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Mobile Pantry Moves To Walnut Hill Community Church In Bethel For Today

BETHEL, Conn. -- The mobile food pantry in Bethel, which supplies lower-income, working families in Fairfield County with free fresh food, has been relocated for today, Jan. 25. 

The United Way of Western Connecticut in partnership with the Connecticut Food Bank is setting up a mobile food pantry in Bethel to make it easier for lower-income, working families in Fairfield County to have access to free fresh food.

The United Way of Western Connecticut in partnership with the Connecticut Food Bank is setting up a mobile food pantry in Bethel to make it easier for lower-income, working families in Fairfield County to have access to free fresh food.

Photo Credit: contributed
Carolyn LaFleur, Community Impact Coordinator for the United Way of Western Connecticut in Danbury.

Carolyn LaFleur, Community Impact Coordinator for the United Way of Western Connecticut in Danbury.

Photo Credit: Contributed

The mobile food pantry will be at Walnut Hill Community Church, 156 Walnut Hill Road, Bethel. That is due to snow in the parking area at the usual site at UConn Extension. 

The distribution of free, fresh food begins at 5:30 pm. Wednesday. No documents are needed. It runs until 6:30 p.m

The food pantry — run thanks to the United Way of Western Connecticut and the Connecticut Food Bank — is held on the fourth Wednesday of every month.

Volunteers will help people choose the food that they want.

Unlike the nonperishable food found at typical food pantries, the mobile food pantry provides fresh food such as vegetables, fruit, dairy products and other items.

The food will set up on a table, and anyone is welcome to attend. No identification is necessary. The mobile pantry can serve up to 300 people each time it arrives.

“The emphasis is on fresh food because it’s a healthier alternative to what you might get at a food pantry or what you may get at the grocery store,” said Carolyn LaFleur, community impact coordinator for the United Way of Western Connecticut in Danbury.

According to LaFleur, the mobile food pantry is designed for what is referred to as the “ALICE” population, which stands for Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed.

“The ALICE population is made up of people who are working full time but still have trouble paying their bills,” LaFleur said. “We have found that for a lot of people in this area, the cost of housing and childcare can be so high that even if you’re working hard, after paying rent, childcare and utilities, there is not enough money left to pay for food.  

"These people are living paycheck to paycheck."

This food pantry has been specifically set up so that people who are working during the day can have access to it, she said.

All the food at the pantry has either been donated by the Connecticut Food Bank, grocery stores or private donors.

“We want to empathize that we set up this food pantry in a central location and not in downtown Danbury," she said. "We are providing food for people throughout the Greater Danbury area."

Next month, the Mobile Food Pantry should return to its usual location at the Fairfield County Agricultural Extension Site, 67 Stony Hill Road, Bethel. It runs from 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. on the fourth Wednesday of every month.

For more information on the mobile food pantry, to donate food or to volunteer with this effort, call LaFleur at 203-297-6307.

Those who come to the mobile food pantry are asked to bring large, reusable bags.

For more information on the United Way of Western Connecticut Danbury Food Collaborative, click here.  To donate food directly to the Connecticut Food Bank, click here.

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