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Volunteering Across Florida’s Food Bank Network

Making an Impact, One Shift at a Time

Volunteering at a food bank may seem like a small gesture, but across Florida it powers a network that provides meals to thousands of families, seniors, and children daily. Behind every box of groceries and each mobile distribution are volunteers who dedicate their time to helping neighbors in need.

Their efforts turn donations into meals, warehouses into hubs of activity, and shifts into meaningful support for households that rely on food banks. At our food banks, all of which are non-profit organizations that depend on this incredible support system, volunteers ensure resources are used efficiently and every effort counts.

 

Getting Started Is Simple

For many, volunteering can feel intimidating, not knowing where to begin or how to start. Luckily, food banks across Florida make participation approachable and welcoming.

Carley Todd, a Feeding Florida staff member and volunteer at Feeding South Florida, described her experience as very easy to sign up online. Once she arrived for her warehouse shift, they held a quick training on how to inspect items and sort them into their correct category.

During her shift, Carley helped organize food for seniors, veterans, and local families. “Knowing that what I spent my morning doing would have an immediate impact on my neighbors made it incredibly rewarding.”

She also noticed the dedication of other volunteers. “In a room of about 20 volunteers, another volunteer and I were the only new people. It was so cool to see how many people have been coming back week after week and have built relationships with staff and each other.”

Shannon, a volunteer with Feeding Northeast Florida, highlighted how different roles offer distinct experiences. “I like the mobile distributions because you actually get to see the people receiving the food,” she said. “I also like the warehouse because it makes my brain happy, organizing everything.”

Volunteers: Critical in the Supply Chain

Volunteer shifts keep food moving quickly and safely through the system so it can reach local households. It’s part of the supply chain that happens internally at the food bank.

In a warehouse, volunteers inspect, sort, and organize donations for partner pantries and programs. During a typical two-hour shift at Feeding Northeast Florida, volunteers can process over 4,500 pounds of food, enough for more than 3,800 meals.

Mobile distributions allow volunteers to see the results of their work firsthand and become part of the chain we call “the last mile.” Volunteers organize and hand out fresh produce, meat, dairy, and pantry staples. A single distribution can provide roughly 8,000 pounds of food to over 160 households.

Across All Faiths Food Bank’s region, 3,300 volunteers contribute 59,000 hours annually, with about 150 volunteers in warehouses and another 100 at mobile distribution sites each week, showing how essential volunteers are to daily operations.

Opportunities Beyond the Warehouse

Volunteering isn’t limited to the food bank warehouses. Ruth Bonet, Volunteer Engagement Manager at Feeding South Florida, highlighted several ways her volunteers can contribute, including:

  • Senior meal box packing and distribution
  • Client Choice Pantry support
  • School food programs
  • Community kitchen meal preparation
  • Event assistance for 5K races, food drives, and seasonal initiatives, etc.

Ruth emphasized, “Volunteer support is essential in helping families, seniors, individuals, and children. Every volunteer and every shift strengthens Feeding South Florida’s mission.”

 

The Impact Volunteers Make

Volunteers provide critical support across Florida’s food banks. At Feeding Northeast Florida, tens of thousands of volunteer hours each year save roughly $1 million in labor costs, allowing staff to focus on purchasing and distributing more food.

Volunteers also bring skills, connections, and leadership that strengthen operations and extend the reach of the network. For example, a single retired volunteer at Feeding South Florida coordinated groups and helped secure a foundation donation that sponsored an entire school pantry, demonstrating that volunteer contributions go far beyond time spent in the warehouse.

This support from volunteers is echoed across the state. Nelle S. Miller, President and CEO of All Faiths Food Bank, explained, “We cannot do what we do for our neighbors without the incredible support of our volunteer corps. We have fewer than 90 staff and over 3,000 volunteers. We have more than 800 points of distribution a month, working with tens of thousands of neighbors.”

“Our volunteers are donors – generous with their time and talents and always willing to step up. There is not a food bank that can operate without volunteers!” Nelle continued, “Every hour that a volunteer works is an hour of ‘pay’ that we can use to purchase food and provide the programs so badly needed and wholeheartedly deserved by our communities!”

 

Gratitude for Volunteers

Aaron Walters, Volunteer Specialist at All Faiths Food Bank, captures the same spirit of appreciation. “To first-time volunteers our message is one full of gratitude. Their willingness to give their time helps ensure that neighbors in our community have access to the food they need. We are grateful they spent part of their day with us making a difference and we hope that this is the first of many volunteer shifts.”  

Aaron added that for long-time volunteers, “We celebrate their generosity and commitment to our mission of fighting hunger in our community. Because of volunteers like them, multitudes of neighbors receive the support they need each week.”

Carley reflected on her experience at Feeding South Florida, “It was inspiring to see how many people return week after week. Volunteers genuinely care about helping others, and it shows.”

 

How to Get Involved

Without volunteers, the network of food banks could not operate. Every hour contributed, every shift completed, and every event supported strengthens households across the state. 

Ruth Bonet, from Feeding South Florida, recommends that prospective volunteers sign up and try different volunteer opportunities to see what resonates. In any case, you will feel your impact with every volunteer shift. Opportunities exist for nearly every schedule, skill level, and interest. Single shifts, consistent commitments, family-friendly events, holiday programs, and mobile food initiatives provide a wide variety and make it simple to participate somehow.

If you’ve been considering volunteering, there’s no better time to start. Sign up, show up, and experience the difference you can make, one shift, one meal, one family at a time.

Find your local food bank and sign up to volunteer today!

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