fbpx

Food Banks Seeking Donations for Holiday Season

Different organizations have different needs, but all say they are serving more people than last year

By Molly Priddy
A worker organizes donated food at the Flathead Food Bank. Beacon File Photo

A growing population in the Flathead Valley needs support from food banks. Here’s a breakdown of the needs of the area’s individual food banks.

Flathead Food Bank – Kalispell

Location: 1203 U.S. Highway 2, Kalispell, 59901

Contact: 406-752-3663

Website: www.flatheadfoodbank.com

The Flathead Food Bank served 1,400 full turkey dinners to families this year, said executive director Lori Botkin, up 200 families from last year.

The food bank expects to serve at least as many dinners as last year — 658 — and is planning for more. It’s looking for turkeys and hams for Christmas dinner, but also the following canned items: vegetables, soups, meats, tuna, and chili.

Money is also appreciated, because the food bank has buying power that a private individual likely does not, she said.

Other necessities, like toiletries and dog food, are also always needed. Botkin said people with soap or shampoo they don’t like can send the remnants to the food bank.

Otherwise, imagine what you’d normally need to cook a Thanksgiving dinner and drop it off.

“It’s the basics,” Botkin said. “People always ask for … the foil turkey trays to cook the turkey in. That’s something we never have.”

North Valley Food Bank – Whitefish

Location: 251 Flathead Ave., 59937

Contact: 406-862-5863

Website: www.northvalleyfoodbank.org

“We’re thinking Christmas,” SueAnn Grogan King, executive director at North Valley Food Bank, said.

Grogan King said the food bank broke records when they served 130 households the week of Nov. 14.

“We were serving just under 100 through October and earlier this season,” she said.

The food bank expected to send out Thanksgiving boxes to 200 households, she said. For Christmas, they’re running a drive to collect socks, hats, and mittens.

The North Valley Food Bank particularly needs mandarin oranges, Grogan King said, because the kids love them and they’re an easy fruit to peel.

Otherwise, the food bank is always accepting food and toiletry donations, she said.

Columbia Falls Food Bank – Columbia Falls

Location: 82 Railroad St E., 59912

Contact: 406-892-0241

With 170 Thanksgiving baskets out the door and turkeys left over for Christmas, Jan Von Lindern at the Columbia Falls Food Bank says the organization is doing well, except for a lack of veggies.

“We’re sitting pretty good except for canned vegetables,” Von Lindern said.

The food bank will accept any food donations, she said, but soup, cereal, peanut butter, and jelly are in high demand and low supply these days.

Donations can be dropped at the food bank location. Call for more information.

West Shore Food Bank – Lakeside

Location: 140 Bills Rd., 59922

Contact: 406-844-2779

Website: www.facebook.com/WestShoreFoodBank

“We need turkeys something fierce,” Leslie Knuth, director at the food bank, said. “We’ve never been short on turkeys and we’re short this year.”

West Shore Food Bank expects to send out at least 100 70-pound boxes full of all the fixings needed for a Thanksgiving meal this year. That’s a 27 percent increase over last year, Knuth said. Donations of turkeys, fresh vegetables, and dressings are on the top of the list.

And for Christmas, the food bank sends out ham dinners, so hams are also appreciated.

Christmas is also the time when the food bank gives out toiletries, so those donations are also always welcome. Monetary donations can be sent to P.O. Box 192, Lakeside, 59922.

Northwest Montana Veterans Food Pantry – Evergreen

Location: 1349 U.S. Highway 2 E., 59901

Contact: 406-756-7304

Website: www.veteransfoodpantry.org

The Veteran’s Food Pantry does NOT need turkeys, said executive director Allen Erickson.

“The lord really blessed us good,” he said, noting that their turkey needs are fulfilled.

Erickson said they need the “fun things” for the holiday meals, such as hot chocolate, yams, marshmallows, and other treats.

The pantry could also use any and all toiletries, especially travel-sized items, such as deodorants, shampoos, and soaps.

Erickson expects to serve 140 families for Thanksgiving, with 150 families already signed up for Christmas. Families can register for Christmas dinners until Dec. 15.

Bigfork Food Bank – Bigfork

Location: 7535 MT Highway 35, 59911

Contact: 406-837-2297

Website: www.bigforkfoodbank.org

The food bank prepared Thanksgiving boxes for about 100 families, equaling roughly 260 individuals, director Ann Tucker said.

The meals included pumpkin pies made from scratch by Flathead High School Culinary Arts students, who gutted the gourds and turned them into pies.

Other than turkey and ham, specific needs at the Bigfork Food Bank include fresh fruit and vegetables, jelly, juice, peanut butter, canned fruit and canned olives, canned ravioli and meals like mac and cheese, and toilet paper.