Neighbors Leading the Way: Celebrating Our Food CARE Council and Peer Navigators

July 13, 2026

Several graduates of the second Food CARE Council cohort

Ending hunger in San Francisco and Marin takes more than distributing food. It takes changing the systems and structures that created the hunger crisis in the first place, and it takes neighbors who have faced hunger helping to lead the way. That is the idea behind the Food Bank’s peer leadership programs, where neighbors turn their own experience into change, some by connecting others to services, others by pushing for policies that can end hunger.  

On a sunny June afternoon in the Welcome Center of our Pennsylvania Avenue warehouse, a gathering was held to honor two graduating cohorts of the Food Bank’s peer leadership programs: the 13  members in the second Food CARE Council and the eight inaugural Peer Navigators.  

Advocacy rooted in experience 

The Food CARE Council brings together neighbors who have experienced hunger firsthand. It’s part of Seeding Change, the Food Bank’s three-year effort to address hunger at its roots. Over a few hours together each month, members learn the ropes of advocacy and public speaking, get a feel for how policy actually gets made and put their own experience to work on the Food Bank’s policy agenda. 

This year’s group leaned into community, opening every meeting with the same simple question: How is everyone doing? 

“This year we focused less on pushing every detail of how a bill becomes law, and more on gathering, talking and sharing what our neighbors are seeing,” said Policy and Advocacy Manager Alex Raffanti, who leads the program. “We found the same issues come up no matter where you live. That’s what brings us together.” 

Members took that shared vision to Sacramento for California Hunger Action Day, where they and some Peer Navigators sat down with their own legislators and wrote postcards for their neighbors. 

When we asked Gianna, a student who relies on Gator Groceries, San Francisco State University’s community food site run in partnership with the Food Bank, what graduation meant to her, she didn’t mention policy at all. 

“It means I found a second family for myself,” she said. “I found my community, and I found what I’m really passionate about, which is ending hunger.” 

Jessica joined the Council after being laid off from a job of 27 years, losing her health insurance the same day. Advocacy, it turned out, came easier than she expected. 

“I would never have gone to Sacramento or written a postcard on my own,” she said. “But the message that came through, over and over, was that your voice matters. Not everybody can speak up. So if you can, you should.” 

Guadalupe and a select group of the inaugural Peer Navigator graduates.

Connecting neighbors to more than food 

The same conviction drives our Peer Navigators. Where the Food CARE Council pushes to change policy, the Peer Navigator program helps open pathways to mobility. Peer Navigators use their own experience to connect neighbors with services beyond food. They help neighbors secure stable housing and connect them to rental assistance workshops. They also guide families through energy assistance applications, easing the burden of utility debt. Job searches, childcare and countless other referrals round out their work, each one specifically tailored to that person’s unique needs. 

“While many resources and services are available, navigating them can feel overwhelming and time-consuming when you’re already facing other challenges,” said Bilingual Community Connections Manager Guadalupe Gonzalez, who leads the program. “Our volunteers have helped bridge that gap by providing compassionate, one-on-one support. They have also supported participants with job searches, connected families to childcare resources.” 

Glenn has served as both a Food CARE Council member and a Peer Navigator. Not long ago, a market visitor stopped to thank him for his support — a referral had helped her land a job. 

“Out of the 150 hours my coworkers and I have spent doing this work, that one hour really paid off,” he said. “We brightened a person’s life, and their family’s life.” 

Two paths to the same goal 

Whether they’re meeting a legislator in Sacramento or a neighbor at the market, these cohorts show what happens when the people motivated to end hunger — either by personal experience or dedication to their community — step forward to do so. We’re so proud of this year’s graduates, and we can’t wait to see where they lead next.