As the federal shutdown drags on, Alameda County officials are trying to figure out how to keep residents from going hungry.
Last week, the Board of Supervisors agreed to give roughly $10 million to local programs that feed residents. The bulk of the funding — $8.3 million — will go to the Alameda County Community Food Bank, and $1.7 million will be spent on meals for senior residents. The Board will reconvene on Oct. 28 to ratify the decision.
Social service organizations warned the board that emergency funding is needed because the shutdown of the federal government, which began Oct. 1, has dried the flow of dollars to California’s main food support program, CalFresh…