
Editor’s note: This article first appeared in City Lifestyle magazine’s The Oranges edition. Click here to read the rest of the article.
In northern New Jersey, where food insecurity touches every community and billions of pounds of edible food go to waste each year, Table to Table has built a mission rooted in compassion and efficiency. The nonprofit rescues fresh, perishable food and delivers it — free of charge — to neighbors who need it most.
For Executive Director Heather Thompson, the work is both urgent and deeply personal.
“Food represents so much — health, hope, comfort — and I believe it is a human right for everyone to have fresh, nutritious food,” she says. Thompson, whose career includes roles at Citymeals-on-Wheels, Eva’s Village and Norwescap, has seen how quickly families can fall into crisis. “Good, healthy food is often the first thing someone sacrifices when money is tight. And that should not be something we accept as a society.”
Last year, Table to Table rescued enough surplus food to provide more than 23 million meals across Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Morris and Passaic counties.
Table to Table is New Jersey’s first and largest food rescue nonprofit, bridging the gap between food being wasted and people facing food insecurity. We bring rescued fresh, nutritious food to 303 community partners, including social service organizations, pantries, shelters, fresh produce markets and centralized distribution hubs. Food is provided free of charge. Through this, Table to Table touches a diversity of those in need, including families, children, veterans, and older adults, making good nutrition accessible while serving as a stimulus for other longer-term benefits. Since 1999 we have rescued more than 120,700 tons of nutritious food—enough for 241,400,846 million meals—and delivered it to our neighbors in need, saving over 544 metric tons of methane saved.
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