Redefining Dignity: How a Local Food Bank is Rethinking the Fight Against Food Insecurity

by BW Group on Monday, April 28, 2025
Food insecurity doesn’t always look the way you’d expect.

Food insecurity doesn’t always look the way you’d expect.

It’s not just about access to food. It’s about access to choice, dignity, and community. That’s what makes the work happening at On Rock Community Services in Montreal so powerful. It’s not just a food bank. It’s a grassroots, boots-on-the-ground operation that treats people like people, not just numbers on a list.

Turning a Food Bank Into a Grocery Store

At On Rock, they’ve reimagined what a food bank can be. Instead of handing out pre-packed boxes, they created a mini grocery store where families can choose the food they want to eat.

Here’s what that looks like:

  • Clients walk through the front door like any other shopper

  • Shelves are stocked with dry goods, fresh produce, dairy, and meat

  • A “pharmacy” area offers essentials like toiletries and personal care items

  • Each family gets a customized list based on their household size

It's simple: when people have the power to choose, they feel respected. That’s not just good service—it’s a step toward restoring dignity.

Pay-What-You-Can Dining That Feeds More Than Just Hunger

Right next door, you’ll find "Le Spot"—a pay-what-you-can restaurant also run by On Rock.

The goal? Make eating out accessible to everyone.

  • If you’re low-income, pay what you can afford

  • If you’re in a position to give more, you’re invited to “pay it forward.”

  • Either way, everyone sits at the same tables and eats the same food

This isn’t about charity—it’s about community.

One day, two guests paid $110 for a small meal, not because they had to, but because they wanted to help someone else eat tomorrow. That’s what a connected neighbourhood looks like.

A New Kind of Generosity: Donating a Cow

Food insecurity isn’t solved with shelf-stable cans alone.

Meat is one of the hardest items to keep stocked, and it’s often what families miss most. So a group of friends from the local Kirkland Touch Football League did something different: they pitched in to buy a cow and donated a portion of the meat to On Rock.

Here’s how they made it work:

  • Sourced pasture-raised, organic Angus beef from the Bouffard family farm in Magog

  • Donated 10% of the meat to Marche On Rock

  • Divided the beef into small portions to make sure even smaller households could benefit

It started with one conversation: “It’s hard to get good meat consistently,” someone said. The next step? Find a solution, and share it.

Building a Place That Works for People

On Rock isn’t a shiny corporate operation. It’s built by people who care, using what they have, and relying on help from their community.

  • Home Depot donated materials for renovations

  • Volunteers come in every weekend to plaster, paint, and run wires

  • Local businesses provide freshly-made soups and other prepared foods

  • Office and warehouse space have been redesigned to improve workflow and storage

  • Donated industrial shelving replaced makeshift pallet stacks

Nothing about this is temporary. It’s about building infrastructure that lasts—and making people feel welcome every time they walk through the door.

What This Means for the Bigger Picture

If you’ve never experienced food insecurity, it’s easy to think it’s just about calories and nutrition. But it’s about more than that:

  • It’s about having the freedom to pick your own groceries

  • It’s about feeding your kids something they want to eat

  • It’s about walking through a front door instead of picking up a box of dry-goods at the back door

  • It’s about contributing to your community when you can, and receiving support when you need it

Food insecurity can touch anyone. But solutions like On Rock’s Marche & Le Spot remind us that compassion, respect, and creativity can go a long way.

Final Thoughts

Real change often starts with small shifts: letting someone choose between tomato soup and chicken noodle. Making space for dignity in a system built on scarcity. Saying “yes” to the question: What if we could do better?

If you’re reading this, you’re part of a community. Whether you’re a homeowner, a renter, or someone thinking about the future, you can be part of building something better.

So next time you hear about a food drive or a grassroots initiative, don’t just donate—ask how you can be involved.

Because at the end of the day, it’s not about handouts. It’s about showing up.

On Rock Community Services serves approximately 300 families every week through the food bank.  To distribute the over $1,500,000 in food they will distribute this year, they need the facilities to store the food and the vehicles to distribute it. They depend on donations from people like you. 

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