With Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits set to diminish or disappear for 600,000 Hoosiers Nov. 1, food pantries and aid organizations are gearing up to meet unprecedented demand.
Another way the program is reconciliation-focused is how it uses the blue corn flour it creates: it donates it, placing free bags in on-campus food pantries or giving it for free to Native farmers.
Emergency funding and expanded food distribution as organizations across Central Indiana brace for a surge in need.
Door Dash: The company announced it will deliver the equivalent of one million free meals and waive fees on grocery orders for 300,000 SNAP recipients during November. DoorDash customers with their ...
A $1 million Central Indiana Food Relief Fund has been launched to address the upcoming cuts to federal SNAP benefits due to ...
"If people would just come over here for a couple hours and watch the people that show up here to get food, you can see the ...
The Office of Public Health and Safety, Indy Peace and a local church are among the groups helping to feed those in need ...
Roughly 600,000 Hoosiers who rely on the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, will not receive federal ...
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