“They’ve got nowhere to go and they’re hungry. We’ve never seen a crisis like this.”

What happens when a community already more disadvantaged than most is hit by a natural disaster? In this story from the frontline, Silvana, a volunteer cook from one of Foodbank’s Member Charities, shares her reflections on her town’s worst crisis in living memory.

When devastating floods hit Caboolture, many people were already barely keeping afloat. There was the rising cost of living, along with job losses caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. Rent and house prices had also skyrocketed, even pushing some people into homelessness.

Silvana is a volunteer cook at Foodbank’s Member Charity, Caboolture Community Action. Before the floods, up to 200 people living with disadvantage would come to her for free hot meals every week to keep their hunger at bay. She and the other volunteers would also pack and deliver hampers to families struggling to keep food on the table.

When the flood came, it amplified the adversity like never before. The flood waters damaged homes and threatened lives. And after the water receded, many people discovered their homes were now inhabitable. All their possessions – including food – had been destroyed. Few people were left untouched.

“The floods have affected people from all walks of life. We’ve had people coming to us hungry who were well off before. One lovely family came in after the floods. The mum and dad had jobs and the kids were doing well in school. But they’d lost everything and were now living in their car.” – Silvana

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To make things worse, the charity’s op shop that helps fund the food and essentials, had flooded. It had to close, so there was little money to run the food service.

“People were coming to us saying ‘I’m hungry. I haven’t eaten today. I haven’t had a hot meal. Could you please heat us something up?’ It was heartbreaking.” – Silvana

At this overwhelming time, a lifeline came. Because of your generous donations to the Foodbank Queensland Flood Appeal, we were able to provide Caboolture Community Action with additional emergency food. It was such a relief for Silvana and her colleagues to know they could keep those people most in need fed, so they could focus on the mop up and rebuilding their lives.

Foodbank provided Silvana and the team with key staples like rice, pasta, baked beans and other canned foods and UHT milk, as well as ready-to-eat frozen casseroles and curries for flood-affected locals to microwave and eat at their emergency accommodation. Caboolture Community Action were now able to pack more crisis hampers, which people gratefully received.

“It’s a sad and happy time. Sad because these people were already struggling to pay the rent, and now they’ve lost everything, including their furniture and bedding. But happy because we are able to go out and provide some comfort, giving them hot meals, a hamper, a hug and a conversation.” – Silvana

Silvana wants Foodbank’s supports to know how thankful the Caboolture Community Action team are of the support provided to their community when it was severely impacted by flooding.

Caboolture Community Action began as a small barbeque in the park for the homeless and now we are providing over 20,000 meals and hampers a year. I feel grateful, thankful and blessed that Foodbank’s donors are helping us support our fellow community members who are living with severe hardship.” – Silvana

Your generosity helps Foodbank provide emergency food and groceries to frontline charities across the state, like Caboolture Community Action, to help local families get back on their feet.

Every $1 you donate provides two nutritious meals to someone facing hunger. Thank you for making a difference.

If you are a Queensland charity,  Foodbank Queensland membership is a great way to support your food relief projects, offering your organisation a reliable source of food and groceries all year round.

If you are in a position to help Foodbank Queensland provide more food across the state to support Queenslanders in need, please consider joining the fight against hunger as a regular giver.

 

Sunny Queen Eggs are feeding hungry Aussies!

 

We are so egg-cited to see these purple eggs in store! Foodbank’s valued partner, Sunny Queen Australia, has launched an incredible initiative in support of Foodbanks across the country to feed families in need. Reach for a purple Sunny Queen egg carton on your next grocery shop and feel egg-cellent about supporting families who need a helping hand.

“These purple egg cartons strengthen Sunny Queen’s long history of supporting the wonderful work Foodbank does. Unfortunately for many Australian families, stretching the weekly income so that they are able to buy enough food to properly feed everyone in their household is getting much tougher with rising costs of living. Sunny Queen is proud to support Foodbank in the fight against hunger. Our new egg pack is another way we can work together to support families in need. Sunny Queen’s GM of Marketing, Isabelle Dench.

This cause-related campaign is an eggs-tension of Sunny Queen’s year-round support, which sees Australia’s most-loved egg brand donate around 1,000 eggs per day to Foodbank. In less than eight weeks, more than 240,000 egg packs have been sold in support of Foodbank. What an incredible community achievement! We couldn’t do what we do without our wonderful supporters. Thank you to everyone who has bought a purple egg pack since the launch. If you haven’t yet, there is still time with the campaign running until December 2022.

Read more about Sunny Queen here: www.sunnyqueen.com.au

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ANNE’S STORY

Thanks to Foodbank Supporters, this struggling mum received a knock on the door that changed everything. 

The scary truth is it only takes one setback to push a person into the nightmare of hunger…  It happened to Queensland mum Anne. She had a stable job and had so many plans for her young children.

Through no fault of her own, Anne was pushed below the poverty line after suffering a serious injury and was forced to skip meals to make ends meet. The young mum suffered the loss of her speech and ability to walk. With no means of income and only a small disability pension, it was often only enough to pay for her therapy and medications.

Whenever she could, Anne scraped together enough for noodles, Weet-Bix, or bananas. Many times though, she’d simply go to bed early to avoid the burning hunger or drink warm water to fill herself up. Not having enough to eat made Anne feel worthless.

“Sometimes I wouldn’t eat for days, as I wanted to save what little bit of money I had left, to provide for my kids during their visits. I was often starving, but my babies would always be happy, so I decided it was worth it.” – Anne

Thanks to generous supporters like you, Anne received a knock on the door that changed everything. A food hamper was placed in her arms.

“It was overwhelming. In the hamper was everything to stock my pantry full. Things like flour, sugar, cereal, spaghetti, and tinned goods. Thinking about it still makes me smile.” – Anne

As the cost of living continues to rise, more and more Queensland families like Anne’s are experiencing desperate hardship and are struggling to put food on the table. We need your help to get food to families like Anne’s who need it most.

“Getting help to feed myself has made me realise good people are out there. Some of the nicest ones are strangers who support the work of Foodbank. It feels so good to be able to eat. Thank you!” – Anne

Every $1 you donate will provide two nutritious meals to someone facing hunger like Anne.

*This is a real Queensland story of hardship. Anne’s name is changed to her protect identity.

HELP HUNGRY QUEENSLAND FAMILIES LIKE ANNE’S

Thank you for giving food and hope to flood affected Queenslanders

Flood Infographic 3In early March 2022, Foodbank Queensland launched a Flood Appeal to help get emergency food and drinking water to flood affected Queenslanders in desperate need. Sadly, many Foodbank Member Charities were contacting us for more food, well above our standard supply volumes, due to an increased community need, flooded food stock and damaged facilities.

That’s why your support was so important. Thanks to our generous supporters, more than 220,000 meals have been supplied to the impacted regions across our state over five months, from March to July 2022.

As Queensland’s largest and most connected hunger relief charity, Foodbank continues to have a vital role to play. We know that flood recovery will take many months, and sadly for some families, home repairs will span years. We will continue working hard with our frontline Member Charities to support these communities with additional food supplies to meet demand, thanks to the support of our donors and the tireless work of many volunteers.

In these times of crisis, we are so grateful to have your support!

 

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Thanks to you, Andrea had food for her children!

 

When the devastating floods arrived in her hometown, Andrea and her children lost everything – Andrea’s family home was destroyed, and all their food and belongings were ruined. As a young single mum, Andrea didn’t know how she would feed her children. Fortunately, thanks to your generosity, Andrea was able to access emergency food from a local Foodbank Member Charity.

“I’d lost everything. Getting help to feed my family gave me hope, trust and faith.” – Andrea*

*This is a real Queensland story of hardship. Andrea’s name is changed to her protect identity.

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Member Charities could keep serving meals!

 

“The floods have affected people from all walks of life. We’ve had people coming to us hungry who were well off before. I feel grateful, thankful and blessed that Foodbank’s donors are helping us support our fellow community members who are living with severe hardship.” – Silvana, Caboolture Community Action

Your generosity helps Foodbank provide emergency food and groceries to frontline charities across the state, like Caboolture Community Action, to support Queenslanders experiencing a crisis.

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You helped flooded communities pull through!

 

With families forced to evacuate homes and food destroyed in the floods, requests for food relief skyrocketed. Thanks to your support, Foodbank could supply Member Charities like Shiloh Christian Care with emergency food for all those going hungry.

“After people had endured days of bad news, getting an emergency food hamper told them somebody out there loves them and cares about them. When you feel like you’re so alone, surrounded by flood waters and rain and all that scary stuff, it’s such a powerful thing.” – Pastor Phil, Shiloh Christian Care (pictured). Click here to read the full story.

Mission critical for Foodbank Queensland amid rising costs 

1st September 2022

Cost of living increases are impacting the most vulnerable across Queensland with Foodbank Queensland revealing more than half the state’s food relief charities are struggling to feed families in need of support.  

Already providing additional emergency food supplies to 67 food relief charities this year, Foodbank Queensland is supporting a staggering 50 per cent more people on a weekly basis than before the pandemic.  

To support struggling food relief charities and families in need, Foodbank Queensland is urging Queenslanders to participate in its annual Hunger Drive campaign from 1–30 September 2022. 

Foodbank Queensland chief executive Sara Harrup said with thousands of Queensland children and adults going hungry each year, the most vulnerable are often those who walk past you every day.   

“Food insecurity doesn’t discriminate and affects Queenslanders of all ages, backgrounds, living situations, employment status and location,” she said. 

“In the face of rising costs of living, we’re seeing a spike in demand for our vital food relief services, as more Queenslanders turn to Foodbank’s Member Charities to help put food on the table.  

“Very often it can be your neighbour or friend who is struggling and too embarrassed or ashamed to speak out and ask for help.  

“With more than 13 per cent of Australia’s population living below the poverty line, and food relief organisations across the state facing difficulties in meeting growing demand, it’s critical the community bands together to provide as much as we can to support those in need.”  

During September, a long-term donor of Foodbank Queensland will be matching all donations made to the Hunger Drive. That means, every dollar donated to the Hunger Drive will generate four meals to help fight hunger and provide much needed food relief to charities and families who need it most.  

Queenslanders can get involved with the Hunger Drive throughout September by setting a fundraising challenge at home, schools, and workplaces. This can include donating your monthly coffee fund, giving up your favourite food or committing to a fitness goal.  

For more information on Hunger Drive or to get involved, visit: www.hungerdrive.org.au  

 

-ENDS 

 

About Foodbank Queensland 

Foodbank in Queensland is the state’s largest hunger relief charity, operating on a scale that makes it crucial to the work of the frontline charities who are feeding vulnerable Queenslanders. 

Foodbank Queensland sources millions of kilograms of food from farmers, manufacturers and retailers, and distributes this food to hundreds of Food Relief Charities and School Breakfast Programs state-wide. 

Foodbank Queensland’s community impact: 

  • Feeding 48,000 Queenslanders in need, plus 33,000 school children per week 
  • Supporting 300 Food Relief Charities, and 300 School Breakfast Programs each year 
  • Sourcing 14 million kilograms of food, distributed as 25 million meals equivalent each year 
  • Reducing landfill CO2-e emissions by 26 million kilograms each year. 

For more information on Foodbank Queensland, visit www.foodbank.org.au 

 

Media enquiries

Zoe Templeton
Marketing & Communications Specialist
Foodbank Queensland
P: 07 3395 8422
E: zoe@foodbankqld.org.au

“The flood left our community like a warzone. It was harrowing”

Pastor Phil will never forget the devastation that severe flooding brought to his hometown of Goodna, in Ipswich.

Houses under water. Cars overturned. Power poles knocked over and roads completely submerged. The destruction caused by the recent floods will haunt Goodna residents, including Phil Kennedy, Senior Pastor of Shiloh Church, for decades.

Shiloh Christian Care, the charity arm of Shiloh Church, is one of Foodbank’s Member Charities providing vital, ongoing support to local families impacted by the floods.

Floods had come to Goodna before. “Anytime you get heavy rain people get nervous,” says Pastor Phil. But in late February 2022, as the rain settled in and got heavier, the collective mood shifted to panic. Streets that usually weren’t affected by intense rain were flooding. “That’s when the evacuation centres began opening and it spiralled from there,” he recalls.

As homes were destroyed and families displaced, requests for food relief skyrocketed. “It was a crisis and people didn’t have a Plan B in place from a food perspective,” explains Pastor Phil. Either their food had been destroyed in the floods, or they’d been forced to evacuate so quickly they couldn’t bring food.

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“We had people needing food relief who were already living below the poverty line when their houses went under. But there were also people who normally wouldn’t need our services, but due to road closures they couldn’t leave their street and couldn’t get to food and water.” – Pastor Phil

Fortunately, because Shiloh Christian Care was on high ground, it didn’t suffer flood damage. The food relief service could still operate. Pastor Phil had to rapidly recruit an army of extra volunteers to help pack enough emergency food hampers for all those going hungry. But unfortunately, there wasn’t enough food to help the number of people in crisis.

Thanks to generous people like you, who kindly donated to Foodbank Queensland’s Flood Appeal, Shiloh Christian Care received additional emergency food supplies to help families in need, and it made an extraordinary difference.

In a disaster like this, when people are left homeless and don’t have access to refrigeration or heat to cook, the right type of food is critical. Pastor Phil explains that many people had only camp stoves to cook on, so they needed food requiring minimal preparation. Things like fruit and vegetables and two-minute noodles were valued. And food that could be eaten on the go for energy in the clean-up, like muesli bars, was very appreciated too.

It was vital that Shiloh Christian Care got emergency hampers to those people most in need, and social media proved critical for success. “People would tag us in Facebook posts and say, ‘Hey, people on this street or that street are struggling’,” says Pastor Phil.

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The food you helped fund reached people of all ages. A retirement village was completely cut off, and had no electricity, so a lot of their food had spoiled. “We got permission to go through the blockade and deliver food to them,” says Pastor Phil. But because vehicles weren’t able to access many local streets, much of the food delivery was on foot. “We’d just knock on doors and say to people, ‘Hey, how you doing? Are you okay? Do you need anything? Do you need food?’ And a lot of these people really needed food,” he said.

Pastor Phil wants you to know that the food you helped his team deliver not only filled hungry bellies – but it did so much more. “For families who had young children, you gave them an emergency hamper, but also dignity, as they could now provide a meal for their children,” he says. “You gave people hope too. After people had endured days of bad news, getting an emergency food hamper told them somebody out there loves them and cares about them. When you feel like you’re so alone, surrounded by flood waters and rain and all that scary stuff, it’s such a powerful thing.”

“I met so many people who had been holding it together and been strong for everybody else around them. And when we gave them an emergency food hamper, they would just break down and cry. All the emotion they had been holding just spilled out in that moment.” – Pastor Phil

Your generosity helps Foodbank provide emergency food and groceries to frontline charities across the state, like Shiloh Christian Care, to help local families get back on their feet.

Every $1 you donate provides two nutritious meals to someone facing hunger. Thank you for making a difference.

If you are a Queensland charity,  Foodbank Queensland membership is a great way to support your food relief projects, offering your organisation a reliable source of food and groceries all year round. 

If you are in a position to help Foodbank Queensland provide more food across the state to support Queenslanders in need, please consider joining the fight against hunger as a regular giver. 

STACEY’S STORY

All Stacey wants is to give her son a better life, even if it means going without meals herself.

Stacey didn’t think she’d ever have to ask for help – let alone food. Stacey’s proud and hardworking. She pays her own way and is doing her best to give her son a happy, healthy childhood. And she’s doing it alone – without any financial support.

When Stacey’s son Blake was just three years old, her relationship with his father ended badly. She had to raise Blake completely on her own, without any financial support from his father. Stacey and Blake moved to a rural Queensland town to be closer to her mum. In such a small place, Stacey was thrilled to find an admin job at a local supermarket with hours to fit Blake’s schooling. It was a second chance for this hardworking mum, who had big dreams of a secure, happy future for Blake. But few of Stacey’s colleagues knew her secret: she would often go without meals to make ends meet.

“My son knows we’re poor. I think he gets sick of me saying it all the time. I feel like I’ve failed because these are basic needs that I should be able to cover. It’s not something I tell people – I just internalise it and keep on going,” says Stacey.

Stacey is grateful to have a job, when so many others in Queensland’s regional towns are without one. But like many low-earning single parents, she barely scrapes by. After paying her rent, bills and for Blake’s school expenses, there is little money left for food. And what she has goes to Blake, ensuring he has proper school lunches and enough for dinner.

“If I had a bill coming up, I’d usually just have a coffee for breakfast, and go without dinner for a few nights. It just had to be done. Blake needs to do well, so everything goes to him so that he can flourish. As depressing as it sounds, I just want to survive,” says Stacey.

When COVID-19 hit, things went from bad to worse. During the pandemic lockdown, Blake had to be home-schooled, and Stacey used up most of her holiday and sick leave to care for him. Then when the next school holidays arrived, she had to take unpaid leave to be with Blake, putting huge pressure on her budget.

“I just wouldn’t eat. I’d distract myself from the hunger by watching TV, playing with Blake or cleaning obsessively,” she says.

At this lonely, hungry time, something wonderful happened one day when Stacey took Blake to a family fun day. A volunteer from one of Foodbank’s Member Charities was reaching out to local families in crisis. Stacey learnt she was able to access regular Foodbank hampers, to help ease some of the pressure – a gift that she’s grateful for to this day.

“Going hungry feels hopeless. It’s terrifying sometimes. It was just such a relief to know I could receive a Foodbank hamper each month – it makes such a difference,” says Stacey.

Today, Stacey feels incredibly grateful for the food hamper she now receives each month – it’s much easier to sleep at night, knowing she can eat tomorrow.

“Foodbank hampers have a trickle-down effect. Blake is more focused at school, and everything at my job works out a little better, because I’m not stressed all the time. With the money I can now save, I can afford swimming lessons for Blake, just like his friends,” says Stacey.

Many single parents like Stacey know what it’s like to go hungry to keep their children fed. Your generosity will give food and hope to hungry families throughout Queensland.

Every $1 you donate will provide two nutritious meals to someone facing hunger like Stacey.

Stacey is a real Queenslander in need. You can help.

HELP HUNGRY FAMILIES LIKE STACEY’S.

Harvest Angels helps Queenslanders in need with vital food relief 

Harvest Angels is one of Foodbank Queensland’s incredible Member Charities providing vital support to many struggling families in the Somerset Region and beyond.

Located in Lowood, a rural Queensland town and home to approximately 4,100 people, Harvest Angels offers free and discounted food, including low-cost food hampers, to anyone needing a helping hand.

All hampers are prepared by volunteers and include a generous box of fresh fruit and vegetables, bread, dry goods, pantry items, and a bag of cold and frozen items, with delivery available to anyone in need. Harvest Angels also runs an Op Shop, selling clothes, shoes, toys, and books, where families can . The charity also provides furniture, appliances, kitchenware, and linen. Many of these items are provided free to locals in desperate need.

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The Somerset Region was one of many that were hit hard by the floods. Sadly, Harvest Angels has been inundated with requests for support, seeing people coming from as far as Toowoomba, Lockyer Valley, Esk, Gatton, Laidley and Ipswich for much needed food relief following the floods.

Lisa Smith, the President and Founder of Harvest Angels, said the charity would be supporting flood-affected families for many months through their long journey to recovery.

“With the support of Foodbank, we have been able to provide a huge amount of food to people – so much more than we normally could. I estimate we are feeding approximately 400 to 500 extra people per week since the floods,” she said.

Hundreds of local families currently seeking support from Harvest Angels have never needed food relief before. Unfortunately, the impacts of the floods and the increase in cost of living is making it difficult for struggling families to make ends meet.

One community, in the Somerset Region, facing extremely difficult times is a disadvantaged community in the rural town of Atkinsons Dam. Foodbank Queensland and Harvest Angels, together with Foodbank Member Charities Ipswich Foodbarn, Lockyer Food Pantry and FareShare, have been collaborating on a project to get emergency food and ready-made meals to the families in Atkinsons Dam who were impacted by the floods. In one month, we have supplied six full pallets of FareShare meals and 60 pallets of essential groceries to provide much-needed support.

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Thanks to their team of volunteers, Harvest Angels has helped distribute 40 pallets of essential food to the local families in Atkinsons Dam. Lisa said many of the families were impacted by the floods, displaced from their homes, and were incredibly grateful for the support.

We took so much food and it all went. We also managed to get some pet food out there which was urgently needed,” she said.

Harvest Angels was founded in 2011 by Lisa Smith after facing hardships of her own and learning that there was no local support network. In 2011, while in a domestic violence relationship and struggling with the challenges and expenses that came with her disability, Lisa then lost everything when her home was destroyed in the floods. For the first time, she was forced to reach out for help. Unable to find any local relief services and knowing many others in need of food support, Lisa founded Harvest Angels, using money from her Centrelink payment, she bought a second-hand fridge, freezer and food stock. With the help of generous volunteers, Lisa and the Harvest Angels team are now helping hundreds of families facing hardship every week.

Foodbank is proud to have been working with Harvest Angels since 2014, to ensure Queenslanders in need have access to essential food when they need it most.

Lisa said 95% of the food Harvest Angels provides is from Foodbank Queensland, and in between their weekly visits to Foodbank, they collect fresh bread from the local Coles to top up.

Foodbank is our backbone, without the help and support we have been receiving, we would not be able to feed any of these people,” she said.

If you are a Queensland charity,  Foodbank Queensland membership is a great way to support your food relief projects, offering your organisation a reliable source of food and groceries all year round. 

If you are in a position to help Foodbank Queensland provide more food across the state to support Queenslanders in need, please consider joining the fight against hunger as a regular giver. 

 

MELISSA’S STORY

When everything that mattered got ripped away, Foodbank supporters gave Melissa hope.

After enduring years of domestic violence, while fighting to keep her family together, one particular incident saw Melissa left with a devastating brain injury. At just 36 years old, and with 5 children to protect, Melissa suffered the loss of her speech, her ability to walk and even take care of herself. Worst of all, she felt powerless to protect her children and because of her injury, they couldn’t stay with her.

Melissa’s ex-partner gained custody of their five-year-old twin boys and three teenage girls. Although Melissa was no longer able to work or drive, she still had to scrape together money to pay the family’s bills. She was desperate to regain custody of her children, who she feared were at risk.

Melissa’s ex was soon imprisoned, and she was having intense therapy to learn to speak again. By then, she was living in public housing, on a disability pension. As her brain injury caused many limitations, she had an NDIS support worker and her children were living with relatives. She saw them for two-hour visits each Friday – the most precious time of the week.

As Melissa was regaining her speech, she hoped to get a job. She wanted to get her children back and create a stable life. But constant headaches, brain fuzz, anxiety and communication struggles made it impossible. The cost of medications was huge, and every other cent went to food for her children. After years of unimaginable trauma, Melissa was now going hungry.

“Sometimes I wouldn’t eat for days, as I wanted to save what little bit of money I had left to provide for my kids during their visits. I was often starving, but my babies would always be happy, so I decided it was worth it.” – Melissa

Melissa was living on noodles, Weet-Bix, and bananas – all cheap and filling. Her stomach began to shrink so much she’d feel sick if she ate. In those tough years, Melissa would also try and make food last by hiding it where it was hard to access. She’d go to bed early, to avoid the burning hunger, or drink warm water to fill up.

Not having enough to eat made Melissa feel worthless. “I’d wake in the middle of the night, starving. I was so hungry all the time and I felt scummy. When I’d walk past a café and see people who could afford to eat there, I’d think to myself ‘they have it all’.” – Melissa

Last year, things felt grim. The hardship was the “worst of the worst”, Melissa recalls. But thanks to Foodbank supporters like you, the struggling mum received a knock on the door that changed everything. A food hamper was placed in her arms.

“It was overwhelming. I gave the man who delivered the hamper a card, to say thank you. I didn’t feel like I deserved this. In the hamper was everything to stock my pantry full. Things like flour, sugar, cereal, spaghetti, and tinned goods. The hamper was so well thought out. Thinking about it still makes me smile.” – Melissa

Melissa now receives food support more regularly. The support and nourishment Melissa receives thanks to generous people like you is helping her move on with her recovery, reclaim her voice and build a safe life. She still has a long healing journey ahead but was overjoyed recently to regain custody of two of her children, her twin boys. Melissa has also been busy handing out her resume in town. She is proud of how far she has come and can’t wait to get work. “I know what I used to be capable of. I’ve been told I can’t do it. But I’ve done it.” – Melissa

“After what I went through with my violent ex, I felt overwhelmed and distraught for a long time, thinking everyone is bad. But getting help to feed myself has made me realise good people are out there. Some of the nicest ones are strangers who support the work of Foodbank. It feels so good to be able to eat. Thank you!” – Melissa

Your generosity will help families like Melissa’s receive the essential groceries they need to get back on their feet.

Every $1 you donate will provide two nutritious meals to someone facing hunger, like Melissa. Thank you for making a difference.

HELP HUNGRY QUEENSLAND FAMILIES LIKE MELISSA’S

Foodbank Queensland Plea To Support Flood Victims

Today, Foodbank Queensland, the state’s largest hunger relief charity, has called out for urgent help to get emergency food supplies to Queenslanders hit by the floods.

Sara Harrup, Foodbank Queensland CEO, said the charity was working hard to get food and clean water out to the communities in desperate need.

“Today we launched the Foodbank Queensland Flood Appeal 2022 and are calling out for help to ensure Queenslanders experiencing hardship have access to emergency food supplies and the clean water they desperately need,” she said.

“With many frontline food relief charities having been flooded and now unable to support their communities, Foodbank is prioritising getting more food and non-food emergency items to these areas, as they have little or no supplies remaining, and heightened demand.

“These prioritised regions include Caboolture, Ipswich and Logan. Many other charities across Toowoomba, Wide Bay-Burnett and South-east Queensland are also reaching out for urgent support. In these regions alone, Foodbank Queensland supports more than 250 charities each week.

“We are doing everything we can to get food out, but we need your help – 100% of all donations will be used by Foodbank Queensland to get emergency food and water to those who need it the most as quickly as possible.

“This is not the first time our state has seen homes and businesses destroyed, but the one thing disasters bring out is the Queensland spirit – our communities are resilient and will rally together to help bring hope to those who have lost everything,” Ms Harrup said.

Funds donated to the Foodbank Queensland Flood Appeal 2022 will cover food, freight and resources to deliver to the hardest hit areas around Queensland in the coming weeks.

Thousands of Queensland residents have been evacuated, and major flood warnings are still in place for the Mary, Logan, Brisbane and Bremer rivers and Warrill Creek.

To donate to the Foodbank Queensland Flood Appeal, please visit www.foodbank.org.au.

 

ENDS

 

For media enquiries, contact Zoe Templeton, Marketing and Communications Manager:

M: 0435 133 601

E: zoe@foodbankqld.org.au