SYRACUSE, N.Y. (NCC News) – Saturday’s Syracuse vs. Perdue football game will be an opportunity for Syracuse’s Salvation Army to replenish its’ stash of food.
According to 2020 U.S. Census data, Syracuse has a 30.3% poverty rate. According to the Census Bureau’s 2021 American Community Survey, the poverty rate skyrockets to 41.9% — nearly a 10 percent increase.
The socioeconomic status of many within nearly a third of the city, compounded with rising grocery prices due to inflation, has left shelves in some pantries partially depleted.
Eligible families are only given food once a month at the pantry, but the number of families coming has risen greatly.
“We’ve seen a huge increase, just since July, and that’s about a 200 people a month increase,” Pam Alderman, Supervisor of the Salvation Army of Syracuse Food Pantry said. “We’re serving over 1,000 people a month food at our pantry.”
Some of the lack of food on pantry shelves stems from the summer as well.
“When the schools were closed, the meal sites were closed, that’s when we saw a huge increase as well — families coming in to feed their children before they got back into the food programs,” Alderman said.
The Salvation Army of Syracuse is partnering with Syracuse University to collect items before Saturday’s football game. Alderman told NCC News that rice, pasta, canned fruit, canned vegetables, juice, and oatmeal are among some of the most-needed items on pantry shelves.
“Without the community’s help, we wouldn’t have the food we have,” patron Andrea Flett said.