10 Items Food Banks DON’T Need
Please, please, please donate items to your local food bank this holiday season. Be aware, however, there are some items they can't, won't or don't want to receive.
- 1
Soda
Soda pop does nothing to fight hunger and contributes to Diebetes, obesity and cavities. Food banks either don't want or can't receive pop.
- 2
Rusty or unlabeled cans
Cleaning out grandma's garage? The food bank doesn't necessarily want what you find.
- 3
Perishable food
meat, dairy and other foods that expire quickly aren't useful to a food bank. They can get fresh stuff from grocery store donors. From you they need non-perishables.
- 4
Homemade items
If you'd like to share homemade cookies, bread or jerky with the hungry, give it to them directly. The food banks can't hand these out, sorry.
- 5
Home-canned foods
Likewise with homemade items, sharing these with hungry people is a GREAT idea, but the food bank can't be the method of distribution.
- 6
Alcohol
Same with soda, the food bank is appreciative of your desire to share your plenty, but alcohol is not food, so they can't give it out.
- 7
Already-open items
Buy the wrong kind of crackers? Your kids don't like the new cereal brand? Donating it to hungry people is a great idea, but the food bank can't accept it.
- 8
Expired foods
Check the dates on your non-perishable items. If you'd still eat it, there's a chance someone else will at the food bank, but the sorting takes man power, so it's easier on the staff if you just leave it out.
- 9
Glass
Non-perishable foods in glass containers ARE good food bank donations, but glass requires special care due to the safety risks of broken glass. Most food banks would prefer not to exercise this special care (a few people are trying to help a lot of hungry). For safety reasons, leave the glass containers at home.
- 10
Unpopular food (sardines, tofu, pig's feet)
Don't donate a food because your family won't eat it. If your family doesn't like a food, other families likely won't either.