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Fresh produce, staples and ‘beautiful little surprises’: School food pantries help families with groceries

Watermelon and vegetables are particular favorites at a new Feeding San Diego-operated pantry in Lakeside, one of dozens the nonprofit helps operate at local schools.

Katherine Barrientos, 5, picks up an orange as she and her mother gather food items at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Katherine Barrientos, 5, picks up an orange as she and her mother gather food items at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)
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Some of the students who come to the school food pantry at Lemon Crest Elementary in Lakeside are shy. Others speak limited English.

But already, there’s a second-grader who hugs Kelcy Sutton, a school counselor who runs the program, every time he sees her.

“I don’t know other languages, but he saw love and acceptance, and he saw me trying to help,” she said Wednesday, just before families picking up their children from school began stopping in to get fresh produce and staples, too.

After spending about a year on the wait list with Feeding San Diego, last fall Lemon Crest opened its school pantry with the nonprofit, which operates 60 school pantries around the region and has more than 30 on a waitlist.

Feeding San Diego serves about 150,000 households a month, and the school pantry program serves, on average, 11,500 households. Of the 60 schools in the program, 39 distribute food twice a month and the other 21 monthly.

Yolanda Sanchez picks up a can of flavored sparkling water as she and Maria Lyle gather food items at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Yolanda Sanchez picks up a can of flavored sparkling water as she and Maria Lyle gather food items at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)

At Lemon Crest, the food is set up on tables arranged in a U where families can grab what they need. The selections on Wednesday included green onions, rice, various drinks and a Taco Bell jarred sauce.

Watermelons and mangoes were particularly popular. Potatoes were popular, too.

The offerings are excess food — much of it from farms in California, says Carissa Casares, a Feeding San Diego spokesperson.

“We really try to get an emphasis on fresh produce as much as possible,” she explained. “That’s often what is expensive in the store as well.

“But right now, everything is expensive,” Casares said.

Lemon Crest Elementary School counselor and Feeding San Diego site leader, Kelcy Sutton shows Katherine Torrance what's available at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Lemon Crest Elementary School counselor and Feeding San Diego site leader, Kelcy Sutton shows Katherine Torrance what’s available at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)

While Feeding San Diego provides the food, the sites are run by people on school staff. Sutton hopes to continue the program through the summer as well.

Casares said that the first programs that “touched the Mountain Empire” area were mobile food pantries. They provided help to a lot of communities with many seniors and people who lacked transportation — a big issue, she said, “because food is heavy.”

Casares shared via email that they operate 25 mobile pantry sites in rural areas of the county.

Sutton said she sometimes drives food to of the community. She said they sometimes have canned food, and she’ll see them with a stroller and kids on a street without a sidewalk.

Wednesdays are early-release days. Families trickled into the room to pick up their food. Kindergarteners were released first. They could take as much sauce as they wanted but were asked to take only one bag of rice.

Daphne Ludlow, 4, helps her mother select food items at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Daphne Ludlow, 4, helps her mother select food items at a Feeding San Diego food pantry set up at Lemon Crest Elementary School in Lakeside on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (Hayne Palmour IV / For The San Diego Union-Tribune)

Ittzel Perez, a mother of five there with her youngest, praised the convenience and said the fresh fruits and vegetables were favorites — “just like the vegetables, broccoli, mangoes, apples.” Watermelon was especially exciting.

Katherine Torrance was there picking up food for other families and her own, in particular oranges and green onions — a favorite of her daughter’s. “I mean, it’s an odd thing, but she loves the green onions,” she said.

The pantry helps her address a nutrition gap, she added. The layout makes it feel like a shopping trip. And the “beautiful little surprises” made it less intimidating to ask for help.

“We even got a watermelon one time,” she said. “My daughter was just so excited because she’d been wanting watermelon, and I couldn’t get her watermelon.”

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