How a growing community is helping neighbors through winter’s hardest stretch.
February does something strange.
Roseville. Calif. – The holidays are behind us. The year is still new. And from the outside, things can look calmer. But for many of our neighbors, this is when food insecurity deepens quietly, without headlines or holiday drives to soften the edges.
At Feeding the Foothills, we see it every year.
Winter bills stack up. Heating costs rise. Medical appointments don’t pause for the season. Groceries cost more than they did just months ago. For families, seniors, and individuals already living close to the edge, February can feel like a long stretch without a safety net.
This is when our work matters most.
It’s also why a milestone we recently reached carries real meaning for our organization. This winter, our Facebook community grew to 20,000 followers.
That growth reflects something important. It means 20,000 people are paying attention to hunger in El Dorado, Nevada, and Placer counties. 20,000 people are choosing to stay informed. 20,000 people are helping amplify this work in ways that extend far beyond a single post or platform.
- Every share helps a donation travel further.
- Every comment helps a story reach someone new.
- Every post seen helps connect a neighbor in need to food, dignity, and support.
Why Digital support matters?
Digital support matters because it leads to real-world impact. When our community engages online, it helps drive more donations, more volunteers, and more awareness of the services and programs families and seniors rely on every day. What often starts on a screen ends with food on a table.
With that support, we move food directly into communities through trusted local partners who know their neighbors and what support looks like on the ground. This approach preserves dignity, stretches resources, and works because people stand behind it.
The pressures facing hunger relief are real. Costs remain high. Funding continues to shift. Demand has not slowed, especially for seniors and working families living on the edge.
This isn’t a sudden crisis. It’s sustained strain.
What gives me hope is this community. Volunteers, donors, partners, and 20,000 people who stay connected and engaged all year long. Every one of them matters.
Hunger doesn’t take a break after the holidays. Neither do we. Thank you for being part of this work. Thank you, 20,000 times.
Consider making a donation online.

