A different kind of food bank
The Marketplace at Regeneration Outreach Community isn’t a traditional food bank. There are no pre-packed boxes, no lineups to receive whatever happens to be available that week. Guests walk in, choose what they need, and leave with groceries for their family.
The philosophy is dignity-first. It shapes everything: the layout of the shelves, the way staff are trained, the items on offer. Not as a policy, but as a belief.
Because when someone walks in already carrying shame, shame about needing help, about not being able to provide, building up over months or years of quietly going without, what they find on the other side of the door matters.
Words can describe it. The people who’ve lived it can show you.

I am so grateful to be able to serve the community by volunteering, but also be able to help supplement my groceries when I come. These are hard times. I thank Regeneration and God for the blessing.
For the first time in years
Since first coming, he’s been back four times. He says he’s eating properly for the first time in years. The anxiety that used to hit him every time he walked into a grocery store, knowing he couldn’t get what his family needed, has started to lift.
“For the first time in years,” he wrote, “I am starting to feel better and better nourished.”
This is what happens when someone has access to real food, chosen by them, without a lineup or a box of whatever’s left over.
It’s what the Marketplace was designed to do.


What keeps it running
The Marketplace operates because Brampton shows up for it, through food rescue partners, volunteers, and donors who understand that $50 provides a week’s worth of groceries for ten families.
The Marketplace is where people feel that something is different. Where the transaction isn’t a handout. Where the mission isn’t written on a wall, it’s felt in the way you’re greeted at the door.
Poverty doesn’t look the way most people think it does. And neither does hope.
*Names and photos are representative to protect guests.

