Greater Boston Food Bank report says food insecurity on the rise

A map of food insecurity growth in Massachusetts in 2024.

A map of food insecurity growth in Massachusetts in 2024. The Greater Boston Food Bank

By CHRIS LARABEE

Staff Writer

Published: 07-04-2025 10:33 AM

Half of all households in Franklin and Hampshire counties and approximately two million adults across Massachusetts experienced food insecurity in 2024, according to a new statewide report published by The Greater Boston Food Bank and Mass General Brigham.

The data, announced by the food bank in June, paints a picture of growing food insecurity across the state, with Franklin and Hampshire counties seeing the some of the greatest increase in food insecurity rates, 13% higher than the previous year. In total, 37% of Massachusetts households faced food insecurity, nearly double the rate from 2019.

Catherine D’Amato, president and CEO of The Greater Boston Food Bank, said in a news release that food insecurity is a threat to both public health and the economy. She urged for “supportive federal and state government policy and ongoing private and public commitment,” as well as assistance from and for the organizations that make up the network of food banks to help address the growing need.

“Hunger is not just an individual issue, it is a public emergency with an astronomical economic and human cost,” D’Amato said. “This report tells us that hunger is doing profound and lasting damage to our neighbors’ health, nutrition, financial stability and social connectedness. Even so, we maintain that hunger truly can be a solvable problem when there is a collaborative and multi-sector approach, especially in Massachusetts, a state where there is a proven legacy of responsive and creative solutions to care for our neighbors in need.”

The online survey, which received more than 3,000 responses and was used in the report, was conducted from November 2024 through March 2025 and focused on participants’ experiences around food access over the prior year.

Food insecurity is defined as the experience of being unable to afford enough food to eat or worrying about where one’s next meal will come from. Food insecurity is then broken down into two levels.

Low food insecurity occurs when a person in a household must reduce the quality or variety of their meals because there is not enough money, while very low food insecurity occurs when a person must skip meals or not eat the entire day because they don’t have enough money for food, according to The Greater Boston Food Bank.

Those working at food pantries and other organizations supporting food-insecure folks say the rising tide of food insecurity and hunger is the reality they face in the Pioneer Valley.

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“It is very alarming,” Food Bank of Western Massachusetts Executive Director Andrew Morehouse said. “I can’t speak to the accuracy of this information, because it’s just an estimate based on a study of 3,000 people, but it does confirm our understanding and our experience and observation that we are providing more food to more people than we ever have in our 43-year history.”

Morehouse said the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts, through its numerous partners, provided more than 1.34 million meals to Franklin County from April 1, 2024 to March 31, 2025, compared to 1.28 million in that same timeframe the previous year. The number of monthly clients also increased by about 14.4%, to 12,923 in Franklin County alone.

At Community Action Pioneer Valley, which operates the Center for Self-Reliance Food Pantry in Greenfield and Shelburne Falls, Associate Director of Programs Janna Tetreault said the survey’s findings correlate with the increased number of people using the agency’s food services.

“I was surprised that it was that high, though we’ve definitely been seeing an increase in folks seeking our services around food for the last couple of years,” Tetreault said. “We’ve seen a 22% increase in participants since 2022.”

It isn’t just those in cities like Greenfield or Northampton, as the Hilltowns are also facing a rising tide of food insecurity, according to Patricia Thayer, who runs the Hilltown Churches Food Pantry, which serves between 100 and 128 families in 11 communities out of its Ashfield location.

“It’s been going up, almost every distribution,” Thayer said. “They may not come every time, but it’s increasing, there’s no doubt about that. I think it’s going to continue as this craziness goes on.”

Inflation, cost of living, housing shortages and other factors, including Franklin County’s rural character, have all created the perfect storm, according to Tetreault.

“Franklin County is our most rural county, so cost of living, cost of transportation, all of those things are very precarious,” Tetreault said. “Families are having to decide on what they have to spend their limited resources on.”

The effects of hunger

Left unaddressed, the costs of food insecurity often bleed into other sectors of public life. People in food-insecure households often eat less nutritious food and forego medical appointments because they cannot afford food or health care. An estimated $1.3 billion in annual emergency room and hospitalization costs for Medicaid may be directly related to food insecurity, according to the Greater Boston Food Bank.

The Greater Boston Food Bank also found food insecurity erodes community participation, as food-insecure households are less likely to volunteer, vote in an election, participate in neighborhood organizations and attend places of worship. Food-insecure children missed three times as many non-school activities as food-secure kids.

Morehouse emphasized the key to reducing food insecurity, as well as the numerous issues that come with it, is by having communities come together and seeing investments into food and health care systems from governments.

“The community certainly came out to support us during the pandemic and now we’re seeing higher levels of food insecurity than in the pandemic,” he said. “We need to be thinking, as a society, in a much broader way of how we’re going to ensure people can provide basic needs for themselves … We’ve got to invest in communities, in people and in businesses.”

Communities banding together, Thayer said, is vital to keeping programs like hers alive, as it is “run entirely on donations.”

“It’s a tight budget, we squeeze every penny five times before it goes,” Thayer said. “Everybody needs to eat, so we’ll keep plugging.”

The threat of cuts to social safety nets at the federal level, Tetreault and Morehouse said, will put even more strain on people. On Tuesday, the Senate passed its Budget Reconciliation Bill by a 51-50 vote — Vice President JD Vance broke the tie. This version of the bill, which then went to the House for a final vote as of Friday morning, is estimated to include cuts of about $200 billion from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and $900 billion from Medicaid.

“We’re very concerned about the looming cut to SNAP and the fact that people who lose a portion or all of their SNAP benefits will turn to local food pantries,” Morehouse said. “We’re bracing for that.”

The Greater Boston Food Bank’s fifth Statewide Food Access Report can be found here: bit.ly/3HNk8UO.

For a list of food pantries and other resources, visit the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts’ comprehensive map and list at bit.ly/4kjdFhO. For more information about the Hilltown Churches Food Pantry bit.ly/46bx3tV.

Chris Larabee can be reached at clarabee@recorder.com.