Yuba Sutter Salvation Army delivers meals to the communityâs unhoused individuals.
Weekdays, Melissa Evangelista is up by about 5 a.m. She picks up the Hope Express delivery truck from The Salvation Army Depot Family Crisis Center transitional shelter program and then heads to the Yuba Sutter (California) Corpsâ kitchen to prepare the dayâs meals.
âMy goal is to feed everybody,â said Evangelista, who has a background in food service. As the Yuba Sutter Corpsâ Homeless Outreach Liaison, Evangelista coordinates the Hope Express initiative, which launched in April and aims to provide food security for the communityâs unhoused individuals.
Currently Hope Express provides food for individuals at four shelters in Northern California, two in Sutter County and two in Yuba County.
âWeâre providing hot, prepared meals Monday through Friday; then we also give them a sack lunch for dinner,â Yuba Sutter Corps Officer Major Julius Murphy said. âEach day they get two meals, and on Friday we give them enough food for the weekend. So we provide food, two meals a day, seven days a week for this population.â
Thatâs a lot of time in the kitchen. Murphy said Hope Express has provided an average of 7,000 meals a month since its April launch.
âI prepare meals for almost 200 people a day,â Evangelista said. âI dedicate my time to cook in the morning. I just focus. If I donât focus, and I donât have what I need, guess what? Someoneâs not going to get fed. My goal is to feed everybody that comes to our truck. Itâs a really big thing. And Iâm honored to do it.â
Evangelista gets help from family members and from Yuba Sutter Corps staff and volunteers, including the corpsâ Emergency Disaster Services team. They assist with meal preparation and food service.
âOnce we prep everything and have everything in the truckâthe main meal, the sandwich meal, water, fruitâwe go to our first site at 11:00,â she said.
Itâs a tight schedule. Hope Express stays at each site for 30 minutes. Two of the sites are open to anyone, beyond those staying at the shelter.
âA lot more people are coming,â Evangelista said. âMore people are coming with their kids. Itâs not just the homeless community; itâs the community itself. Wordâs getting around.â

Even though the schedule is tight, Evangelista takes time to talk with clients. She said one young woman told her, âWhat youâre doing out here is amazing. Not a lot of us have food to eat out here. Thank youâyouâre really helping.â
She said clients look for ways to show their appreciation, often asking how they can help. She often has assistance carrying water and cases of fruit.
âThey help me in many ways and they donât have to,â she said. âIâm supposed to be here serving them.â
Among those from the larger community who came for food is a single mother. Evangelista recalled that although the woman had a place to live, she had trouble making ends meet and did not qualify for CalFresh, Californiaâs food stamp program. âShe would come every Friday to get food for the weekend,â Evangelista said. âShe told me she didnât know what they would have done without that help.â
Interactions like this keep Evangelista goingâher motivation stays high. She admitted her job can sometimes be stressful in the morning, when she considers the task before her. âBut knowing that people are going to get fedâŠthat just makes the difference,â she said.
These days, lines form at the shelters before Hope Express arrives. And the name, Hope Express?
âThe theme of our programming is âHope,ââ Murphy said. âAnd we wanted something to tie in to the food truck theme as well.â
Murphy said funding for Hope Express comes from a federal grant administered by the state. Originally the project was set to end in September.
âBut in Godâs economy, he upsized that and itâs extended until next September,â he said, noting plans to request additional funds to further extend the program. âOur plan is to keep it operational, indefinitelyâŠThe community is really responding well, not just those who participate in the program, but also our community partners and our donors. They’re seeing what weâre doing, and itâs unique.â
Evangelista credits The Salvation Army for its efforts to help those in need.
â[Hope Express] is a really big thing,â she said. âKnowing that weâre a part of doing the most good and giving backâthatâs all that matters to me. Itâs a true blessing.â
Do Good:
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- Read more about how the Yuba-Sutter Corps serves its community.