Share and Follow

When KC Neufeld shared a post on her Denver neighborhood’s Facebook page about distributing ramen and packs of macaroni and cheese along with candy this Halloween, she didn’t foresee a significant reaction. Her announcement was met with much more enthusiasm than she imagined.
As a mother of twin 4-year-olds residing in a working-class neighborhood, Neufeld aimed to make a modest impact amidst the looming end of food aid funding for millions of vulnerable Americans, anticipated due to the government shutdown slated for Friday.
Surprisingly, her post resonated with the community, garnering nearly 3,000 reactions in just two days. Many thanked her for the initiative, while others pledged to join in her efforts.
“This post blew up way more than I ever anticipated and I’m severely unprepared,” Neufeld, 33, admitted. Despite having already exhausted her family’s weekly grocery budget, she plans to return to the store to gather more supplies.
Expressing her wishful thinking, Neufeld added, “I wish I could just buy out this whole aisle of Costco. I can’t. But I’ll do what I can.”
Neufeld is one of many people across the U.S. preparing to give out shelf-stable foods to trick-or-treaters this year to help fill the void left by looming cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, which helps about one in eight Americans buy groceries.
A flurry of widely shared posts have popped up over the last several days as many people look for ways to help offset the surge in need. Some posts suggest foods to give out while others show recently acquired stocks of cheese sticks, mini cereals, canned soup or even diapers ready for trick-or-treaters.
Posts are often followed by a string of comments from people announcing similar plans, along with plenty of reminders not to forget the candy.
Emily Archambault, 29, and her sister-in-law Taylor Martin, 29, in La Porte, Indiana, will be putting out pasta and sauce, peanut butter and jelly, cereal and other foods, along with diapers and wipes on Halloween. They’re also collecting donations from members of their church.
Their plan is to set everything out on a table away from where they’re giving out candy, so families can take what they need without worrying about judgement.
“It kind of takes a little bit of pressure off of the parents,” said Martin. “You’re out and about trick or treating and it’s there and your kids probably won’t even notice you’re taking it.”
Archambault said she relied on the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children, known as WIC, after her son’s medical complications forced her to stop working temporarily. Losing that assistance would have meant turning to food pantries. And while she said there are great ones in her area, she expects them to be overrun.
“We have to band together,” she said. “I am grateful to have received benefits, and I am even more grateful to be able to give back now.”
Erika Dutka, who depends on SNAP to feed herself and her three children in Archbald, Pennsylvania, went to a “trunk or treat” Sunday with people giving out candy from the trunks of cars. She said she was relieved to get packs of ramen, oatmeal, juice, pretzels and fruit snacks in addition to sweet treats.
The 36-year-old — who works two jobs and goes to school fulltime — said the food means she’ll have plenty of school snacks for her children the rest of the week and can save her last $100 of SNAP funds.
“It buys me more time,” she said. “Maybe things will change. Maybe it’ll get turned back on.”
Neufeld, the Denver mom stock-piling shelf-stable items for trick-or-treaters, said she relied on a food bank at her college to get through school. She said most people would never have known she was really struggling. And now, with SNAP drying up, she wants people to remember not to assume anything about others.
“You truly don’t know what other people are going through,” she said. “So even if they don’t ‘look like they need help,’ it’s still important to just give when you can because it can make a huge difference.”