Toy Drive for Mission Food Hub // San Francisco
Donate a toy for a child this Christmas until December 16th! Support Mission Food Hub Toy Drive!
- Gift a Toy to Mission Food Hub Familias.
- 100% of your donation feeds the Mission District.
Mission Food Hub
1333 Florida Street, San Francisco CA 94110
How to Donate!
or
Mail check to:
CANA/ Mission Food Hub
1333 Florida Street< San Francisco CA 94110

Story:
Please help give children a better holiday season by donating a new, unwrapped gift or donating!
Help us provide for familias with children to give them that holiday spirit.
*Mailed donations accepted. Please make donations to CANA/Mission Food Hub & mail to 1333 Florida Street, San Francisco CA 94110.
At the height of the pandemic San Francisco’s Latinx COVID-19 infections accounted for over 40% of the total cases in our city, that is more than three times the rate of the 15% share of San Francisco’s Latinx population! Most of those families cannot apply for unemployment or some public benefit. We are feeding people who have no access to such benefits and who would go hungry without our mutual support. Children, elders, immigrants, the disabled and families suffering COVID-19 infection are particularly hard hit. Together we can humbly address our community’s need for food today. Please give generously!
For more information please visit our website: https://www.missionfoodhub.org
UCSF Contact Tracer Finds Mission District Latinos at Higher Risk of COVID-19
By Joe VazquezJuly 2, 2020 at 11:50 pmFiled Under:Coronavirus, COVID-19, Latinos, Mission District, San Francisco News
SAN FRANCISCO (KPIX) — As the number of COVID-19 cases increases, the latest numbers show it is Latinos who continue to be disproportionately infected by the virus.
Statewide, Latinos are 39 percent of the population but now make up 56 percent of the COVID-19 cases, according to the California Department of Public Health.
Allison Wong, a UCSF medical student and contact tracer who is focusing on the Spanish-speaking patients in San Francisco, said it does not appear parties or protests are major factors. Instead, she said, the bulk of the infections appear to stem from the fact that more people are working and living in environments where it’s difficult to get enough social distance.
“As we’re opening up, a lot more people are going back to work and so we’re seeing a lot more (virus) spread through employment,” Wong said. “This is something I can really speak to that I’ve seen a lot of is houses of people who are working but have many, many people living in a single one-bedroom, one-bath or two-bedroom, one-bath for financial reasons.”
For years, gentrification has been pushing out the Latino population in San Francisco’s Mission District. But, in the last few months, it is COVID-19 that has been attacking the neighborhood, said Mission District activist Roberto Hernandez.
“Latinos never had the luxury to shelter at home,” Hernandez said. “Grocery stores — who’s the cashier? Who’s stocking the shelves? Who’s in the back rooms? Who are the janitors? It’s Latinos.”
Hernandez runs a volunteer operation called the Mission Food Hub, a new food bank that is helping feed thousands left hungry from the economic crisis. Hernandez said many of his neighbors are having to leave home every day, overexposing themselves to the virus, including one family of 13 who have been living together in one apartment out of economic necessity.
“Out of the 13, seven of them were tested positive but they couldn’t even quarantine because they lived in a two-bedroom house. It’s difficult times,” Hernandez said.
The Mission Food Hub is asking the community for help with donations, which can be provided here at GiveButter.com/6HtzZM
Wong said she is hoping to recruit more Spanish-speaking contact tracers to continue to find out why an increasing number of Latinos are getting infected.
IMAGES BELOW: Food volunteers, food line, bulk food purchases and donations, Grocery bags and boxes ready for distribution.









