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Women’s Lunch Place tells council demand is rising and asks for budget support to expand services

Boston City Council Committee on Human Services · March 30, 2026

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Summary

The Women’s Lunch Place told the City Council committee that demand for prepared, culturally appropriate meals and shelter services is increasing; its leaders said more space, staff and stable funding would be required to meet that need and asked the council to consider budget requests this cycle.

The Women’s Lunch Place told the Boston City Council Committee on Human Services on March 30 that rising demand for prepared meals and shelter services is stretching the nonprofit’s capacity and that city funding and budget commitments would be necessary to expand services.

Jennifer, chief executive officer of Women’s Lunch Place, described a model that pairs daily meals and on‑site case management with an overnight shelter. She told the committee WLP served more than 2,300 women last year and provided about 165,000 healthy meals. “A meal is how trust begins,” she said, explaining that meals create a connection that allows staff to help guests enroll in SNAP, find housing referrals and access health care and other supports.

Jennifer said many guests need prepared meals because they lack cooking facilities or face barriers such as cognitive impairment or recovery from trauma. She said WLP’s takeaway dinner program and on‑site advocacy reduced reliance on emergency food boxes and supported transitions into housing; WLP reported that it has housed more than 30 women from its overnight shelter.

Council members asked what it would take to double WLP’s capacity; Jennifer said the barriers are physical space, staff and capital — more kitchen capacity, refrigeration, and additional shelter beds — and that WLP has made recent capital investments but still faces constraints. She asked the council to consider filling funding gaps and welcomed the opportunity to submit itemized budget requests; councilors signaled willingness to raise those requests during the budget cycle but made no promises.

City staff and public‑health presenters said the city supports WLP through shelter funding and partnerships (including mayoral and state support to stand up a 65‑bed overnight shelter) and noted that sustaining prepared‑meal capacity matters because SNAP alone does not cover ready‑to‑eat food for people without kitchens. The council asked the Women’s Lunch Place to provide specific budget figures for council consideration.

The hearing closed with councilors thanking WLP for frontline services and requesting budget details; no formal action or vote occurred.