When the Safety Net Fails
Posted by Stanford Social Innovation Review on July 14, 2026
An innovative public-private partnership between the San Francisco Human Services Agency and Crankstart, a San Francisco-based family foundation, offers a potential blueprint for cross-sector collaboration when the federal safety net is interrupted.
On October 1, 2025, the United States federal government shut down. Among the many consequences was an unprecedented crisis: For the first time in its history, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) was poised to suspend benefits to 42 million Americans. In San Francisco, that meant 112,000 residents across 82,000 households suddenly faced the prospect of losing the food assistance that put meals on their tables.
The traditional playbook for food emergencies—food banks, community meal programs, emergency distribution sites—couldn’t come close to meeting this moment. Food banks typically provide one meal for every nine meals that SNAP covers. Even with heroic efforts to scale up operations, the infrastructure simply wasn’t designed to replace an entire federal nutrition program. San Francisco needed something different: an immediate, comprehensive response that matched the magnitude of the crisis.
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