Community Corner

Stamp Out Hunger: The Largest Single-Day Food Drive in America is Saturday

Will the National Association of Letter Carriers top last year's food drive totaling more than 77.1 million pounds of non-perishable goods? That's up to you!

McDonald's restaurants may proudly boast “Over a Billion Served,” but the National Association of Letter Carriers (NALC) can say the same when it comes to pounds of food collected for the needy.

Since 1993 the NALC has collected more than one billion pounds of food through its annual nationwide event, "Stamp Out Hunger" – America’s largest single-day food drive.

This Saturday, more than 1,500 NALC branches from every state, involving more than 10,000 cities and towns, will have more than 230,000 letter carriers collect non-perishable goods from people’s mailboxes.

Find out what's happening in Oak Forestwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Because the drive is organized by the NALC, rural routes, which work under the union of National Rural Letter Carriers’ Association, don’t have to participate in collection, but most do.

Across the country, many have banded together to advertise for the day’s collection. Campbell’s, a long supporter of the drive, will donate one pound of food (up to one million pounds) to Feeding America for every person who joins the Stamp Out Hunger Facebook community. Additionally, you can join Stamp Out Hunger on Twitter to follow the national collection online as food is gathered this Saturday. 

Find out what's happening in Oak Forestwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Residents can leave non-perishable food in bags next to mailboxes if donations exceed the mailbox size. Because the drive has gotten so big, Anderson said he’ll take a spin around town to collect food in his pick-up truck if the letter carriers can't fit all the donations in their mail trucks.

According to the NALC, the need for donations is greater than ever. The organization stated, “According to the Agriculture Department's most recent study of food security in the United States in 2009, the number of Americans living in so-called 'food insecure' homes topped 50 million. Of those, 17.2 million are children.”


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