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How to help: Where the hungry can find food — and others can give — as SNAP benefits cut off

With funding for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program running out Nov. 1 due to the ongoing government shutdown, Bay Area families who rely on the assistance to keep their families fed may have to turn to nonprofits and food banks to fill the empty plates on their tables.

The SNAP program provides food for 5.5 million low-income Californians, providing about $785 for a family of three each month to purchase food, seeds and plants. CalFresh, California’s version of the assistance program, serves more than half a million people across the Bay Area.

RELATED: Which restaurants will give free meals because of SNAP cutoff

To fill the federal funding gaps, some state and local governments are providing funding or services to their residents. Other programs that provide supplementary income for food such as Women, Infants and Children — or WIC — remain open during the government shutdown. As the demand for food surges, these foods banks are also asking community members who are able to donate.

Several Bay Area restaurants and food trucks have also announced plans to provide free or discounted meals to children or families who are SNAP recipients, including Tony & Alba’s Pizza and Pasta in San Jose and Monster Pho in Oakland.

Here’s a list of food banks and organizations that can help Bay Area residents get the food they need — and that are accepting donations to continuing assisting the community during the SNAP cutoff.

South Bay

East Bay

Other

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