By Edward Henderson | California Black Mediaย
Amid a crowd of thousands waiting for groceries at a San Diego food distribution site on Nov. 2, Josh Fryday, Director of the Governorโs Office of Service and Community Engagement (GO-Serve), stood alongside California Service Corps members to launch Operation Feed California, a statewide effort to help the 5.5 million Californians struggling with delayed SNAP benefits during the ongoing federal government shutdown.
โMillions of people across the state are seeing a delay in federal food benefits, and we need Californians to step up to protect their neighbors from going hungry. Operation Feed California is a critical effort that offers ways to help. This is what it means to be a Californian โ when challenges arise, we show up together,โ said Fryday.
Despite a federal court order to release emergency funds earlier this month, there will be a delay in those funds getting to individuals as they are released to the states and then distributed onto individual payment cards.
โThis time period will still be incredibly difficult for those who rely on SNAP benefits, and the longer the government shutdown lasts, the more challenging it could become to fund SNAP and similar programs like WIC,โ United Ways of California stated in a press release.
The Trump administration has used tariff revenue to temporarily fund WIC, and California officials have shared that they have enough funding to keep the program running through at least Nov. 30.
โItโs also important to note that H.R. 1 (The One Big Beautiful Bill Act) includes cuts to SNAP benefits that will have detrimental effects on our communities in the longer term as well,โ the United Way statement continued.
Among those feeling the effects of the delay is Tasha Reynolds, a 37-year-old single mother from San Diegoโs Encanto neighborhood. Sheโs been waiting more than three weeks for her CalFresh funds to arrive.
โThese delays? They hurt,โ Reynolds said. โBut they also woke me up โ I canโt keep counting on that card to save me every month.โ
Reynolds works part-time as a home health aide and on weekends as a grocery store cashier. Between her rent, car insurance, and childcare, CalFresh has been her familyโs main buffer against food insecurity. The delay has forced her to cut portions and rely on food pantries.
โIโm not the type to just sit and wait for things to get fixed,โ she said. โYou do what you have to do. My kids look at me and donโt see stress โ they see dinner on the table. Thatโs all that matters to me.โ
Operation Feed California encourages residents to volunteer, donate, and find local ways to fight hunger during the shutdown. The program recommends visiting CAFoodBanks.org to locate nearby food banks, supporting school or campus pantries, and organizing community-based aid like meal trains or grocery deliveries.
โItโs not just politics โ itโs peopleโs well-being.โ Reynolds added. โBut the communityโs been showing up. Iโve seen neighbors share food, gas money, babysitting โ whatever theyโve got. Thatโs how we survive.โ
Gov. Gavin Newsom has directed California Service Corps members and the California National Guard to assist with food distribution across the state. Additionally, the governor announced that the state is fast-tracking $80 million in emergency support to help food banks manage increased demand.
โTrumpโs failure isnโt abstract โ itโs literally taking food out of peopleโs mouths,โ Newsom said in a release. โThis is serious, this is urgent โ and requires immediate action. Millions of Americans rely on food benefits to feed their families, and while Republicans in Washington drag their feet, California is stepping up once again to fill in the gaps.
According to the governorโs office, this new effort mirrors Californiaโs 2020 statewide COVID-19 response, when tens of thousands of volunteers and National Guard members mobilized to feed communities during the pandemic. Together, these actions represent a coordinated, statewide approach to preventing hunger in cities and towns across California.
