Food Pantry
As part of the Harbor Fellowship mission statement, we as a community serve the poor, needy, those trying to make ends meet and the homeless with
food.  By the grace of God and donations, along with the Second Harvest Food Bank, we feed and nurture the less fortunate.

WHEN: Every Sunday after service around 12pm, a team of volunteers assembles in the parking lot of Bay View Elementary School to begin handing
out prepared food bags and fresh produce. We also have volunteers that take food out to the Santa Cruz West Side cliffs to those who can't make it

We currently are feeding 60 people per week.

Helping the poor is an important part of Harbor Fellowships' community. We treat each person with respect and dignity.  We pray for them and welcome
them into our church for spiritual nourishment.

Jesus gave us a mission when he said,
"Do you love me? Then tend my sheep."
If you would like to be part of this Ministry please contact us
E-mail
td@harborfellowshipsc.org
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All rights reserved Harbor Fellowship, 2007. Website Design by Lumina
Harbor Fellowship of Santa Cruz
A Place of Refuge
Kenny & Gloria Green
We have Food for you

Every Sunday at 12 noon we distribute Free food to anyone in need.

FACT:
One in four people in a soup kitchen line is a child.

Americans we help:

Children
Seniors
Families
Homeless
Newly Unemployed
Disabled
Mentally Ill
Working Poor
Victims of Disaster

FACT: More than 35 million Americans are food insecure, hungry or at risk of hunger.
We are pleased to present the second and expanded edition of the nation’s most comprehensive guide to national and state facts on domestic hunger
and poverty. We hope this guide, with its unique combination of original research from the America’s Second Harvest Network along with current
statistics from a multitude of government and private sources, will become the most powerful needed to understand the causes and consequences of
hunger in our communities and in our country. Most importantly, we hope that the Almanac become a vital instrument in fostering the debate on how
we can reduce and ultimately end hunger in America.

This Almanac is divided into five sections and 52 State Reports (includes D.C. and Puerto Rico) [   pdf files]:

Section I - About America’s Second Harvest — The Nation’s Food Bank Network features the past and present work of our organization, including the
many programs and initiatives that have made the America’s Second Harvest Network a leader in the fight against domestic hunger. In addition, you
will find a glossary of commonly used terms in the universe of hunger-relief and, new to this year’s edition, a summary of federal hunger-related
legislative activities. As you will likely note throughout this publication, the America’s Second Harvest Network does so much more than move food –
research and policy are crucial activities within our organization towards our mission of ending hunger.


Section II –Federal Nutrition Programs provides insightful portrayals of the programs that are so vital to the more than 25 million Americans we serve.
Incorporating historical accounts with contemporary program activities and challenges, this section will provide readers with a firm foundation from
which we hope will develop even more public support on the benefits of these critical federal programs.


Section III – National Statistics on Hunger and Poverty in America contains a statistical snapshot of the current state of hunger and poverty in
America. Unique to this section are the tables ranking each state relative to all others in the key indicators of hunger and poverty in America. This
piece of the Almanac also provides readers with the national-level data that is reflected in each state in Section IV for easy comparison.

Section IV - California Statistics on Hunger and Poverty in America compiles even more data and features than our celebrated 2006 edition.  
For each state, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rice, you will find a detailed map illustrating the Congressional Districts and Counties served by
our network members, an exhaustive list of demographic and program information on the residents of the state, as well as comprehensive figures on
the operations of each member of our network.  New to this year’s edition is the Comparative Dashboard that begins each state layout in this section.  
The Dashboard is meant to be a visual tool that quickly communicates to the reader the state’s ranking in comparison to all others among six important
indicators of hunger and poverty.
The Almanac of Hunger and
Poverty in America 2007
Now Available