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Davis Journal

Feed Utah food drive set for March 15 at seven Davis County locations

Mar 12, 2025 01:04PM ● By Tom Haraldsen

There will be a new look in Davis County this year for the annual Feed Utah food drive. Thanks to efforts coordinated by the Bountiful Food Pantry, there will be seven drop off/collection locations this year, including expansion into Clearfield and Clinton.

The annual food drive will take place on Saturday, March 15. Rebekah Anderson, Executive Director of the Bountiful Food Pantry, is working with two other pantries in the northern part of the county that will help collect and distribute food to needy families.

“Of the Davis County residents fed by our pantry, 42 percent of them live in the north part of the county,” she said. “We’ve been making efforts to expand our services into that portion of the county, and adding three new collection sites will assist us in that effort.”

The 2025 Food Drive locations are as follows:

• 480 E. 150 N., Bountiful, UT 84010 (Bountiful Food Pantry)

• 1125 N. 400 W., Centerville UT 84014

• 347 S. 200 W., Farmington, UT

• 900 S. Main St, Kaysville, UT Kaysville, UT

• 935 S. State St, Clearfield, UT

• 1446 W. 1800 N., Clinton, UT

• 725 N. Redwood Rd., North Salt Lake, UT  (Lee’s Marketplace)

Each location will be collecting food from 9 to 11 a.m on March 15, while the Lee’s Marketplace location will operate from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. It’s part of the statewide food drive that overall will provide food to an estimated 414,000 Utahns who face hunger, including one in six children.

Residents across the state will receive door hangers during the week leading up to the food drive, and will be asked to place nonperishable food items outside their doors by 9 a.m. on March 15. Volunteers, including many from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, will go door to door to pick up the food and deliver it to the drop off locations.

“More than three-quarters of those who receive groceries – about 76 percent – only need help less than six times before their lives normalize and they no longer need donations,” Anderson said. “The efforts of the food pantries help fill in the gaps families face due to unexpected financial challenges, short term unemployment or other issues. This annual food drive replenishes our pantry supplies to help meet those needs.”