
After a long drive from Salt Lake City, the driver pulled into Feeding Westchester’s distribution center in Elmsford and backed an 80-foot trailer into the loading dock. Inside was 40,000 pounds of food—shelf-stable items grown, produced, and packaged hundreds of miles away, now destined for neighbors across Westchester County.
By morning, the building was already in motion.
As the sun rose, Feeding Westchester’s operations team began unloading the shipment, carefully sorting and inventorying each pallet inside the organization’s 62,000-square-foot facility. What had traveled across the country would soon move through a different kind of network—one built to reach neighbors where they are, through food pantries, soup kitchens, schools, community centers, and mobile distributions.
Over the coming weeks, this food will be distributed through Feeding Westchester’s network of 175 partner agencies, ensuring it reaches communities across the county. For many families, that access is not guaranteed. In Westchester, more than 1 in 3 households are at risk of hunger, including working parents, seniors, veterans, and children navigating difficult and often unseen challenges.
This delivery is part of a broader national effort led by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which is coordinating 250 truckloads of food to 250 food banks across all 50 states. Each truck provides enough food to feed approximately 1,400 people for one week, contributing to an estimated 10 million meals nationwide.
Local representatives from the Church were present for the delivery, witnessing how a single act of generosity moves through a community. With support from partners like JustServe, which connects volunteers to service opportunities, efforts like this extend beyond a single moment and become part of a sustained commitment to care for others.
At Feeding Westchester, this is what the work looks like every day: food arrives, it is sorted and distributed, and it reaches neighbors who need it most. In that process, something essential happens. Access to food creates stability, and stability creates the possibility for something more.
Because food is not just nourishment—it is a foundation.
And for many of our neighbors, it is where hope begins.
Due to weather conditions, our office will be closed on Monday, February 23. We have coordinated with our partners and made the necessary arrangements.
Thank you for your understanding and continued support of our work across Westchester.
In observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, our offices are closed today, January 19. Food donation drop-off remains open, and your support helps ensure neighbors across Westchester have access to fresh, healthy food.