Our Mission

The Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina is among the largest anti-hunger organizations in the United States.

We work every day to provide food to people in need while advancing long-term solutions to end hunger in our communities. For 45 years, the Food Bank and our Branch locations have served as the central hub of a network that has grown to 700+ partner programs across a 34-county region — including free food markets, pantries, meal sites, and a host of initiatives serving children, adults and seniors. Together, we’re working to overcome hunger and create an environment where everyone in North Carolina can thrive.

At the Food Bank, we envision a future where no one goes hungry.

We know that hunger is more than a single empty stomach or individual experience. Hunger is a community-wide symptom of not having enough — not having enough nutritious food, enough income, enough voice in the decisions that impact us. It’s a symptom of barriers to employment, education, housing and healthcare

We all experience the effects of hunger in our communities. And together we can build a future where everyone has access to the food and essential resources we need to thrive. Where every voice matters. Where we all share responsibility for each other and our common good. No matter where we live, where we’re from or the color of our skin.

Through our network of 700+ free food markets, pantries, meal sites and delivery programs, we work systemically to achieve this vision.

Together, we nourish people facing hunger with healthy, culturally familiar foods. We build solutions to reduce poverty throughout the region. And we empower our communities to address hunger at its roots through outreach, advocacy and organizing for long-term change.

Because no one should go hungry…no matter where we live, where we’re from, or the color of our skin.

Learn about our 45th Anniversary

Listen to our Podcast

Our Strategic Plan to End Hunger

The pandemic shed much-needed light on systemic challenges hunger relief organizations have long worked to address. Too many members of our community are living one significant medical bill, one missed paycheck, one price increase away from being unable to consistently put food on the table.

Awareness of these challenges grew as many people experienced economic insecurity for the first time in their lives — offering first-hand experience in what it’s like to face impossible choices between paying for medications or utilities, gas or childcare, healthy food or the rent or mortgage. More and more people came to understand the longstanding realities of communities that have faced barriers and exclusion for generations.

This shared experience presents a critical opportunity to look deeper into what causes hunger and poverty in our communities.

And the outpouring of community understanding and support positions organizations like ours to invest in approaches that support people on the cusp of food insecurity before we find ourselves needing the services of the hunger relief system.

That’s where our Strategic Plan comes in: a multi-year blueprint to not only nourish people, but to build long-term solutions that empower communities to prevent hunger from happening.

Together, we’re strengthening existing tactics and trying new approaches that bring us closer to our vision of a future where no one goes hungry.

We are members of Feeding America, a national organization supporting more than 200 food banks across the country, and the largest domestic hunger relief agency in the U.S.

Reports & Financials

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Mapa del hambre y el impacto

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Pitt Lenoir Greene Carteret Jones Craven Onslow Pamlico Columbus Pender Brunswick New Hanover Duplin Chatham Person Orange Durham Granville Vance Moore Richmond Scotland Lee Edgecombe Wilson Nash Sampson Harnett Franklin Halifax Wake Johnston Wayne Warren Clay Mecklenburg Anson Northampton Currituck Caswell Mitchell Dare McDowell Hyde Madison Jackson Polk Davie Rowan Martin Macon Cherokee Rutherford Yancey Burke Bertie Montgomery Wilkes Ashe Surry Cumberland Buncombe Pasquotank Camden Robeson Swain Hoke Hertford Caldwell Beaufort Stanly Davidson Bladen Haywood Henderson Tyrrell Guilford Cabarrus Gates Cleveland Watauga Stokes Alexander Lincoln Alleghany Washington Union Gaston Forsyth Avery Catawba Iredell Yadkin Chowan Rockingham Transylvania Graham Alamance Randolph Perquimans
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Carteret
Chatham
Columbus
Craven
Duplin
Durham
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Franklin
Granville
Greene
Halifax
Harnett
Johnston
Jones
Lee
Lenoir
Moore
Nash
New Hanover
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Orange
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Scotland
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  • 607.630
    de personas enfrentan el hambre
  • 18 % 1 de cada 5
    de personas con inseguridad alimentaria
  • 109 millones
    Libras de alimentos distribuidas por la red de Food Bank
  • 91 millones
    Comidas proporcionadas por la red de Food Bank
  • 505.967
    Personas inscritas en la asistencia con SNAP, FNS y cupones de alimentos
  • 6,7 MUS$
    de asistencia proporcionada con SNAP, FNS y cupones de alimentos
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