Friday, April 25, 2025, 2:37PM |  69ยฐ
MENU
Advertisement
An average-sized Pennsylvania deer provides enough high-protein, low-fat meat for 200 healthy meals.
1
MORE

Donated venison needed now more than ever

Wikimedia Commons

Donated venison needed now more than ever

The medical crisis that spawned an economic crisis has caused a hunger crisis in Pennsylvania. Pandemic-related business closings have led to layoffs or pay reductions for more than 1 million Pennsylvanians since March. Food banks in the state report that the number of residents requiring food assistance has grown from 1.5 million to 1.8 million since spring.

John Plowman, director of Hunters Sharing the Harvest, said that despite record-setting donations of hunter-killed deer in 2019, the need has increased substantially this year. The nonprofit group, which has moved deer from hunters to participating butchers to food banks since 1991, is urging hunters to fill an extra doe tag this year to provide much-needed venison to the hungry.

โ€œWhen the economy crashed last March, all of a sudden a lot of people who had never had problems with their economic situation suddenly needed food assistance,โ€ said Mr. Plowman. โ€œCorona showed up after the hunting season. Butchers are still processing long after the last shot is fired. A lot of deer that were donated in winter were still in freezers. Processors had not delivered all of their meat, and our program became extremely valuable to many people.โ€

Advertisement

The Pennsylvania food bank network reported that from March 2019 through the same time period in 2020, the demand for donated food rose by 50%.

Mt. Lebanon, Pa April 2, 2010 Pittsburgh Post-Gazette / Jim Mendenhall   A white tailed deer hobbles into Bird Park in Mt. Lebanon after being approached by an animal control officer. The deer, which could not bear weight on its right rear leg had suffered some kind of trauma, most likely from an auto accident, and had been lounging in backyards for much of two days. The day before it had rested under the back porch of a home and could hardly move. This day it made it's way back into the park.   Original Filename: south mendenhall 3standalon.jpg
John Hayes
Volunteer venison-sharing program celebrates 25 years

โ€œBusinesses closed, people became desperate. When you think about our program getting pounds of venison burger to food banks, it became a lifesaver,โ€ said Mr. Plowman.

More than 100 Hunters Sharing the Harvest processors statewide provide ground venison wrapped and frozen in 1-pound blocks to regional food banks, which distribute them to smaller charitable food outlets. A single average-sized Pennsylvania deer can provide about 200 individual meals. In 2019, Pennsylvania hunters donated 5,000 deer โ€” more than 160,000 pounds of meat โ€” to the state food bank system, a new record for Hunters Sharing the Harvest.

A pound of ground meat can go a long way.

Advertisement

โ€œMy kids love it,โ€ said Charsey Adamson, of Washington, Pa. โ€œWe hit some hard times when COVID came. I lost my job and it was the first time we ever had to take a food donation.

โ€œFortunately weโ€™ve always been an outdoorsy family, so my girls โ€” 7 and 9 years old โ€” were used to eating wild food. We make cheeseburgers, but it really goes a long way when I put the ground meat in noodles with gravy or in spaghetti sauce, things like that. Itโ€™s lean meat so itโ€™s good for them, they like it and weโ€™re very lucky that this program was there when we really needed it.โ€

Hunters pay no processing fee when dropping off deer donations. No special field dressing protocol is required during the pandemic.

Southwestern Pennsylvania hunters donate more deer to Hunters Sharing the Harvest than those in any other region of the state. This year, the EQT Foundation made a large donation to keep processing fees down. Mr. Plowman said that instead of relying on the big food banks to distribute all of the venison, HSH is initiating a new program to move some of the meat directly to small distribution centers.

Free venison distribution at the Ellsworth Food Pantry in Washington County.
John Hayes
Donate food through a deer processor near you

Donโ€™t have a deer to donate, but want to help? Hunters Sharing the Harvest processes financial support through the Buck For The Pot campaign. Contributions go to the costs of processing and distributing donated venison. In 2019, about $12,000 was donated to pay for processing fees when hunters donate a deer at a participating processor. Hunters Sharing the Harvest reports that for every $25 received, 100 meals of venison can be served to the hungry.

Memorial contributions can be made in honor of a family member or friend, hunting club member, work associate or on behalf of an organization or business. Send checks payable to: Hunters Sharing the Harvest, Attn: John Plowman, Executive Director, 6780 Hickory Lane, Harrisburg, PA 17112.

First Published: October 8, 2020, 10:25 a.m.
Updated: October 8, 2020, 10:25 a.m.

RELATED
SHOW COMMENTS (0)  
Join the Conversation
Commenting policy | How to Report Abuse
If you would like your comment to be considered for a published letter to the editor, please send it to letters@post-gazette.com. Letters must be under 250 words and may be edited for length and clarity.
Partners
Advertisement
Iowa running back Kaleb Johnson, right, stiff arms UCLA linebacker Kain Medrano during the second half of an NCAA college football game, Friday, Nov. 8, 2024, in Pasadena, Calif.
1
sports
2025 NFL draft Day 2: Best options available for Steelers
Mississippi quarterback Jaxson Dart (2) communicates with the fans during the second half of an NCAA college football game against Georgia on Saturday, Nov. 9, 2024, in Oxford, Miss. Mississippi won 28-10.
2
sports
Joe Starkey: Steelers will regret bypassing Jaxson Dart, who went 4 picks later
Sen. Dave McCormick addresses hundreds of local Republicans at the Allegheny County Republican Committee's annual Lincoln Day Dinner in at the Wyndham Grand in Downtown Pittsburgh on Thursday, April 24, 2024
3
news
Dave McCormick tells hundreds of local Republicans at annual fundraising dinner to keep 2024 momentum going
Oregon defensive lineman Derrick Harmon rushes Illinois quarterback Luke Altmyer in a 38-9 Ducks win on Oct. 26, 2024. The Steelers picked Harmon No. 21 overall in the 2025 NFL draft.
4
sports
Jason Mackey: Why the Steelers taking Derrick Harmon was the exact right choice โ€” and one we should've seen coming
The Cathedral of Learning on the University of Pittsburgh campus. The National Science Foundation has canceled 17 grants worth $7.3 million to Pennsylvania institutions of higher education, with Pitt accounting for five, or about one-third, of the terminated grants.
5
news
Five research grants at Pitt are canceled, the highest number in Pennsylvania
An average-sized Pennsylvania deer provides enough high-protein, low-fat meat for 200 healthy meals.  (Wikimedia Commons)
Wikimedia Commons
Advertisement
LATEST life
Advertisement
TOP
Email a Story