I wish I could say yes, but the reality is that the answer is no. What it has meant for us is a significant increase in investment in staffing, in food and in facilities to be able to continue to meet that demand. It has led to our needing to accomplish more fundraising. We've had to become much more intentional in speaking with our community, in approaching large funders, in writing grant applications and in approaching foundations. What it's meant is a significant increase in workload for my staff overall to try to continue to secure the resources we need to make sure that no family goes hungry.
At the end of the day, if a family has come to the food bank and they need help from the food bank, our responsibility is to make sure that they walk out of the food bank with the resources they need to take care of their family. If that means that we have to invest more money to buy food because the food donations aren't as strong as they were or we have to spend more time doing fundraising so we can make sure that we have the resources to do that, that's what we're consistently doing.