FORT LEE, Va. -- Stateside commissaries are again serving as collection points for the Feds Feed Families campaign for 2019, which began June 26, and continues through Aug. 9 at participating military installations.
Participating installations help collect items most needed by food pantries and then donate them to area food banks. Commissary customers and employees participate by purchasing needed food and personal hygiene products for donation while shopping at the commissary, or bring items from home and drop them off at the store. Another option commissaries have made available are prepackaged donation bags. Store workers assemble bags of various appropriate items. They’re placed around stores where patrons can easily pick them up as they shop to donate at the checkout.
This year marks the 10th consecutive year commissaries have participated.
“The employees and patrons of DECA really stepped up to the plate in 2018 by collecting more than 1.52 million pounds of donations,” said Randy Eller, DECA director, logistics. “The DOD collected a total of a little over 2 million pounds, which makes DECA’s collections approximately 75% of all donations collected.”
Once collected, installation officials work with the commissary to deliver donations to local food banks.
Some of the most-needed items include:
Canned vegetables – low sodium, or no salt
Canned fruits – in light syrup or their own juices
Canned proteins – tuna, salmon, chicken, peanut butter and beans
Soups – beef stew, chili, chicken, turkey or rice
Condiments – tomato-based sauces, light soy sauce, ketchup, mustard, salad dressing or oils
Snacks – individually packed snacks, trail mix, dried fruit, granola and cereal bars
Multigrain cereals
100% juice – all sizes, including juice boxes
Grains – brown and white rice, oatmeal, bulgar, quinoa, couscous, pasta, and macaroni and cheese
Paper products and household items – paper towels, napkins and cleaning supplies
Hygiene items – diapers, deodorants, feminine products, toilet paper, soap, toothpaste and shampoo
For more information on this campaign, go to the U.S. Department of Agriculture website.