Minnesota is on pace to hit a record this year for the number of residents relying on food shelves.
More Minnesotans than ever turned to food shelves for help during the COVID-19 pandemic, making 5.5 million visits in 2022 — the highest annual number of food shelf visits in history. That was up from 3.6 million visits in 2019.
The state is now on target to shatter that 2022 record, surpassing 7 million food shelf visits in 2023 and straining the resources of already overloaded nonprofits, according to new data from Hunger Solutions Minnesota.
"When people have to choose between budgeting for housing, transportation, utilities, medical bills and food, food is often where they sacrifice," said Cassie Kienbaum, director of food support programs at Neighborhood House in St. Paul. "But the need and our budgets are getting farther and farther apart."
Food shelves are getting some extra relief, state officials announced Monday, giving $5 million, the last of Minnesota's federal American Rescue Plan Act funds, to the state's seven food banks to buy extra food to distribute to food shelves.
"These funds are more important than ever before, especially in the face of sunsetting pandemic benefits and historic increases in food shelf usage," Lt. Gov. Peggy Flanagan said. "Hunger exists all around us."
Minnesota boosted its funding to food programs this year, when the DFL-controlled Legislature approved free school breakfasts and lunches for all students — only the third state in the nation to do so.
The Legislature also earmarked an additional $3 million annually for Minnesota's nearly 400 food shelves over the next two years, nearly triple the previous biennium's funding. Earlier this year, Gov. Tim Walz signed off on $5 million in emergency aid for food shelves. The Legislature also approved $7 million in one-time funding to expand or renovate food shelves statewide.