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    3. Feeding the Gulf Coast
    Feeding the Gulf Coast logo

    Feeding the Gulf Coast

    ActiveFood, Agriculture & Nutrition
    Theodore, ALWebsiteEIN: 63-08219972 filings on record

    About Feeding the Gulf Coast

    This foundation is singularly focused on hunger relief in the Gulf Coast region, providing substantial support directly to food bank member agencies to fight food insecurity. Its giving is mission-driven and operationally focused, channeling large sums to the network of local partners that deliver meals and emergency food assistance. The foundation appears to prioritize scale and reach over diversified grantmaking, concentrating resources where they directly support food distribution and client services.

    Focus Areas

    Regional food bank network support (Gulf Coast/Alabama member agencies)Emergency food distribution and pantry operationsCapacity-building and operational support for frontline hunger-relief partners

    Who They Fund

    food-insecure individuals and familiesresidents of 24 counties in Alabama, Florida, and Mississippilow-income and underserved communities

    Giving Approach

    Highly concentrated giving: very large, repeat grants directed to a single category of beneficiaries (food bank member agencies) rather than a diversified portfolio; funding emphasizes operational/ program support to scale service delivery.

    About Feeding the Gulf Coast

    Feeding the Gulf Coast’s most distinctive recent pattern is its very large support for Food Bank Member Agencies to fight hunger, with grants of $42,973,231 in 2023 and $42,473,679 in 2024. That scale places the organization in an operational role rather than a conventional discretionary grantmaker: it directs substantial resources to the local partners that distribute food, serve meals, and deliver emergency assistance across its service area. The foundation’s work is centered on hunger relief through a regional food bank network. It supports food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters, and other nonprofit emergency food providers, and its programs also extend to child nutrition through afterschool meals and summer meals. The emphasis is on direct food provision, basic needs, and the infrastructure that makes food access possible for children and families. Feeding the Gulf Coast’s recent grants show a narrow, mission-specific approach. The named recipient category in the largest awards is Food Bank Member Agencies, reflecting a pattern of channeling resources through a network rather than scattering smaller grants across many unrelated causes. Its program structure includes agency partnerships and site enrollment for meal programs, which reinforces that its giving is tied to service delivery and food distribution.

    What Feeding the Gulf Coast Funds

    In hunger relief, Feeding the Gulf Coast supports the agency network that distributes food and emergency assistance across Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi. Through the Agency Partner Program and the “Become an Agency Partner” pathway, nonprofit food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters, and similar providers can receive donated and purchased food plus program support. Child nutrition is another clear focus. The foundation operates Afterschool Meals under CACFP, where community organizations such as Boys & Girls Clubs, churches, and schools can become program sites to serve free meals and snacks that meet federal nutrition guidelines. It also runs Summer Meals sites for children during school breaks. School-based food access appears in the Backpack Program and School Pantry work. These programs provide meals and bags or food items for children through schools and community organizations, linking the foundation’s food distribution role to weekday and out-of-school nutrition support.

    How Feeding the Gulf Coast Gives

    The typical grant size is unusually large: p25 is $42,598,567, median is $42,723,455, and p75 is $42,848,343. The two recent grants on file are close in size, which suggests a highly standardized funding pattern rather than a wide spread of award amounts. The available grants point to recurring support for the same recipient category across consecutive years, with Food Bank Member Agencies funded in both 2023 and 2024. The foundation is not a general-purpose funder; it operates through programmatic channels tied to food distribution and meal service. It also accepts unsolicited participation for several active programs, including agency partnership and site enrollment pathways.

    Financial Snapshot

    Annual Giving

    $42.5M

    Total Assets

    $29.4M

    Total Revenue

    $57.5M

    Total Expenses

    $56.4M

    Typical Grant Size

    Most grants fall between $42.6M and $42.8M, with a median of $42.7M.

    25th Percentile

    $42.6M

    Median

    $42.7M

    75th Percentile

    $42.8M

    Geographic Reach

    Leadership

    Michael Ledger

    Deep Analysis

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    Funding Style

    direct service deliveryin-kind food distributionnutrition-focused assistanceregional/area-restricted support

    Notable grantees: Food Bank Member Agencies (Feeding the Gulf Coast network)

    Topics

    hunger reliefnutritionally balanced food provisionfood bank/food pantry resupplyemergency/short-term food assistanceregional (AL/FL/MS) food distribution

    Where Feeding the Gulf Coast Makes Grants

    Grant recipients are located in the US, with the recent grants list showing 100% domestic giving. The service footprint is regional rather than national: active programs cover Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi, including the Central Gulf Coast in child nutrition work. Named site and partner pathways extend across those three states, and some programs specify Florida or the Central Gulf Coast more narrowly. The recent grants themselves are directed to Food Bank Member Agencies rather than a city-specific recipient, which fits a network-based model of distribution across the Gulf Coast service area.

    Frequently Asked Questions About Feeding the Gulf Coast

    What kinds of organizations does Feeding the Gulf Coast support?

    It supports food pantries, soup kitchens, shelters, schools, churches, Boys & Girls Clubs, childcare providers, community centers, faith-based organizations, and other nonprofit emergency food providers. Its programs are built around food distribution, emergency food assistance, and child nutrition sites.

    Does Feeding the Gulf Coast accept unsolicited participation in its programs?

    Yes. The active programs listed for agency partnership and child nutrition site enrollment all accept unsolicited participation, including the Agency Partner Program, Become an Agency Partner, Afterschool Meals CACFP site enrollment, Summer Meals site partnership, and school-based program enrollment.

    What is the typical grant size?

    The grant-size distribution is very concentrated: p25 is $42,598,567, median is $42,723,455, and p75 is $42,848,343. The recent grants also cluster tightly around that level, with awards of $42,973,231 in 2023 and $42,473,679 in 2024.

    Where does Feeding the Gulf Coast focus its giving geographically?

    Its programs serve Alabama, Florida, and Mississippi, with some child nutrition work specified for the Central Gulf Coast. The recent grants on file are all in the US, and the foundation’s active program descriptions repeatedly point to that Gulf Coast service area.

    What are the foundation’s main focus areas?

    Its main focus areas are hunger relief, emergency food distribution, child nutrition, and support for food bank member agencies. Program names and descriptions point to agency partnership, afterschool meals, summer meals, backpack support, and school pantry work.

    Latest 990 Filing

    2024

    Source: IRS Form 990-PF, fiscal year 2024.

    Open Grant Opportunities

    Current and upcoming funding from Feeding the Gulf Coast that your nonprofit may be able to apply for.

    Open nowRolling / open intakeAward: Varies

    Child Nutrition Programs

    child nutritionfood insecurityschool meals+2 more

    Who can apply: Program sites are typically schools or community organizations serving children; Afterschool Meals and Summer Meals require state site applications, and the organization must meet program requirements.

    View & apply
    Open now

    Afterschool Meal Program / CACFP (Site Application 2025-26)

    Child nutritionAfter-school meal serviceCACFP

    Who can apply: Organizations operating an afterschool program that will serve children are eligible to apply. Applicants must supply required attachments (health/inspection documentation, program description, letters of support, background check statement where applicable) and comply with CACFP regulations.

    View & apply
    Open nowRolling / open intake

    Agency Partner Program

    food distributionemergency food assistancecapacity support

    Who can apply: Must be a nonprofit or community organization providing emergency food assistance or related direct services within Feeding the Gulf Coast’s service area; must complete agency partnership application and meet agency partner requirements.

    View & apply
    Open nowRolling / open intake

    Child Nutrition Programs – Summer Meals (SFSP) Site Enrollment and School-Based Programs (Backpack & School Pantry)

    summer meal provisionbackpack food programsschool pantry support+1 more

    Who can apply: Schools and community organizations serving children; schools typically identified by teachers/counselors for Backpack/School Pantry. Summer Meals sites must meet SFSP requirements and complete state-specific site applications.

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    Deadlines and eligibility are summarized from public sources and may change — always confirm the details on the funder's official application page before applying.

    Recent Grants

    Most recent grants reported to the IRS.

    RecipientLocationAmountYearPurpose
    Food Bank Member Agencies—$42,473,6792024Fight Hunger
    Food Bank Member Agencies—$42,973,2312023Fight Hunger

    Food Bank Member Agencies

    $42,473,679
    2024

    Fight Hunger

    Food Bank Member Agencies

    $42,973,231
    2023

    Fight Hunger