04 Jun Hunger is on the Rise

From the June 2026 Gorge Grown Newsletter-
Hunger is even higher among certain populations:
- 63% of households with children reported food insecurity
- 80% of migrant/seasonal farmworkers do not have enough to eat
This year marks the 10-year anniversary of the Columbia Gorge Food Security Coalition, which formed after the original 2015 assessment revealed the scale of hunger in our region. Over the past decade, collaboration across healthcare, agriculture, education, and community organizations has led to meaningful progress — including programs like SNAP Match, Veggie Rx, expanded food bank services, and community gardens at low-income housing centers. These programs matter deeply, and many families rely on them every day.
But this new data also reminds us that hunger is not simply a food problem. Poverty is the root cause of hunger. If we want to end hunger, we must look beyond emergency food access to the broader conditions that make people food insecure in the first place: low wages, unaffordable housing, rising healthcare and childcare costs, and inequities embedded within our food and economic systems.
As food justice leader Nick Saul writes, “We need to move beyond charity to solidarity.”
That shift – from charity alone toward food justice and systems change – is at the heart of our work today. Join the Food Security Coalition to become part of a deeper conversation and movement to build an inclusive local food system where no one goes hungry.
Learn more:
Sign up for the Food Security Coalition newsletter, and stay tuned for a detailed report on regional food security coming in the fall
TedTalk: Why Food Won’t Solve the Problem of Hunger
Read The Stop about Canada’s revolutionary food justice movement
Check out the Food for All Oregonians campaign