Please make sure the bags are in reusable condition!
Reusable woven grocery bags
Woven plastic, fabric, or poly
Reusable cloth grocery bags
Reusable canvas bags
Reusable mesh totes and beach totes
Reusable cooler bags
Paper grocery bags
Plastic grocery bags
These can go in your plastic film bag!
Wine tote bags with dividers
Dirty, stained, or moldy bags
Bags with holes in them
Food
Keep an eye out for our "non-perishable food" featured category!
Luggage bags
Do you have a few too many reusable grocery tote bags stashed in your pantry?
Our local partners will use your extra bags to help provide community members with tasty food!
Birch Community Services helps out Oregonians who are living paycheck to paycheck. They work to provide a community where people can be responsible and accountable for meeting their basic needs, and to equip them with tools to overcome financial difficulty. BCS serves 600 families each week with food and financial education. After a year at Birch, an average family pays off $7,000 of debt and increases their savings by $1,000. Additionally, BCS distributes food to 70 other nonprofit organizations across the Portland Metro area, reaching more than 15,000 people each week.
Brown Hope began in 2018 as a Black Resilience Mutual Aid service founded upon a deep sense of urgency to overcome the vicious cycle of wounding caused by historical and ongoing racial trauma. Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities have survived centuries of racial trauma, which has passed emotional, psychological, and material injuries from generation to generation. Brown Hope embodies the philosophy of trauma informed activism, launching initiatives that inspire hope, collective healing, and the grassroots momentum needed to dismantle systems that perpetuate harm against our communities. Brown Hope acts as a bridge with people across different backgrounds to support an ecosystem of unique programs that embrace abundance, promote solidarity, and nurture a world of healing and justice.
The Solidarity Squad program focuses on connecting folks of all races and genders with resources and services they need during hardships. Whether that is providing kitchenware to those in transitional housing or food and winter warmth items to Portland's unhoused community, the Solidarity Squad is building a relationship-based network by listening and responding directly to those in need.
Rose Haven is the only day shelter in all of Portland serving 3,600 women, children and gender diverse folks experiencing homelessness, poverty and trauma each year. They are a low barrier shelter, with no federal funding, that provides food, supplies, showers, restrooms as well as classes and activities.
Along with these services, they have an advocacy program with licensed social workers and serve as a safe mailing address for their guests. With an intersectional lens, they offer resources, community, and compassionate understanding to all who come to their haven.