What’s Up Worcester! I need to tell you about something I witnessed firsthand. Heartbreaking. And incredibly beautiful at the same time.
October 31, 2025, was one of those Woo days that remind you why this city is special. What’s up Worcester was “boots on the ground” to support our city during this food crisis at el Buen Samaritano on Piedmont Street, as we will continue to be all over the city. (More to come on this soon). As a Worcester resident and Founder of WUW, my heart was doubly on my sleeve, and what I saw deserves our collective attention.
Every Family Fed, Every Heart Full
“Today was Love.” That’s how the morning started at EBS, and it delivered.
I watched families walk out with carts with bags stacked high, more than $200 worth of groceries each. Let that sit for a second. In a moment when grocery bills are crushing working families across Worcester, nobody, and I mean nobody, was turned away empty-handed.
“As you move in faith, stand in purpose, and stay obedient to the mission, God provides,” the EBS team told me. You could feel it. Volunteers hustling. Neighbors cheer each other on. And a line of smiles that looked like hope in real time.


The most powerful moment? Seeing Executive Director Mari Gonzalez and so many others; grinning through the grind, faces full of hope, hugs all around, love pouring out the doors.

Worcester showed up big-time: supporters came out to show love, including Margie Breault, City Councilman Luis Ojeda, State Senator Robin Kennedy, and Woodrow Adams of 508 Forever Young, hugging folks, hauling boxes, and spreading that Woo energy.

The Crisis Mari Gonzalez Wants You to Know About
Mari didn’t sugarcoat it when we talked. What’s happening in Worcester right now is a major and serious public crisis. Our food assistance agencies are running hot, with late nights and early mornings, moving mountains to make sure everyone in need is fed.
This isn’t the usual “pantry could use a few cans” moment. It’s all-hands-on-deck. And it’s threatening to derail Thanksgiving for thousands of families if we don’t rally like Worcester does.
More Than Just Food – It’s About Dignity
El Buen Samaritano has been holding it down since 1991, more than three decades of love, dignity, and community. That’s their whole blueprint. WUW supports the same community values.
What sets EBS apart? It’s not just the groceries (though they do that extremely well). It’s how people are treated. No lectures. No shame. No hoops. You need food? You get food. Period.
At 39 Piedmont Street, right on the corner of Davis, folks know they’ll be seen, heard, and respected. When you’re struggling, that kind of dignity hits different, and it matters.
How Worcester Can Show Up Right Now
If yesterday proved anything, it’s that Worcester has love to give. Volunteers. Donors. Prayers. Good vibes. That’s the Woo I know and love.
But the need isn’t dipping. It’s growing. Here’s how you can plug in, straight from what I confirmed on site:

Weekly Food Distribution: Every Friday from 11 am-2 pm at 39 Piedmont St. If you’re struggling to put food on the table, this is for you. No judgment. No paperwork nightmares. Neighbors helping neighbors.
Emergency Situations: Can’t wait until Friday? Things got urgent? Call 774-253-1619 or email to set up an emergency appointment. They’ll work it out with you.
Want to Help: Head to ebsamaritano.org to see what’s most needed. Spoiler: everything helps food donations, volunteer hours, financial support, and folks spreading the word.
The Thanksgiving Reality Check
Let’s be real. Thanksgiving is supposed to be gratitude, family, and full tables. But for too many Worcester families, it’s becoming a reminder of what feels out of reach.
Here’s the twist: this is usually the season when donations spike. But the need is so massive this year that even our traditional holiday generosity might not cover it all. For the full picture on just how many neighbors are feeling it, check our report: 25% of Worcester residents face an empty Thanksgiving table; local programs are here for all of us. Read it here.
That’s not to make you feel helpless; it’s to show that what you do right now truly matters. A case of soup. A few bucks. A Friday afternoon to volunteer. It all adds up to full plates and breathing room for our neighbors.
What Makes Worcester Special
What I saw at EBS wasn’t just about groceries. It was Worcester being Worcester, seeing need and meeting it with love, not judgment.
“We are here. We are serving. And together, we will keep showing love, hope, and dignity to every family that walks through our doors,” the team told me. That’s the city I’m proud to report on, and the community I’m proud to be part of.
The Call for All Hands on Deck
Mari’s not being dramatic, calling this a crisis. Agencies across the city are waving the flag for all hands on deck because the need is unlike anything they’ve seen in years.
This isn’t about politics. It’s about your neighbors eating tonight. About whether kids in the Woo feel seen, supported, and fed.

On October 31, 2025, Worcester proved what happens when Worcester moves with purpose and faith. Every family is fed. Every person is treated with dignity. Every heart is a little fuller because love was the plan.
But tomorrow? More families will need help. Next week. Next month. Through Thanksgiving and beyond. The question is: will Worcester keep showing up?
If you know this city, you know the answer. We show up. We take care of each other. We don’t leave folks behind.
El Buen Samaritano is counting on us, the city is counting on us, and I believe this community is about to remind everyone what the Woo can do when we lock in together.
October 31, 2025, was love. Tomorrow can be love, too, if we make it happen.
Have news, tips, or a story Worcester needs to hear? Reach Editor-in-Chief Jerry Filmore at [email protected] or [email protected] because community news starts with you.

