Foodland launches Project Keiki to support food banks on Big Island, beyond
Foodland Super Market on Monday launched Project Keiki, a new monthlong statewide community giving program that will help provide lunches and meals to Hawai‘i’s children on days they don’t have access to school lunches.
Support will go to the Hawai‘i food banks on four islands to fulfill this mission.
According to the Hawai‘i Foodbank, one in four keiki in Hawai‘i are food insecure, meaning they often don’t have enough to eat and don’t know where their next meal will come from. In addition, food insecurity among Hawai‘i families has increased by more than 50% since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Many children statewide rely on school-provided lunches for their nutrition during the academic year. On weekends and when school is out, many of them lose access to their most reliable and consistent source of food and nutritional balance.
Foodland created Project Keiki to help the Hawai‘i Foodbank, Maui Foodbank, The Food Basket: Hawai‘i Island’s Food Bank and Hawai‘i Foodbank Kaua‘i fund their work and programs providing Hawai‘i children with meals when school is not in session.
Throughout the month of April, Foodland customers are invited to participate in Project Keiki. Here’s how customers can help:
- Donate $5 at checkout
- Round up your purchases to the nearest dollar
- Donate your change
- Donate 250 Maika‘i points (the equivalent of a $5 donation)
- Purchase a set of Foodland Pin Pals for $5
Foodland Pin Pals are a collection of nine food-themed pins celebrating some of Hawai‘i’s favorite local foods, including poke, poi, musubi and more. They feature puns such as, “It takes 2 to Mango,” “Taro-ffic” and “Bok Choy to the World!”
Three individual sets of three pins each are available for sale, and each set is priced at $5 with 100% of the proceeds going to Project Keiki. Foodland’s Pin Pals are available for purchase near the registers at all Foodland stores.
“Project Keiki is a program close to our hearts as it will help ensure Hawai‘i’s students have access to good, nutritious food on days they are not in school so they will not go hungry,” said Foodland Chairman and CEO Jenai S. Wall. “Our Foodland customers have demonstrated their kindness and generosity in supporting the needs of our community and making our islands a better place to live. We thank them in advance for their support and hope they will be excited by this fun way to help feed keiki in need.”
Project Keiki funds raised in-store will remain on-island, directly supporting the children and specific needs of each island’s communities.
On O‘ahu, the Hawai‘i Foodbank’s Feeding Our Future summer lunch program engages the nonprofit’s food partner agencies — including the Institute for Human Services and Catholic Charities Hawai‘i — to distribute hot lunches to keiki. On Kaua‘i, Project Keiki funds will support Hawai‘i Foodbank Kaua‘i’s Keiki Café and Backpack Program. A donation of $5 on Hawai‘i Island could provide three keiki-friendly meals for The Food Basket: Hawai‘i Island’s Food Bank’s “We Got Your Back” keiki backpack program.
“We have a collective responsibility to give our families every opportunity to succeed, and we are incredibly grateful for Foodland and their efforts to help nourish our ‘ohana throughout the entire state,” said Hawai‘i Foodbank President and CEO Amy Miller. “Funds raised through Project Keiki will not only help provide more children with the food they need to thrive but also give parents comfort in knowing that their keiki’s next meal is covered.”
For more information on Project Keiki, visit Foodland.com.