An edition of the Littleton Independent
WEEK OF DECEMBER 21, 2023
VOLUME 23 | ISSUE 3
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Arapahoe County food banks serving more INSIDE THIS ISSUE Donation needs increased BY TAYLER SHAW, ELISABETH SLAY, NINA JOSS COLORADO COMMUNITY MEDIA
Local hunger-relief organizations are facing record-levels of demand this year, underscoring the need for community support. Serving more than 6,000 people a month, Integrated Family Community Services, or IFCS, near Englewood is seeing even more need than it saw during the COVID-19 pandemic. For Mosaic, a church in unincorporated Jefferson County, the demand for its food bank has almost doubled in the past year. A community center’s food bank in Littleton, called the Life Center, thinks it may soon need to expand its hours to be able to serve the number of people in need. And in Greenwood Village, Covenant Cupboard Food Pantry is on track to exceed last year’s recordbreaking number of people served. To help meet the demand, organizations like Integrated Family Community Services, Life Center and Covenant Cupboard have partnered with the Food Bank of the Rockies. Erin Pulling, CEO of Food Bank of the Rockies, said she is hearing from hunger-relief partner organizations that more people are coming to
TOWN HALL State Rep. Chris Kolker talks about upcoming session
A volunteer packs pasta at the twice-monthly Colorado Community Church mobile PHOTO COURTESY OF FOOD BANK OF THE ROCKIES pantry in Aurora.
them for help than ever before. “We were seeing an all-time record need for help during the height of COVID,” Pulling said. “We really didn’t think that anything could surpass that — and this last year has.” A look at the numbers
IFCS operates a five-day-a-week food market and provides bulk food items to community partners and first responders, said Todd McPherson, director of development. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of people IFCS serves each month has grown to more than 6,000, he said.
VOICES: 14 | LIFE: 16 | CALENDAR: 19
This year, McPherson said the organization has seen a need even more than it did during the pandemic. “We are serving record numbers of new visitors, immigrants filtering in the south metro communities, and the cold weather or holiday increases,” McPherson said. “When kids are off from school and subsidized meal programs, the demand is always high.” In unincorporated Jefferson County, the Mosaid church hosts a food bank to serve its community, SEE FOOD BANKS, P6
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