Tag: LIFE Food Pantry

  • Will you help our Back-To-School program?

    Will you help our Back-To-School program?

    Promoted Post

    Loveland, Ohio – The LIFE Food Pantry says that it is time for us to start packing school bags for the 2023-24 school year. It is thanks to supporters like you that our students will be able to go back to school with everything they need.

     

    Like in previous years, students registered at the pantry will receive a backpack filled with grade appropriate supplies, socks and underwear, a Spirit Wear shirt, shoes, and personal care items (toothpaste, deodorant, shampoo, etc.). The distribution will be during the first two weeks of August.

    Are you willing to help us?

    We are expecting at least 160 students to receive supplies this year. We are still seeing many new clients, so the number might be higher. Last year we planned for 120 and distributed 150 bags and supplies!

    We are looking for our generous donors to help us by donating backpacks with supplies (with a list of supplies provided), individual school supplies or personal care items.

    We will need donations by July 20th. They may be dropped off at the LIFE Food Pantry at 541 Loveland Madeira Road, Tuesday through Saturday 9:30 – noon; Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday 3:30 – 6:30, or by appointment.

    You can also purchase items though our Amazon shop here.

    Please contact backtoschool@lifefoodpantry.org or Carolina Maurer at (513)319-4881 for more information. Thank you for donating to the LIFE Food Pantry—we truly could not do this without your support.

    Click here to visit our Amazon page here to buy school supplies for those in need!

    Prefer to shop locally? Here is a list of items needed:

    • Large backpacks that can hold a laptop for older students
    • Composition notebooks
    • Crayola wide markers
    • Headphones for young students
    • Earphones for older students
    • 3 prong folders in red, blue, yellow, or green
    • Clorox wipes

     

  • Jeffrey Atkinson of Edward Jones is a “LIFEsaver”

    Jeffrey Atkinson of Edward Jones is a “LIFEsaver”

    Jeffrey Atkinson

    Loveland, Ohio – Jeffrey Atkinson of Edward Jones signed up as a LIFEsaver, providing a monthly financial donation to LIFE. Recurring monthly donations help us to budget and plan for regular items needed, provide financial assistance to clients, and run programs such as our Back-to School backpacks and holiday food baskets.

    Thank you for your support! Visit our website to learn how you can be a LIFEsaver! https://lifefoodpantry.org/annual-campaign/

  • Join the LIFE Food Pantry Hunger Walk

    Join the LIFE Food Pantry Hunger Walk

    Loveland, Ohio – The LIFE Food Pantry is partnering with Fleet Feet in downtown Loveland to hold a Hunger Walk along the Loveland Bike Trail on Memorial Day, Monday May 29th at 9 AM.
    Go to https://lifefoodpantry.org/5k-hunger-walk-run/ for more information for the event and collect donations.
    Hope you can join us.

    PROUDLY SERVING HUNDREDS OF LOCAL FAMILIES EACH MONTH

    Since 1988, the Loveland Interfaith Effort (LIFE) Food Pantry has been serving the Greater Loveland community by providing food and support for those less fortunate. We currently provide much needed food to hundreds of families, stock snack shelves at the local schools for qualifying children, and even financial assistance for those in dire need.

  • 10th annual Loveland Food Truck Rally this Saturday

    10th annual Loveland Food Truck Rally this Saturday

    Promoted Post

    Loveland, Ohio – The 10th annual Loveland Food Truck Rally will be held on Saturday, May 13, from 3 PM until 10 PM at Shopper’s Haven Plaza (597 Loveland-Madeira Rd.). The President of the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance CeeCee Collins said, “We are so happy this event has become the unofficial kick of to summer in Loveland.”

    Collins added that the Chamber loves highlighting businesses along the Loveland Madeira corridor and in the Shoppers Haven area. “There will be excellent entertainment, an enhanced children’s area, tons of food trucks that any foodie can enjoy and a variety of cold beverages.”

    Be sure to help others and bring a non-perishable goods for the LIFE Food Pantry-Stuff a Truck on site!”

    There is no cost to attend the food truck rally.

    The event includes:

    • Food options from over variety of 25 food trucks offering something for everyone’s taste! We are at capacity for food trucks! Vendors still welcome.

    • Beverages for sale to include beer, wine, seltzers, water, and soda.

    • Live music.

    • Help the Loveland Police Department Stuff-a-Truck with non-perishable donations for Loveland LIFE Food Pantry.

    • Join OrangeTheory Fitness in the kids area for family fitness classes!!!

    • Children’s area with inflatables, face painting and more!

    Schedule:

    3 o’clock – Food Trucks will begin serving

    3 – 4 o’clock – Premier Dance on stage

    4 – 6 o’clock – Counting Skeletons on stage

    6 – 10 o’clock – Hifi Honey on stage

    10 o’clock – Event ends

    Food Trucks:

    • Adena’s Beefstroll

    • Best Thing Smokin

    • Brents Smokin Butts & Grill

    • Chicken Mac truck

    • City Belle Fried Pies

    • Crazy Bird Kitchen

    • Daizies Dillas

    • El Cardenal Taquería

    • Funnel Vision LLC

    • Indigenous Chef

    • Jenn’s Hot Tamale

    • Just Jerks Food Truck

    • Kabobske

    • Kona Ice of NE Cincinnati & Dayton

    • Loveland Dairy Whip

    • Off The Hook

    • Red Sesame Korean BBQ

    • S.E.A. Cuisine Foodtruck

    • Steak It Eazy

    • streetpops

    • Sweet Jazz Treats Bakery

    • Sweet Maize Company, LLC

    • Sweets & Meats BBQ

    • The Cheesecakery

    • The Naughty Lobstah

    Parking is available at the Primary School across the street and in Shoppers Haven Plaza parking lot.

    Bring your friends and folding chairs to enjoy the complimentary entertainment on stage! Feel free to also stop in and get a take-out order!

    For more information visit www.lmrchamberalliance.org or call the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance office at 513-683-1544.

  • Loveland Police “Stuff-a-Truck” now an official tradition

    Loveland Police “Stuff-a-Truck” now an official tradition

    Loveland, Ohio – This community tradition has joined forces wth the Loveland Food Truck Rally and is a wonderful way to give back to your neighbors.

    The Loveland Police Department will have a Ford F150 Police Vehicle at the rally and you can help load it up with with non-perishable food donations for Loveland’s LIFE Food Pantry.

    The 10th Annual Loveland Food Truck Rally presented by the Little Miami River Chamber Alliance is an awesome summer kick-off event and is in less than 10 days! Mark your calendars for a great afternoon of fun and food including 25 food trucks, a kids’ area, live music, cold beer, and more!

    The Stuff-A-Truck and Food Truck Rally will take place Saturday, May 13 from 3 in the afternoon until 8 PM at Shopper’s Haven Plaza, 597 Loveland Madeira Road.

    Read more about the Rally…

  • Be a LIFEsaver for to your neighbors

    Be a LIFEsaver for to your neighbors

    Loveland, Ohio – The LIFE Food Pantry campaign is now live and runs through May 20th. They are encouraging the community, businesses and individuals, to give a financial donation through PayPal or Venmo to help them serve their clients.

    DONATE NOW

    2022 LIFE Client Statistics

    • 3,200 families with 8,449 family members
      • 33% children
      • 18% senior citizens
    • 160,629 total meals served
    • 67% increase in client families vs. prior year

    Services provided by LIFE go beyond just food – here are a few examples:

    • LIFE helps with emergency financial assistance, including rent, utilities, auto repair, prescription medications and more. In 2022, 208 families helped totaling $40,000
    • Back to school backpack program, filled with necessary supplies
    • Holiday food bags for November and December holidays
    • Holiday giving shop with clothing, gifts, etc., for client families
    • Student weekend bags filled with healthy food
    • Tiger pantry at the Loveland High School, with food and personal supplies
    • Client bags specifically for senior citizens
    • Pantry pals, who shop for and deliver to clients who are unable to come into the pantry

    DONATE NOW

  • After the end of COVID-era benefits, 70k older Ohioans struggle to fight hunger

    After the end of COVID-era benefits, 70k older Ohioans struggle to fight hunger

    Throughout the pandemic, families have turned to food banks for help. Harvesters, a private food bank, saw the amount of food distributed increase from 54 million pounds in 2019 to 65 million in 2020. In this picture, food is distributed at a drive-in in Kansas City, Kansas. (Harvesters — The Community Food Network).

    BY:  Ohio Capital Journal

    After Congress ended pandemic food assistance in February, 70,000 older Ohioans have seen food benefits slashed to $23 a month, in some cases down from $280.

    That has many making excruciating choices between food, medicine and utilities like electricity and gas, Lisa Hamler-Fugitt, executive director of the Ohio Association of Foodbanks, said Wednesday.

    And while it’s dire for anybody to live in hunger, that’s especially true the older you are, she said, because insufficient nutrition exacerbates conditions such as diabetes and depression and can take away seniors’ ability to live on their own. The end of COVID-era enhancements to benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — or SNAP — has added to the already increasing number of older Ohioans seeking help at Ohio’s groaning food pantries, Hamler-Fugitt said.

    “They’re the canaries in the hunger coal mine,” she said, explaining that because most older Ohioans live on fixed incomes, they can’t earn their way out of food insecurity. “When they join the food line, they’re not leaving until they go into the nursing home or they pass away.”

    To help low-income people deal with the economic shocks from the coronavirus epidemic, Congress and the Trump administration in 2020 enhanced benefits under SNAP, the program formerly known as food stamps, and it eased eligibility to include households with somewhat higher incomes. And by literally putting food on the table, it had a big effect on poverty, the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reported.

    “The temporary benefits pushed back against hunger and hardship during COVID,” the report said. “A study estimated that (enhanced allotments) kept 4.2 million people above the poverty line in the last quarter of 2021, reducing poverty by 10 percent — and child poverty by 14 percent — in states with (enhanced allotments) at the time. The estimated reduction in poverty rates due to (enhanced allotments) was highest for Black and Latino people.”

    But last December, Congress and the Biden administration decided to end the enhancements effective in February.

    “This change was made as part of a bipartisan compromise that created a permanent Summer Electronic Benefit Transfer (EBT) program to provide grocery benefits to replace school meals for some 30 million children in low-income families when schools are closed in the summer — a time when families with school-aged children are at higher risk for food insecurity,” the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities reported.

    Hamler-Fugitt said that in Ohio, the group over 60 was particularly hard hit in part because it’s an aging state. It has the 18th-highest percentage of residents over 65, for example.

    In some cases, seniors don’t have support systems and some are even supporting others, such as grandchildren and great-grandchildren. And the older one becomes, the more health complaints accumulate, often making it impossible to perform many of the jobs that are available.

    Hamler-Fugitt said her agency has been hearing about the real-life consequences of cutting back food benefits to older Ohioans.

    “You just can’t even believe these horror stories,” she said. “We’re interviewing them now about what their coping strategies are and it’s really, really scary. Before they had about $2 a meal — that was a best-case scenario. Now it’s 75 cents a day. That’s 25 cents a meal.”

    She explained that the permanent fix to the problem is at the federal level, where providing the U.S. Department of Agriculture with more resources could make the enhanced benefits permanent.

    But over the short term, advocates for the poor are asking the Ohio General Assembly to pony up $21 million for each of the next two years to ensure that every eligible Ohio household has at least a $50 monthly SNAP benefit.

    “The economic consequences of this for an aging state like Ohio are just huge,” Hamler Fugitt said.

    _____________________________

    MARTY SCHLADEN

    Marty Schladen has been a reporter for decades, working in Indiana, Texas and other places before returning to his native Ohio to work at The Columbus Dispatch in 2017. He’s won state and national journalism awards for investigations into utility regulation, public corruption, the environment, prescription drug spending and other matters.

    MORE FROM AUTHOR

  • As we move into a new season, we always have fresh hope

    As we move into a new season, we always have fresh hope

    by Linda Bergholz

    Spring in the Midwest – we’ve seen sunshine, flowers, heavy rain, crazy wind and even snow!

    As we move into a new season, we always have fresh hope. But many of our clients are facing the same issues that plagued them through the winter. Unpaid bills and rising food and shelter costs continue to weigh on their minds.

    Spring is the time of our annual Feed The Hungry campaign, which brings hope that LIFE clients will have a brighter season.

    This year we are changing the name to better reflect what we do – it’s more than food. While food donations are important, monthly pledges from the community and business partners help us buy needed perishables such as milk, eggs, and cheese but also does so much more. Financial donations allow us to pay emergency financial assistance for items such as rent, utilities, prescription medicines, and maintenance for vehicles, so clients can continue to live safely in their homes and have reliable transportation for work.

    You will receive information next month about this important campaign, and how you can be a LIFEsaver* with just the click of a button from the comfort of your home, office, or anywhere. We make it easy for to make a monthly donation, would you please consider it? Of course, we welcome one-time donations as well, which is also easy to do online. You can also drop a check in the mail or bring it by in person – we love to show off our pantry! 

    Spring cleaning is just around the corner!  We need cleaning products such as window and floor products, all-purpose cleaners, paper towels, bathroom cleaning products, anything you use to make your house fresh and clean. When you pick up supplies for your home, please consider adding a few additional items to donate to the pantry.

    *LIFE is so thankful for our LIFEsavers, who provide an ongoing monthly contribution to help our neighbors in need. If you’d like to learn more about donating and being a LIFEsaver, visit our

  • Loveland High School Student Council shares the wealth

    Loveland High School Student Council shares the wealth

    Provided Photo

    Loveland, Ohio – The Life Food Pantry says, “A huge thank you to the Loveland High School Student Council for all the amazing goods donated to the pantry! The Loveland Schools and community are an enormous source of support for the pantry. Thank you so much for sharing the wealth for those who need a hand!”

    CURRENT NEEDS

    FOOD

    • Canned Peas

    • Coffee

    • Crackers

    • Manwich/Sloppy Jo

    • Rice a Roni

    • Taco or Chili Seasoning

    HOUSEHOLD/PAPER GOODS

    • Laundry Detergent

    • Paper Towels

    BABY

    • Diapers, Pull-Ups, Wipes

    SENIORS

    • Ensure/Boost

  • Need assistance with Medicaid, SNAP benefits, Presumptive Eligibility, or Marketplace insurance?

    Need assistance with Medicaid, SNAP benefits, Presumptive Eligibility, or Marketplace insurance?

    Make sure your enrollment information is up to date

    Loveland, Ohio – HealthSource of Ohio’s Outreach and Enrollment Team will help if you need assistance with Medicaid, SNAP benefits, Presumptive Eligibility, or Marketplace insurance. This is a FREE service for anyone in the community – you don’t have to be a HealthSource patient. Call or email today at 513-707-9901 or insurance@hsohio.org.

    The HealthSource Outreach and Enrollment Team can assist you with Medicaid, Presumptive Eligibility, and SNAP applications for FREE. You don’t have to be a HealthSource patient to contact the Team. Call 513-707-9901 to speak with a Team member, or leave a voice mail and you will get a call back!

    Now that a March 2020 provision increasing the federal contribution to state Medicaid programs while requiring states to maintain continuous coverage for Medicaid patients during the COVID-19 public health emergency will be going away, the number of children falling under those protections will also be decreasing.

    These children are at grave risk of losing coverage.

    Loveland’s LIFE Food Pantry is working with Alicia Blum, with HealthSource to assist clients with benefit/government programs. Many are not aware that they must re-register for many of the programs, as well as the changes that have happened.

    Stay tuned to Loveland Magazine about when HealthSource will be at the LIFE Food Pantry to answer questions and offer assistance.