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.