Oregon Emergency Office not just focused on Natural Disasters, but Food Insecurity

SALEM, OR – In a warehouse just south of Salem the week before Thanksgiving, about a dozen state employees passed 1,500 boxes down a line, each dropping cans of beans, rice, canned fruit and other non-perishable food items inside.

The boxes will get distributed to Oregon Department of Human Services offices throughout the state to help low-income Oregonians. But it’s not just to give out immediate food aid, it’s an exercise Ed Flick, director of the state’s Office of Resilience and Emergency Management, said will prepare the agency to help respond in a major emergency.

The agency, which operates under the department of human resources, was created in September 2020 as wildfires over Labor Day weekend destroyed more than 4,000 homes

Since its establishment, the office has provided emergency equipment such as generators to counties, supported warming centers in winter storms and cooling centers in heat waves, offered air purified spaces during wildfires and distributed hundreds of emergency kits filled with food, flashlights and batteries for elderly people living in Oregon.

But the office’s role has transformed over the past five years. In addition to natural disasters, it’s preparing to help Oregon families who fell behind during the federal government shutdown, as well as those who may no longer qualify for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program under new eligibility requirements congressional Republicans put forth in a budget law President Donald Trump signed in July.

The one in six Oregonians who rely on SNAP were left without access to the program’s benefits in the first week of November. It took a federal court order for the federal government to restore benefits to Oregon and 21 other states after the states sued the government for withholding the funds.

The food packing exercise corresponds with the office’s role in empowering resilience hubs, or places where Oregonians can receive resources in cases of emergencies. The office in February awarded $10 million in grants to 87 organizations focused on serving as resilience hubs. That program is funded through House Bill 3409 passed by the Oregon Legislature in 2023.

Flick said while his office is focused on providing emergency assistance, the resilience piece means pushing Oregon families toward independence.

“We don’t just wait around for disaster,” Flick said. “We work every day to strengthen resilience, and then when emergencies occur, we support them and then step in.”

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Oregon Capital Chronicle is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Oregon Capital Chronicle maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Julia Shumway for questions: info@oregoncapitalchronicle.com.

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