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Society of St.Vincent de Paul St.Louis responds as hunger and SNAP uncertainty deepen across region.Across the St.Louis region, thousands of families are being forced into making near impossible choices between paying for food, rent, utilities, medicine and transportation as hunger and federal nutrition assistance uncertainty continue to rise.The Society of St.Vincent de Paul, or SVdP, St.Louis reports increasing demand for emergency food assistance as neighbors struggle to make ends meet amid rising costs, strained public systems and changes to federal food support programs.“At SVdP St.Louis, we are seeing more neighbors facing food insecurity for the first time,” said Michael Meehan, Ph.D., executive director and CEO of the Society of St.Vincent de Paul St.“These are working families, seniors and individuals who are doing everything they can — but the margin between stability and crisis has become increasingly narrow.” Food insecurity is widespread in the region Even before recent disruptions, food insecurity in the St.Louis region remained high: - Roughly 1 in 5 of city of St.Louis residents relies on SNAP benefits.- Food insecurity affects 18.4% in the city of St.Louis and 12.8% in St.Louis County.- Approximately 1 in 6 children in Missouri and Illinois experiences hunger.Statewide, hundreds of thousands of Missourians depend on SNAP each month to afford basic nutrition, while food banks and pantries continue to report growing demand.SNAP disruptions and policy changes have intensified pressure In 2025, the federal government shutdown temporarily halted SNAP benefits for hundreds of thousands of Missourians, overwhelming food pantries and emergency assistance providers across the region.Now, additional federal policy changes are expected to further strain families and local support systems.A new federal budget reconciliation law includes significant reductions to SNAP funding over the next decade and introduces stricter eligibility requirements, including expanded work rules.State estimates indicate that up to 150,000 Missourians may lose some SNAP benefits and tens of thousands may lose benefits entirely.The first major impacts are expected to begin in mid-2026.Many impacted households include children, older adults and individuals with disabilities — populations that already face barriers to consistent employment and access to services.Food banks and pantries cannot replace federal nutrition assistance.SNAP provides the majority of food support for low-income households, while emergency food providers supply only a fraction of total need.In response to rising need, the Society of St.Vincent de Paul sees increased direct assistance need including emergency grocery and utility assistance and expanded parish-based food pantries.In addition, several months ago, SVdP began mobile food pantry distributions in high-need rural areas.This mobile food pantry service continues, with growing numbers of families in need of assistance.Hunger often hides in plain sight The Society of St.Vincent de Paul volunteers report that food insecurity is increasingly visible: - Working parents are skipping meals so their children can eat.- Seniors are stretching their limited food supplies across the month.- Families are quietly seeking help for the first time.“These are not isolated stories — they are becoming more common across our region,” said Meehan.The Society of St.Vincent de Paul St.Louis encourages the community to support neighbors in need by: - Donating to the Society of St.Vincent de Paul in St.Louis to help neighbors struggling to make ends meet and afford food for their families - Becoming a member of the Society of St.Vincent de Paul, helping those in need - Partnering in mobile food pantry efforts - Referring neighbors to the Society of St.Vincent de Paul who may need assistance “Charity alone cannot replace the safety net,” said Meehan.“But together, we can make a real difference to those in need.This is the heart of the Vincentian mission.We meet people where they are — not only with food and other assistance, but with human connection and hope.” To learn more about supporting the work of the Society of St.Vincent de Paul, visit svdpstl.org/donate.