Approximately 25.8% of active-duty service members experience some level of food insecurity, with junior and mid-grade enlisted families disproportionately affected. Today, an estimated 22,000 active-duty families, 213,000 National Guard and Reserve members, and 1.2 million veterans rely on federal food assistance. On many installations, food pantries now operate specifically to support junior enlisted families.
That fact alone should stop us.
Behind these statistics are families—not abstractions. Spouses stretch each paycheck to cover rent, gas, childcare, and groceries. Children quietly accept smaller portions. Service members carry the additional burden of financial strain while remaining mission-ready. They stand watch, deploy, train, and defend the nation—while worrying about what’s in the refrigerator at home.
When We Saw It Up Close
In 2022, the San Dimas Rotary Club was approached by the Diamond Bar Woman’s Club, which operated a military outreach effort called Making Spirits Bright, providing Christmas gifts to junior enlisted families.
That same year, Rotary members visited the Marine Air Ground Combat Center (MAGCC) at Twentynine Palms. There, we met with representatives of the Armed Services YMCA, which operates a food pantry on base. It was in that conversation—standing in the high desert—that the scope of the problem became real.
This wasn’t theoretical. It was immediate.
Young Marine families were walking into a pantry on base because their pay, after housing, childcare, and the cost of relocation, simply wasn’t enough.
From One Food Drive to a Lasting Mission
In March 2023, we organized a major food drive. The response was strong. The need was stronger.
We quickly realized that a single event would not solve a structural problem. What was required was permanence.
In response, we formed the Satellite Rotary Club of Military Family Support, a sole-purpose Rotary club dedicated entirely to supporting active-duty, Reserve, and veteran families. We also established the San Dimas Rotary Foundation, a 501(c)(3), to provide the charitable framework necessary for growth and accountability.
As regional partnerships expanded, we created Feeding Military Families as a DBA under the Foundation, supervised by the Satellite Club.
What began as a community response became an organized mission.
Where the Help Has Gone
Since launching Feeding Military Families, we have collected and distributed more than forty (40) tons of food and household supplies to military communities across California, including:
Marine Air Ground Combat Center (29 Palms)
Camp Pendleton
Fort Irwin
Los Angeles Air Force Base
Coast Guard Base Los Angeles/Long Beach
Each installation presents different challenges.
Fort Irwin sits in a remote high-desert region with limited surrounding infrastructure. Families there face isolation and restricted access to affordable off-base resources.
Twentynine Palms serves thousands of Marines and families in similarly remote conditions.
Camp Pendleton supports one of the largest concentrations of Marines in the country.
Los Angeles Air Force Base and Coast Guard Base Los Angeles/Long Beach represent urban military communities where high housing costs place extraordinary pressure on junior enlisted families.
In every location, the story is consistent: strong families under strain.
Hunger Is Only Part of the Story
Through the integration of Making Spirits Bright, our mission expanded beyond food alone.
Last December, in addition to supporting families at Camp Pendleton and MAGCC Twentynine Palms, we extended significant assistance to Fort Irwin. There, we delivered:
Hundreds of toys
More than 70 bicycles
$7,000 in direct financial relief through gift cards
For families stationed in one of the most isolated installations in California, the holidays became a season of celebration—not stress.
Because food insecurity is not only about calories. It is about morale. It is about stability. It is about ensuring that when a service member trains, deploys, or stands duty, they are not distracted by worry at home.
Readiness Begins at Home
Military readiness does not start on the battlefield. It begins in the kitchen.
If a service member is worrying about groceries, unpaid bills, or whether their spouse can find employment after yet another relocation, readiness is compromised.
Addressing food insecurity strengthens:
Family stability
Mental health
Morale
Retention
Community trust
This is not charity alone. It is an investment in readiness.
The Hidden Hunger
Military culture values self-reliance. Pride runs deep. Asking for help can feel like failure. That stigma is one reason many families struggle quietly.
But the food pantries on base tell the truth.
The federal assistance numbers tell the truth.
The young Marine couple with two children tells the truth.
The hunger is real.
The question is whether we choose to see it.
Join Us – March 14, 2026
The solution is not complicated. It is community.
Feeding Military Families – March Food Drive 🇺🇸
Date: Saturday, March 14, 2026
Time: 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM
Location: TBA
Website: www.feedingmilitaryfamilies.org
Join us as we collect food and essential supplies for military families in need.
Every month, thousands of active-duty service members, veterans, and National Guard families struggle with food insecurity. Since 2022, you have helped us collect and distribute over 40 tons of food and supplies to military families at 29 Palms, Camp Pendleton, Fort Irwin, Los Angeles Air Force Base, and Coast Guard Base Los Angeles/Long Beach.
This March, we are back with another major Food Drive—and we need your help.
What to Bring:
Non-perishable food items
Hygiene and toiletry products
Baby and household essentials
Whether you donate a bag of groceries, volunteer your time, or simply help spread the word, your support matters.
➡️ Visit www.feedingmilitaryfamilies.org and click on “Events” for full details and volunteer information.
Please share this event. Together, we can ensure no military family goes hungry.
Let’s serve those who serve us.
#FeedingMilitaryFamilies #FoodDrive #SupportOurTroops #MilitaryFamilies

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