![]() If you’re interested in volunteering at one of our food pantries, go here or call us at (801) 373-8200. Now they’re open and planning for the future. They saw a need in the community and contacted Community Action to get started. Haymond said it has been a blessing to reach people in need in Springville and help connect them with emergency food and other assistance. CAM P-TECH is a joint venture between Erie-2-Chautauqua-Cattaraugus BOCES. They also plan to send emails to parents through the schools. SPRINGVILLE - High school freshman from all across the Greater Erie County. Those kids will be able to reach out to the school if they need help, and the pantry will set them up with food. In the fall, they’ll distribute fliers to schools that will go to children in need. Now that the pantry’s up and running, Haymond and the Kiwanis plan to promote it. on Tuesdays and Thursdays and from 9 a.m. The city’s behind the efforts, too, and now has a committee to help people in need. People see the benefits of having an easily accessible place for Springville residents in need. The new pantry opened in early April, and Haymond said the community is embracing it. Once they had a location, Community Action added a freezer, refrigerator, and shelving. So the school was happy to rent the space for a food pantry. The Kiwanis Club helped Mountainland Head Start purchase the old Grant School in Springville, and the school still had unused space in the building. Then Kiwanis Club would operate the pantry and supply volunteers. Community Action-which has pantries in Provo, Heber, and Coalville-would stock the shelves. The Kiwanis Club and Community Action worked together on the plan for a Springville food pantry. Here’s how they did it and what they’re planning for the future. The answer was a joint-venture food pantry. So they reached out to us at Community Action Services and Food Bank about how they could help more people in their city. ![]() They wanted to get the food to the people who needed it, and they wanted it to stay in Springville. Every year, they collect food and fill as many as 400 boxes-or up to about 20 tons of food.ĭuring the last food drive, though, the group had five tons of goods left over after donating more than 300 boxes to churches and 150 to local schools. With numbers like that, there will always be those who step up to bring the numbers down through service.īrent Haymond and the Kiwanis Club in Springville are no strangers to collecting food and donating to people in need. Before COVID, nearly 64,000 people, including almost 23,000 children, were facing hunger in Utah County.
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