$100+ Million
Food & Essential Resources
to Be Distributed
in 2026

Built on more than 25 years of service and distributing over $2 Million a week in food and essential resources, Compassion Coalition is on track to exceed $100 million in distribution during 2026, expanding its impact through a growing nationwide network of nonprofit and community partners.

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DonorDonorDonorDonor9 Million Reasons
650+
Nonprofit Agencies Served Across Our National Distribution Network
National Partner Network

Trusted by major food, retail, logistics, and humanitarian partners

Compassion Coalition works with national partners to recover, transport, and distribute food and essential resources through nonprofit agencies and community programs.

Compassion Coalition partner relationships include Walmart, Chobani, Baldor Specialty Foods, Sysco, World Vision, Convoy of Hope, and Delivering Good.

Additional distribution and recovery collaborators

As Seen On
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About Compassion Coalition

A Self-Sustaining National Distribution Ecosystem

Compassion Coalition operates a scalable national logistics, recovery, and nonprofit retail system designed to move food and essential resources directly into underserved communities across the United States.

In 2026, the organization is projected to distribute more than $100 million in food, household goods, hygiene products, clothing, and essential resources through a rapidly expanding national network of nonprofit agencies and community partners.

The operational model integrates large-scale product recovery, centralized warehousing, transportation logistics, nonprofit grocery operations, and direct community distribution into a single self-sustaining ecosystem.

Unlike traditional nonprofit models that rely primarily on grants and donations, Compassion Coalition reinvests revenue generated through nonprofit grocery operations directly back into charitable distribution, infrastructure expansion, logistics capacity, and partner support.

As economic pressure and food insecurity continue increasing nationwide, the organization continues scaling operational capacity and expanding regional distribution systems to meet growing community demand.

Because Compassion Coalition operates without institutional debt and maintains vertically integrated distribution infrastructure, the organization remains positioned for long-term operational stability and sustainable national growth.

How the Distribution Model Works

  • Large-scale product recovery from manufacturers, distributors, retailers, and national suppliers
  • Centralized warehousing and high-volume logistics supporting nationwide distribution
  • Nonprofit grocery markets providing affordable food access within underserved communities
  • Revenue reinvested directly into transportation, logistics infrastructure, charitable distribution, and nonprofit partner support
Compassion Coalition trucks and warehouseBargain Grocery checkout interaction
FOOD RESCUE IMPACT

Turning Excess into Access.

Recovering surplus food and expanding access for communities across the country.

Projected 2026 Impact

7.2 Million

Pounds Rescued

6 Million

Meals Provided

Weekly Impact

138,000

Pounds Rescued Weekly

115,000

Meals Provided Weekly

Food Recovery at Scale

An estimated 40% of food produced in the United States is never consumed. Compassion Coalition rescues surplus food from retailers, manufacturers, distributors, farms, and community partners before it enters the waste stream, redirecting it through a growing national distribution network.

Based on current 2026 tracking, Compassion Coalition is recovering an average of 138,000 pounds of food each week, providing the equivalent of approximately 115,000 meals weekly. If current trends continue, the organization is projected to rescue more than 7.2 million pounds of food and provide approximately 6 million meals during 2026.

Every pound recovered represents food that can nourish families instead of being discarded. Food rescue also helps preserve the water, energy, land, labor, and transportation resources invested in producing that food while reducing landfill waste and its environmental impact.

This work was highlighted in a case study by Rochester Institute of Technology's New York State Pollution Prevention Institute, which examined Compassion Coalition's food recovery and distribution model as an example of how organizations can simultaneously reduce food waste, expand affordable food access, and strengthen community food systems.

How We Deliver Impact

Delivering Community Impact Through Integrated Distribution Infrastructure

Each operational channel functions as part of a connected national distribution ecosystem designed to maximize volume, reduce waste, and expand access to food and essential resources within underserved communities.

By integrating logistics, nonprofit retail, product recovery, warehousing, and community partnerships into a unified system, Compassion Coalition is able to scale charitable distribution while maintaining long-term operational sustainability.

National Distribution
National Distribution

National Distribution

Compassion Coalition operates a national distribution network that moves food and essential resources through nonprofit agencies, schools, churches, shelters, food programs, and community organizations across the United States.

In 2026, the organization is projected to distribute more than $100 million in food and essential resources while serving millions of individuals through a rapidly expanding nonprofit partner network.

The system operates year-round through centralized logistics infrastructure, warehouse coordination, transportation partnerships, and regional distribution operations designed to move resources efficiently into communities with the greatest need.

Bargain Grocery — Nonprofit Grocery Infrastructure
Bargain Grocery

Bargain Grocery — Nonprofit Grocery Infrastructure

Bargain Grocery operates nonprofit grocery markets within underserved communities and food deserts, providing consistent access to affordable groceries while supporting broader charitable distribution efforts across the Compassion Coalition network.

The nonprofit grocery model functions as a long-term sustainability engine that reinvests operational revenue directly into food distribution, logistics expansion, nonprofit partnerships, and community support initiatives.

More than 250,000 annual customer transactions across multiple locations
Strong utilization of SNAP/EBT benefits supporting food accessibility
High engagement among refugee and immigrant households
Community-centered retail model designed to increase long-term food access and affordability
Community Resource Center For Nonprofits & Families
Community Resource Center

Community Resource Center For Nonprofits & Families

The Community Resource Center provides nonprofit organizations and vulnerable households with access to new brand-name clothing, footwear, hygiene products, household essentials, and direct support resources.

Since launching, the center has rapidly expanded support capacity for nonprofit agencies serving:

Foster families and children
Individuals reentering the workforce following rehabilitation or recovery
Families experiencing housing instability or economic transition
Refugee and immigrant support organizations
Emergency assistance and crisis response programs

The center is designed to equip nonprofit partners with consistent access to high-quality goods that can be distributed directly within their communities quickly, efficiently, and at scale.

Built For Maximum Resource Deployment

Compassion Coalition operates a self-sustaining distribution model designed to maximize how much donor funding is converted directly into food and essential resources distributed within communities.

Unlike many traditional nonprofit systems that require large administrative and operational overhead structures funded through donations, Compassion Coalition integrates nonprofit retail operations, logistics infrastructure, and product recovery systems into a financially sustainable ecosystem.

Traditional Food Bank

$1 Donated

Is divided across food and the operational costs required to deliver it.

Based on common IRS Form 990 reporting categories and operational expense patterns among large U.S. food banks.

$ 2026 Donor Impact Allocation

Compassion Coalition
96¢ of every donated $1

.96¢

Used to purchase goods distributed directly to individuals,

generating up to in retail-value impact.

4¢ reflects payment processor fee

2026 Impact Snapshot

$0M+

Projected Food & Essential Resource Distribution in 2026

0M+

Individuals Expected To Be Served Across Our National Network

0+

Nonprofit Agencies, Community Organizations, and Distribution Partners

0¢ of $1

Directed Toward Food, Essential Goods, and Community Distribution

0X

Every Donated Dollar Can Support Up To ~$8 In Distributed Goods Through Large-Scale Recovery & Sourcing Partnerships

Current Distribution Scale

Compassion Coalition is currently distributing approximately $2 million in food and essential resources every week through its national nonprofit distribution network, with projected annual distribution expected to exceed $100 million in 2026.

2025 Operational Snapshot

256,000 Transactions
25% using SNAP/EBT

Cornell Study showed $100 at Bargain Grocery ≈ $438 at national retail chains

During SNAP/EBT reductions and federal funding disruptions, an additional 10% discount was applied to help families maintain access to food.

Bargain Grocery Utica
Bargain Grocery Utica
Bargain Grocery Troy
Bargain Grocery Troy
BARGAIN GROCERY

Nonprofit Grocery Infrastructure Supporting Community Affordability

Bargain Grocery operates nonprofit grocery markets within underserved communities and food deserts, providing consistent access to affordable groceries while strengthening household purchasing power and reinvesting operational revenue directly into charitable distribution systems.

With more than 25 years of operational history, the model has demonstrated long-term sustainability, strong community utilization, and increasing demand during periods of economic pressure and food cost instability.

In 2025, the stores recorded more than 256,000 customer transactions while continuing to expand access to affordable food for working families, seniors, refugees, immigrant households, and individuals experiencing food insecurity.

Pricing across many product categories remains substantially below major retail grocery chains, allowing households to extend limited food budgets significantly further during periods of rising inflation and economic uncertainty.

Approximately 25% of all transactions were completed using SNAP/EBT benefits, reflecting the growing role nonprofit grocery infrastructure plays in supporting food accessibility within vulnerable communities.

During periods of SNAP/EBT reductions and broader federal funding disruptions, additional emergency discounts were implemented to help stabilize food access for households experiencing increased financial strain.

Increasing Demand In 2026

As affordability pressures continue increasing nationwide due to inflation, supply chain instability, rising transportation costs, and broader geopolitical economic pressures, demand for low-cost nonprofit grocery access is expected to continue accelerating throughout 2026.

Compassion Coalition projects continued expansion in transaction volume, community utilization, and regional affordability support as more households turn to nonprofit grocery infrastructure to maintain stable access to food and essential goods.

Meet Our Team

Dedicated People,
Driven by Compassion

Our passionate team works every day to connect communities with the resources they need to thrive — building a more compassionate nation together.

Government & Community Perspectives

Perspectives From Public Officials, Nonprofit Leaders, and Community Partners

"Compassion Coalition created the Bargain Grocery model that allows individuals facing food insecurity to shop with dignity through its self-sustaining grocery store."

Kirsten Gillibrand headshot

Kirsten Gillibrand

United States Senator

Bargain Grocery offers a low-cost shopping option for families and support our shared mission to reduce food insecurity and waste. Compassion Coalition's commitment to partner with local nonprofits strengthens our collective impact and enhance food access throughout the community.

Barbara C. Guinn headshot

Barbara C. Guinn

Commissioner, NYS Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance

"We need to make sure that all New Yorkers can afford to live, work, raise a family, here in beautiful Utica. Food affordability is part of that and making sure that they have access to fresh food. They're doing a wonderful job with it here at Bargain Grocery"

Roberta Reardon headshot

Roberta Reardon

Commissioner, New York State Department of Labor

"Compassion Coalition is an entrepreneurial-based, innovative nonprofit whose mission is to connect communities and serve those who are underprivileged or lack access to basic life necessities such as affordable food, clothing, housing, transportation, employment, and financial resources."

Joe Griffo headshot

Joe Griffo

Senator 53rd District Assistant Minority Leader NY

"Compassion Coalition provides families with food, basic necessities, valuable skills, and the compassion needed to help people and communities thrive."

Anthony J. Picente Jr. headshot

Anthony J. Picente Jr.

Oneida County Executive

"Compassion Coalition has provided invaluable support to the greater Utica community. Its ability to solve a food desert problem is incredible."

Michael P. Galime headshot

Michael P. Galime

Mayor of Utica

"Compassion Coalition delivers weekly tractor-trailer loads of food, clothing, and essential supplies into New York City, strengthening and expanding our distribution network and increasing access for organizations serving communities across NYC."

Carolyn Marko headshot

Carolyn Marko

CEO, 9Million Reasons NYC

"What Compassion Coalition Resource Center provides goes a long way for this community, for the City of Utica and for the youth we serve. It lifts them up. It gives a child a winter coat, boots, sneakers."

Chet LoConti headshot

Chet LoConti

Recreation Director, City of Utica

"Their model truly revamped how services were offered to the most vulnerable residents, providing next-level support for community members who needed it most."

Tim Julian headshot

Tim Julian

Former Mayor of Utica NY

"The plan they developed to make this project sustainable was, to me, genius. They quickly became a great partner helping more people get greater value from limited resources."

Ralph Eannace headshot

Ralph Eannace

Judge and Former Oneida County Executive

"They’ve grown leaps and bounds as Compassion Coalition has expanded, becoming a well-oiled organization that continues to increase its impact throughout the community."

Robert Palmieri headshot

Robert Palmieri

Former Mayor of Utica

"There has been fewer better models for success in providing food to our most vulnerable population in Utica and Oneida County than the one created by Mike Servello"

Delores Caruso headshot

Delores Caruso

Commissioner’s Mohawk Valley Regional Representative, NYSDOL

"They are the first agency we call when we know of a family in need, providing food, hygiene products, furniture, and essential resources."

Katherine Warden headshot

Katherine Warden

Director Behavioral Medicine Program MVHS,

Impact 2026

Scale of Distributions in 2026

These represent just a few of the many distributions made across the Northeast and throughout the United States in 2026.

400,000 Pounds of Fresh Produce Distributed to Farmlink
13Tractor Trailers

400,000 Pounds of Fresh Produce Distributed to Farmlink

Compassion Coalition distributed 400,000 pounds of fresh produce through The Farmlink Project in California, equivalent to more than 300 pallets and 13 tractor-trailer loads. Farmlink helps connect surplus food with hunger-relief organizations across the country, increasing access to nutritious food while reducing waste.

More Than $1M in Fresh Produce and Products Delivered Weekly to 9 Million Reasons in NYC
$1 MillionPer Week

More Than $1M in Fresh Produce and Products Delivered Weekly to 9 Million Reasons in NYC

In New York City, 9 Million Reasons, the largest food distribution hub in NYC, directly feeds more than 200,000 people every week and distributes food to hundreds of nonprofit and community-based agencies, collectively reaching more than 1,000,000 individuals weekly across the city.

25 Tractor Trailers Loads
$25 MillionRetail Value

25 Tractor Trailers Loads

Compassion Coalition distributed 763,303 pounds of clothing, housewares, medical equipment, and essential supplies to Jezreel International, totaling 25 tractor-trailer loads and representing an estimated $25 million in retail value. Jezreel International provides humanitarian aid to vulnerable communities in more than 40 countries worldwide, helping deliver critical resources to families affected by poverty, disasters, and humanitarian crises.

28,080 Pounds of Fresh Tomatoes Distributed to City Harvest
28,080Pounds

28,080 Pounds of Fresh Tomatoes Distributed to City Harvest

Compassion Coalition distributed 28,080 pounds of fresh tomatoes to City Harvest, filling an entire tractor-trailer with nutritious produce for New Yorkers facing food insecurity. As New York City's largest food rescue organization, City Harvest helps recover and distribute fresh food to hundreds of community food programs across the five boroughs, ensuring healthy food reaches families in need.

119,443 Pounds of Fresh Produce and Baby Food Distributed to Operation Blessing
$1 MillionRetail Value

119,443 Pounds of Fresh Produce and Baby Food Distributed to Operation Blessing

Compassion Coalition distributed 119,443 pounds of fresh produce and baby food to Operation Blessing, totaling 96 pallets and representing an estimated $1 million in retail value. Operation Blessing provides disaster relief, hunger assistance, and humanitarian aid to vulnerable communities in the United States and around the world.

22,051 Pounds of Amazon Home Goods Distributed to Team Goodness
22,051Pounds

22,051 Pounds of Amazon Home Goods Distributed to Team Goodness

Compassion Coalition distributed 22,051 pounds of Amazon home goods to Team Goodness in Buffalo, New York, totaling 48 pallets and two tractor-trailer loads with an estimated $1 Million in retail value. Team Goodness provides practical support and essential resources to families and communities throughout Western New York, helping meet everyday needs and strengthen local neighborhoods.

Connected Community Schools

Connected Community Schools

They bridge the gap for families in 13 districts in upstate NY with brand new school supplies.

Saquoit Valley CSD

Saquoit Valley CSD

Picking up brand new school supplies for students in their district.

Herkimer Boces Pathway

Herkimer Boces Pathway

Helping kids finish out the school year strong with brand new school supplies.

Mt Markahm Elementary

Mt Markahm Elementary

As the school year progresses lots of school supplies run out we are excited to giveaway more school supplies

Madison Oneida Boces

Madison Oneida Boces

Receiving brand new school supplies as many students have run out by March helping them to finish strong

Mohawk Valley Community Action

Mohawk Valley Community Action

Brand new school supplies for educators and students in the foster system

City of Troy Mayor Mantello

City of Troy Mayor Mantello

1000s of winter boots to the City of Troy so they can distribute to kids.

The Center

The Center

Received brand new winter boots for in coming refugees many with no winter clothing.

Backyard Hope

Backyard Hope

Receiving brand new winter boots and clothing for local schools.

Convoy of Hope Partnership

Convoy of Hope Partnership

96 couches shipped to Jamaica with Convoy of Hope.

Fresh Produce Distribution

Fresh Produce Distribution

Tractor-trailer of fresh produce delivered to Campaign Against Hunger in Brooklyn.

Community Thanksgiving Support

Community Thanksgiving Support

Turkey donation to Poland Baptist Church for their local Thanksgiving dinner for the community.

School Food Support

School Food Support

Turkeys and potatoes provided to rural school districts through Connect Community Schools.

Pediatric Cancer Support

Pediatric Cancer Support

Hope in Action donated supplies to a pediatric cancer support organization.

Veterans Service Dogs Support

Veterans Service Dogs Support

Supplies donated to Clear Path for Veterans to support service dogs.

Utica Turkey Giveaway

Utica Turkey Giveaway

Free turkey distribution for families by "The Village" in the City of Utica.

Veterans Outreach Center Support

Veterans Outreach Center Support

Food provided to support veterans experiencing homelessness and substance abuse recovery.

Troy City School District Support

Troy City School District Support

Christmas gifts donated to students in the Troy City School District.

Address

178 Industrial Park Dr Frankfort, NY 13340

Call In The US

315-266-0039

Contact