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September 4, 2024
Neighbors,
Did you know that September is Hunger Action Month?
While Fairfax County has one of the highest median incomes in the nation, almost a quarter of our community experiences hunger or food insecurity, according to the Capital Area Food Bank’s Hunger Report.
What does this mean? Food insecurity can mean going hungry because you don’t have enough money to pay for groceries, reducing the amount you eat or being unable to afford balanced meals.
Hunger impacts people of all ages, races and even incomes. It can be a child who eats lunch at school, but she goes hungry when she comes home. Or it can be an older adult on a fixed income who can’t buy groceries after paying for medicines or housing.
It might surprise you that even high-income families are going hungry. One in five households that make $120,000 — which is nearly the region’s median income — deal with food insecurity, says the Capital Area Food Bank. Their report also finds that 25% have some higher education like an associate’s degree and another 25% have a college degree or higher.
To help fight hunger, Fairfax County gave out about $9.5 million in federal pandemic relief funds to community food providers during the last two years. The county also allocates more than $1 million every year in Consolidated Community Funding Pool grants to nonprofits that provide emergency food assistance.
You can help combat hunger too. Please donate to the county’s virtual Stuff the Bus food drive this month. You can choose which nonprofit food provider to support, including two that serve the Hunter Mill District: Cornerstones and Western Fairfax Christian Ministries.
You can also donate these food banks directly:
Together, we can all help reduce hunger and food insecurity.
Regards,
Walter
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