
Inside the everyday hustle to keep families fed in the city we call home.
WORCESTER— “I’m not starving, but I’m stretched.” That’s how one Worcester mom summed it up when we asked her what food access looks like in her house right now. And she’s not alone.
In a city where new condos keep going up and restaurant week gets all the hype, folks in the inner neighborhoods are still figuring out how to stretch a $60 grocery run into meals for a family of four. Inflation may have cooled off on paper—but try saying that in the checkout line when your kid’s cereal jumped from $3.99 to $6.29 in a year.
We’re hearing it all over—Grafton Hill, Main South, Chandler Street, Belmont Tower, across the board:
- Working families relying on school lunch programs to get by
- Elders choosing between prescriptions and pantry staples
- College students scraping by on ramen and cafeteria leftovers
- Parents hitting two food pantries a month and still coming up short
“I never thought I’d need to ask for help with groceries,” said Lydia, a 41-year-old mother of two. “But here I am. Rent goes up. Gas goes up. Food? Through the roof.”

Yes, Worcester has some amazing food pantries. Shoutout to the folks at El Buen Samaritano, The Friendly House, WooFridge, and Pernet Family Health, who are doing real work. But the need is deep—and steady.
One pantry manager told What’s Up Worcester that they’re serving over 300 families a week now. “We’ve got single parents. Seniors. Veterans. People with full-time jobs. This isn’t a homeless issue—it’s a citywide issue,” she said.
And here’s the real talk: people are embarrassed. They shouldn’t be, but they are. We’ve heard it again and again: “I don’t want people thinking I’m broke.” But it’s not about being broke. It’s about being human in a system that has been broken for a long time.
What Can We Do?
Start by checking in. Ask your neighbor if they’re doing good. Share pantry locations in your group chats. Drop off a bag of groceries if you’ve got a little extra. And stop judging—because food insecurity doesn’t look like what you think.
If you’re in need, help is out there. No ID. No questions. Just people who care.
Check out WooFridge, Pernet Family Health, South Worcester Neighborhood Improvement, and El Buen Samaritano for food access.
At What’s Up Worcester, we don’t just report—we represent. The struggle is real, and so is the community that keeps this city going.
Got a story about feeding your family on a tight budget or helping others do the same? Hit us up. Let’s keep it real. Let’s keep it local.

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