Stamp Out Hunger food drive to take place May 12
Published 8:18 am Thursday, May 10, 2018
On May 12, postal carriers across the nation will be picking up more than letters and delivering packages when they stop at residents’ mailboxes. They will also be collecting food to help those less fortunate.
Communities in Berrien and Cass counties will have a chance to help postal carriers in their mission during the 26th annual Stamp Out Hunger food drive in Edwardsburg, Niles, Buchanan and across the nation on May 12.
“Basically, we ask for donations and the residents of Dowagiac help us out,” said Sean First, a custodian at the Dowagiac Post Office who has been volunteering for the event for the last three years. “Then we take the food to local pantries so those in need can use them.”
In Dowagiac, the donations will go to First Christian Church, St. Paul’s Episcopal Church and ACTION Ministries.
“People can put any canned food or unopened boxed items that they want to donate out by or in their mailboxes, and the carriers will pick it up when they are out delivering mail on Saturday,” said Linda Tallmadge, the acting postmaster in Edwardsburg. “It comes back here and it will go to a local food bank, and then they distribute it to people in need in our area.”
During the annual event, which is put on by the National Association of Letter Carriers, residents place nonperishable food donations near their mailbox. A postal carrier or volunteer will pick up the food which will be donated to local food pantries. In Edwardsburg, donations will go to the Edwardsburg Food Pantry. In Niles, the donations will support the Niles Salvation Army, St. Mary’s Christian Service Center and First Presbyterian Church. In Buchanan, postal carriers will collect the donations for the Redbud Area Ministries.
“There’s a lot of people that go hungry,” Tallmadge said. “There’s a lot of kids whose only meal is during school and a lot of people that aren’t working, so they don’t have a lot of food to put on the table. The food pantry does run out of food a lot of times, so this just helps boost their inventory. And if everyone would just donate a couple of cans per household in this area, we would be stocked well and could help needy families.”
At the Niles location alone last year, postal carriers collected more than 15,000 pounds of food. Nationally, the event collected more than 75 million pounds of food last year to support food pantries across the country.
Niles postal carrier Johnny Hernandez, who serves as the food drive coordinator, has participated in the event for the past 20 years.
“It’s an honor to be part of it,” Hernandez said. “We realize not everybody has it good. It’s much needed.”
For local pantries, the Stamp Out Hunger donations come at an ideal time when donation stocks are low. This is because most food donations typically come during the Thanksgiving and Christmas season.
“We walk in the community, so we see [the need] on a daily basis,” Hernandez said. “It is one thing we can try to do throughout our community and help each other out.”
Hernandez said food insecurity is also a problem that can persist behind closed doors and that people may not notice if their neighbor is struggling to keep food on the table.
Hernandez recommended residents to put their donations by their mailbox by 9 a.m. While postal carriers will carry both food and mail during this day, they have scheduled volunteer helpers to help with the collection process. If food is not picked up, people can return the donation to their mailbox area on Monday where it will be picked up.
According to Hernandez, in the 25 years that the drive has existed, more than 1.6 billion pounds of food has been collected. Many families in the U.S. struggle with hunger, more than 49 million Americans say they do not know where their next meal will come from, according to Stamp Out Hunger data.
“It makes us feel good that we are able to help out the community,” Hernandez said.
For more information: nalc.org/community-service/food-drive.