After 30 Years of Service, Good Neighbor Food Pantry Closes June 1.
After feeding hungry people in Woodstock for over 30 years, volunteers at the Good Neighbor Food pantry were asked to leave the pantry’s space at the Woodstock Reformed Church by June 1, when the pantry will close..
This didn’t happen because there were no hungry people to use the pantry. This pantry has been one of the largest in the area since it expanded in the economic downfall of 2008. Before that time, shoppers were mostly a couple dozen single homeless men and Woodstock colorful characters.
With the economic downfall, patronage escalated from 25 people per week to hundreds. Hungry people filled the halls. The line filed out the door into the parking lot.
Before the economic downfall, people came in and got one or two each of four basic items: cereal, tuna fish, peanut butter, soup. About the time that the crowds began to shop for food, the food bank changed the system to include fresh produce and a three-day-supply of food for every person in the household.
People left the pantry with bags of food: eggs, vegetables, fruit, yogurt, items of dignity.
Church members and townspeople never really accepted these changes.
People resented the changes they didn’t ask for. This was understandable. No one likes change, especially uninvited change.
They liked feeling only a few people in town needed food.
They liked thinking the pantry was “theirs” when it really belonged to the Food Bank. After all, that’s where the food came from. That’s where volunteer training came from. That’s where food and rent grants originated.
With the changes in food served came training classes at the Food Bank. Funds became available to assist pantries with rent, and utilities. At that time, the volunteer coordinator applied for and received a $1,000 rent grant to pay the church annually.
The $1,000 rent grant was new for the Woodstock Reformed Church. No food pantry volunteers had paid rent money to help the membership.
At the time, the intention was to increase the amount annually. $8,000 was a long range goal.
$8,000 was not out of line if the refrigerators and freezers were moved from the unpainted barn in the parking lot to the church basement.
A nationally known fundraising guru, Kim Kline, taught interested nonprofit volunteers how to raise money. She based her success on the premise that givers give. She told everyone in the class exactly what to do.
After this class, pantry volunteers in Woodstock did exactly as she instructed.
These fundraising efforts at the pantry made the Good Neighbor Food Pantry a success story. Secrets of successful fundraising are outlined in detail on pages 196 and 197 of the book “I Don’t Hang Out in Churches Anymore.”
The Good Neighbor Food Pantry need not close. There is time to raise the money needed. There are probably still volunteers in this pantry who remember these skills taught by Kim Kline.
There is still time to feed the many hungry people who need this food. The need is greater now than it has ever been.
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Thank you for your interest in feeding hungry people. Our need is greater now than ever before.
Thurman Greco
Woodstock, New York
alleviating hunger, breathing, cash flow, Disaster Preparation, domestic violence and sexual assault survivors, elderly poor, emergency feeding programs, emergency food assistance, emergency food assistance program, employed poor, fear, feeding the homeless, Feeding the Hungry, food desert, food insecurity, food insecurity for seniors, food pantries, food pantry, food pantry blog, generational poor, global warming, homelessness, hunger, Hunger is Not a Disease blog, ill poor, infant poor, meaning of life, medical expenses, meditation, mental illness, New York Times, nutrition assistance, persistent poor, protection, resource poor, serious illness, situational poor, SNAP, social justice, soup kitchens, struggling poor, the transportation challenged, Thurman Greco, trauma, trauma sensitive yoga, underemployment, unemployment, waste disposal
"I am Your Neighbor" by David R. Brown and Roger Wright, "I Don't Hang Out in Churches Anymore", "Miracles" by Thurman Greco, "Miracles" by Tim Stafford, "Nickel and Dimed" by Barbara Ehrenreich, and halfway house to be rich enough to feed everyone who needs the food., Coming soon: "No Fixed Address", deteriorating economic security, economic downfall, Economic downturns erase job opportunities., elderly volunteers', Enough volunteers., First time volunteers are making new beginnings., food and rent grants, Good Neighbor Food Pantry closes in Woodstock, Hungry people don't live in two realities., June 1, lines of hungry filed out the door into the parking lot, negotiations are best kept private, One of the largest pantries in the area, Pantry shoppers and volunteers live with grief., People resent changes they don't ask for., The food came from the Food Bank, volunteerism, Volunteers Needed!, Woodstock Reformed Church