Glide gets much of its food supply from the SF-Marin Food Bank, which itself has been dealing with a surge in demand for food assistance. Pre-pandemic, the food bank was serving around 32,000 households, and although demand has waned from the peak of the pandemic, it’s still serving 55,000 households.
Barbara Abbott, the vice president of supply chain for the SF-Marin Food Bank, said the nonprofit is struggling with the same forces affecting its clients as well as local restaurants. Unlike a for-profit business, however, it cannot raise its prices. As the holidays grow near, the scale of need is coming into stark relief.
“To be quite honest, we were relieved that we could even find the meat, the whole chickens that we were looking for, because there’s a huge shortage right now of chickens and of turkeys,” Abbott said. “We’ve never seen anything like this, and I think if you talk to consumers, you’ll hear the same thing.”
The proof is in the prices. Abbott said last year the organization spent around $200,000 on holiday chickens. This year, the cost is coming in at more than $400,000. The cost of eggs, another staple protein for the food bank, has risen from $1.50 a dozen to $2.60 over that same time.