helps out.”

We Are Nourished Food Pantry, a ministry of Trinity United Methodist Church, is open on Wednesdays from 3:30 to 7:30 p.m. at 1021 Sycamore Street in Fayetteville. They can be contacted at 479-530-4395.

Agency Partner Spotlight – The Shepherd’s Food Pantry

When you visit The Shepherd’s Food Pantry, you’ll find help and encouragement through once-a-month food support.

“There is a definite need out there,” said John with The Shepherd’s Food Pantry. “We have a lot of younger families coming in ... that are struggling to make ends meet with the inflation and everything. Then we have our seniors that come in and are trying to live on $700-$800 a month from Social Security, and that’s pretty darn hard to do.”

The Northwest Arkansas Food Bank supplies food to The Shepherd’s Food Pantry, one of 110+ partner agencies across the region.

To receive assistance, individuals will need to go inside the pantry, fill out an intake form and present a photo ID.

The pantry operates a partial client-choice model. Families receive pre-packed bags with various shelf-stable foods including mac and cheese, oatmeal and soup, along with meat and eggs. They can also choose between white or wheat bread, if they want peanut butter and jelly, and the option between flour, sugar or oil. Local farmers also donate fresh produce.

The amount of food you receive depends on your household size. Volunteers can customize food bags for gluten-free and diabetic needs.

In addition, the pantry distributes hygiene products including laundry detergent made in-house, diapers, and soap.

“The people that come in ... just need a little hand up, and then they can take the money they were going to spend on those groceries and put it towards rent or an electric bill,” John said.

The Shepherd’s Food Pantry, a ministry of Bella Vista Lutheran Church, is open on Fridays from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. at 1990 Forest Hills Boulevard in Bella Vista. They can be contacted at 479-855-0272.

The Shepherd’s Food Pantry is located at Bella Vista Lutheran Church.


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By Master Account June 7, 2024
For the past few months, I have focused on one specific area of the Claude and Betty Harris Center for Hunger Relief, Northwest Arkansas’ new Food Bank warehouse which is under construction. I’ll return to that topic in June, hopefully with good news about the move and a wrap up of how it will serve us all for many, many years to come. In the meantime, let’s take a look at some other topics that need to be addressed. Diana and I have lived in our current home for over 30 years. We’ve done lots of maintenance and some remodeling, but for the most part a lot of what we moved into the house all those years ago is still there. After spending a few days packing up my office here at the Food Bank in preparation for the move to the new Food Bank, all I can say is I hope we never move! “One hungry person is one too many.” It’s worse if that hungry person is a child. By last count, Feeding America estimates there are approximately 18,000 young people about to enter summer vacation hungry in our four-county service area. With school out, the safety net of school lunch, breakfast in the classroom, snack pack programs and school pantries are not available. I often tell people there is no slow time of the year for hunger. It never takes a break. However, summer vacation time puts additional stress on families and our agency partners. I remember as a child looking forward to summer vacation. Time off from school meant days of baseball or swimming with friends. Carefree days in the sun. But every one of those days ended with me going home to a nutritious home cooked meal. My mom always had enough for all of my friends who wanted to stay and have some of whatever she had fixed that day. Like I said, I looked forward to summer vacation. Hungry children do not have that luxury. In many cases they are afraid of how they will survive while school is out. Where will the food come from? You can help us stock our partner agencies for the increased summer need. Thank you for helping us prepare. I often get asked the question, “what is your most pressing need?” I respond with “knowledge.” Knowledge and understanding by the community that there is a food insecurity problem. People are surprised that I don’t say more donations or more volunteers, but that I emphasize that I need more people to know why we do what we do. Recently I ran into an old friend who I had not seen for several years. I was sharing this with him and he suggested that we all have on blinders and until an issue touches us directly, we don’t necessarily pay attention. He’s right. But food insecurity does touch us all. Every one of us knows someone who struggles to put a meal on the table. We may not know that we know someone, but I promise you we know one of the 70,000 plus in the four-county service area that struggle. I encourage you to think of food insecurity not as some faceless being living somewhere else, but think of the food insecure neighbor as someone you see every day. I promise you, it will bring a new perspective to the way you consider our neighbors in need. I want to close by saying once again how much I appreciate your support. The staff and board of the Food Bank could not do what we do without your help. Recently I attended the Feeding America National Conference. The biggest thing I learned was confirmation of what I already knew….Northwest Arkansans have a giant heart and together we will address food insecurity for many years to com Because of you, someone will eat today. K
By Mallory Morris February 7, 2024
Letter From Our President & CEO – December 10th, 2023
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