$101.2M in expenses
Food distributionin 2024, the organization provided food banks with more than 274 million pounds of food through partnerships with agricultural producers across the state. This included more than 269 million pounds of fresh fruits and vegetables and almost 5 million pounds of high-quality proteins and pantry essentials to keep food banks stocked at a time of increasing need in their communities.the organization's farm to family operation is the state's most extensive charitable food recovery program, working with a network of over 240 farms and aggregators throughout the state. (continued on schedule o)last year alone, the program distributed more than 54 varieties of produce to more than 71 food banks across the country.in 2024, CAFB began implementing its state contract for the USDA local food purchase assistance program. Through this program, we purchased $11 million worth of produce from 600 local, small, and mid-sized farms. This produce was then delivered to 30 food banks and 14 community-based organizations throughout california.the CAFB food procurement programs operate on a reimbursement basis. This means the organization needs to have several million dollars in working capital to cover the packaging and freight costs for our members before receiving reimbursement from food banks or state contracts. An important financial safety net for our members which ensures the food supply chain is not interrupted, and vital produce reaches california communities in need.
$6.0M in expenses
Programscalfresh (SNAP) is one of the most effective anti-poverty programs in the nation. The organization's calfresh outreach program supports over fifty community partners throughout the state. Their efforts include enrolling eligible californians, helping them keep their benefits, and educating the outreach and stakeholder community. Our outreach partners assisted more than 28,000 households in applying for calfresh, and nearly 8,000+ households retained benefits with partner support.(continued on schedule o)in 2024, the organization continued its outreach efforts to support calfresh for disaster relief and sun bucks until these programs concluded. Activities included training and providing programmatic support, offering updates on policies that affect calfresh access and eligibility, and collaborating with stakeholders to enhance language access by translating and reviewing materials.
$1.4M in expenses
Research & public policycafb research and public policy work leads the fight to eradicate food insecurity in california by researching hunger in its communities, advancing legislative and budget initiatives, and conducting administrative advocacy at the state and federal levels to strengthen charitable nutrition safety nets.in 2024, our advocacy & policy team advocated for robust investments in food banks and public benefit adequacy improvements. Specifically, the (continued on schedule o)organization worked to increase state baseline funding for the calfood program which enables food banks to purchase california grown and manufactured foods, protecting funding for a calfresh minimum nutrition benefit pilot program to raise the calfresh monthly benefit to $60 from the current minimum of $23, and worked with the state to ensure robust implementation for the new sunbucks, summer lunch program.CAFB research and strategic initiatives continued its work to deepen our understanding of food insecurity in california, including convening a community advisory board to inform the organization on barriers to accessing charitable food. We also released a mixed-methods report on the impact of emergency allotments in california, and an updated analysis and dashboard on the expansion of calfresh benefits to SSI recipients. In addition, the department continued to provide relevant time-sensitive research and data through several new dashboards to track economic indicators in california related to food security, and a suite of resources to inform the expansion of medically supportive food and nutrition programs among member food banks..
$897K in expenses
Communications & member engagementcafb is committed to increasing the understanding of hunger and its social and health-related impacts. Our work includes uplifting the essential work of food banks, educating the public about barriers to accessing food, calfresh, and other public nutrition benefits, and policy priorities to end hunger in california permanently. The organization provides direct support and resources to its member food banks through training, technical assistance, communications toolkits, and ad hoc support. Its member engagement programs aim to increase the resilience and capacity of its member food banks through webinars and in-person convening, as well as discipline-specific, cross-network discussion groups and cohorts to share best practices and find innovative solutions to challenges faced by food banks across the state.