Q: When and where is the Edmonds American Legion Post 66 and VFW Post 8870 veterans dropoff event?
A: Saturday, May 9, 2026, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Wilcox Construction Red Barn at 5th Avenue and Maple Street in downtown Edmonds. Members of Edmonds American Legion Post 66 and VFW Post 8870 will accept donations of food, personal hygiene items, lightly used or new spring and summer clothing, socks and underwear, cash or checks made out to “American Legion Food Drive,” and used American flags in need of proper disposal. Food collected goes to the Edmonds Food Bank for distribution to local veterans, with help from representatives of the Lynnwood Heroes’ Café. For information call 833-924-4636.
The Quietest Way to Help a Snohomish County Veteran This Month Is a Saturday Morning in Edmonds
There are over 50,000 veterans in Snohomish County, according to the event announcement from Edmonds American Legion Post 66 and VFW Post 8870 — a number that includes everyone from World War II survivors in their late 90s to NAVSTA Everett sailors who hung up the uniform last year and are still figuring out the gap between active-duty pay and the civilian job market. Many of them, the announcement says plainly, “continue to need help due to difficult circumstances.”
That is the context for what happens in downtown Edmonds on Saturday, May 9, 2026.
From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., members of Edmonds American Legion Post 66 and VFW Post 8870 will be at the Wilcox Construction Red Barn — at the corner of 5th Avenue and Maple Street — collecting the kind of donations that veterans assistance programs need every month and rarely get all at once: food for the Edmonds Food Bank’s veteran clients, personal hygiene supplies, clothing, and money. Lynnwood Heroes’ Café representatives will help with distribution.
It is the kind of community event that does not make the front page even when it should. So here is what is being collected, who runs it, why the food bank route matters, and how it fits into the broader picture of veteran services for Navy families and retirees living within reach of Naval Station Everett.
What the May 9 Dropoff Event Is Collecting
The event organizers have published a specific list of what is needed. None of it is a guess about what veterans want — it is what the partner agencies, the Edmonds Food Bank and the Lynnwood Heroes’ Café, have asked for based on what they actually distribute.
Food
All food donations are routed to the Edmonds Food Bank, which then distributes them to local veterans. Non-perishable items — canned proteins, pasta, rice, soups, peanut butter, shelf-stable meals — are the standard ask.
Personal hygiene items
The published list calls out, by name: deodorant, toothbrushes, toothpaste, razors, lotion, body wash, and sanitary napkins. These are the categories that food banks consistently report as the hardest to keep stocked, because federal nutrition programs cover food but not hygiene products. Every dollar a veteran spends on toothpaste at a regular grocery store is a dollar not spent on rent or utilities.
Disposable diapers
Diapers are also specifically requested. Veteran households with young children — including grandchildren in the care of grandparent veterans — face the same diaper-cost squeeze as any other low-income family, and diapers cannot be purchased with SNAP benefits.
Clothing, socks, and underwear
Lightly used or new spring and summer clothing is welcome. Socks and underwear are specifically mentioned, which is also the standard ask at most veteran-serving distributions — those items are almost never donated used because most people wear them out.
Cash and credit/debit donations
Cash and card donations are accepted on-site. Checks should be made out to “American Legion Food Drive.” Cash donations let the post commanders fill specific gaps after the event closes — usually the high-cost items the in-person drive did not collect enough of.
Used American flags
The posts will also accept worn or damaged American flags for proper retirement and disposal. This is a service American Legion posts perform under flag-code protocol, and it removes a real practical question — most people do not know what to do with a flag that has worn out and cannot legally just put it in the trash.
Who Is Running the Event
Two posts are co-hosting:
Edmonds American Legion Post 66 is the Edmonds-area chapter of the American Legion, the congressionally chartered veterans service organization founded in 1919. Post Commander Dan Mullene said in the event announcement that “our Edmonds-area community always supports our vets, and we are pleased to provide this opportunity of them to do it once again.” That language — “once again” — is the operative tense. This is not a one-off. The posts have been running similar drives for years, and they have a track record.
VFW Post 8870 is the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post serving the Edmonds area. Post Commander Duane Bowman said in the same announcement that “we greatly appreciate the continued community responses to our drives. Last year we brought in significant donations of food, hygiene products, clothing and money at similar events.” The VFW is a separate organization from the American Legion — membership is restricted to veterans who served in a designated overseas combat zone — but the two posts coordinate on community-facing events like this one.
Wilcox Construction donates the venue. Matt Lessard, president of Wilcox Construction, makes the Red Barn available for the event. The Red Barn — at 5th Avenue and Maple Street in downtown Edmonds — is one of those community-asset properties that exists because someone with the means decided it should. Both post commanders specifically thank Lessard and his team in the event announcement.
Edmonds Food Bank handles distribution of the food collected. The food bank has been the through-line for veteran food assistance in the Edmonds area for years and operates the actual logistics of getting groceries to veterans who have signed up for assistance.
Lynnwood Heroes’ Café sends representatives to help with distribution. The Heroes’ Café is a community gathering space serving veterans, first responders, and their families in the Lynnwood area, and its presence at the May 9 event extends the reach of the donations beyond just Edmonds.
Why a Food Drive Matters Inside a $340 Million Military Economy
Snohomish County is home to one of the largest concentrations of military households in Washington state. Naval Station Everett is the third-largest employer in the county, and the total annual economic impact of the military presence in Snohomish County is estimated at roughly $340 million.
That number represents wages, contracts, base spending, and the supplier ecosystem. It does not represent the gap between what active-duty pay covers and what civilian living costs in the Puget Sound region in 2026 actually are. It does not represent the gap between full benefits and the months immediately after separation, when a sailor who decided not to re-enlist is waiting for VA paperwork, looking for civilian work, and facing rent on the local market for the first time without a housing allowance.
And it does not represent the older veteran population — the Vietnam-era and Korean War veterans, many of them on fixed Social Security and partial VA benefits — who make up a significant share of the 50,000-plus county total. For those households, a food drive is not a feel-good event. It is grocery money for the month.
That is the gap the May 9 dropoff event is designed to close, even just for one weekend. The Edmonds Food Bank’s veteran-targeted distribution runs year-round; the May 9 event is a restocking surge.
How This Connects to Other Veteran Services in Snohomish County
If you are a Navy family member, a veteran, or a civilian neighbor who wants to do more than drop off a bag of canned goods on May 9, here is the broader landscape of resources that the dropoff event sits inside.
Veteran benefits and claims help in Snohomish County is provided through several channels: the Snohomish County Veterans Assistance Program at the Robert J. Drewel Building in Everett, the VA Puget Sound Health Care System’s Everett clinic which began seeing patients in February 2025, and monthly visits by VBA service officers. The schedule of in-person VA claims help in Everett changed in February 2026 when VFW service officer hours at the Everett Vet Center were reduced — coverage of the current options is available here and the complete 2026 guide is here.
Memorial Day 2026 services in Snohomish County are scheduled for Monday, May 25, with American Legion Post 181 in Lake Stevens hosting one of the most well-attended ceremonies in the county. A practical guide to Memorial Day events for military families and veterans new to Everett — including Tahoma National Cemetery, the County Eternal Flame at the Drewel Building, and the Lake Stevens, Floral Hills, and Evergreen ceremonies — is available here. The May 9 dropoff event is timed to land before Memorial Day, when public attention to veteran issues briefly peaks.
NAVSTA Everett family resources — including the Fleet & Family Support Center at 425-304-3735 and the SAPR 24/7 line at 425-754-5977 — exist for active-duty families currently homeported at the base. The Fleet & Family Support Center coverage is here. These are different services than what the May 9 dropoff event supports, which is primarily aimed at veterans who have left active duty and the older veteran population, but they are part of the same ecosystem.
What to Bring, What Not to Bring
Based on the event announcement and the standard practice of veteran-serving food drives:
Bring: non-perishable food in original sealed packaging, unopened hygiene products, sealed packs of disposable diapers, clean lightly used spring/summer clothing, new socks and underwear in package, cash, checks made out to “American Legion Food Drive,” and worn American flags for proper retirement.
Do not bring: opened or expired food, used hygiene products, used socks or underwear, heavy winter coats (the request is specifically spring and summer clothing), perishables that need refrigeration without coordinating in advance, or items the announcement did not list.
If in doubt, the post information line is 833-924-4636.
The Bigger Pattern: How Veteran Service Organizations Bridge a Gap Federal Programs Cannot
The federal veteran benefits system — VA health care, disability compensation, GI Bill education benefits, VA home loans, VA pension — is the largest and most comprehensive veteran support apparatus in the world. Snohomish County veterans access it through the VA Puget Sound system, the VBA regional office in Seattle, and a network of accredited service officers.
What that system does not do well is provide groceries on a Tuesday afternoon when the rent is due Friday. That is the niche American Legion posts, VFW posts, food banks, and community partners like the Heroes’ Café have always filled. The May 9 dropoff event is a representative example of how that informal network operates: a venue donated by a local business, two veteran service organizations organizing the drive, a food bank running the distribution, and a community gathering space helping with reach.
The Edmonds-area community — and the broader Snohomish County community within driving distance of downtown Edmonds — has a low-effort, high-impact way to participate this Saturday. The barrier to entry is a bag of canned goods and a parking spot at the Red Barn between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m.
Frequently Asked Questions
When and where is the Edmonds veterans dropoff event on May 9, 2026?
The event is Saturday, May 9, 2026, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Wilcox Construction Red Barn, located at the intersection of 5th Avenue and Maple Street in downtown Edmonds, Washington. Edmonds American Legion Post 66 and VFW Post 8870 are co-hosting.
What items are being collected at the May 9 Edmonds veteran food and hygiene drive?
The event is collecting non-perishable food (routed to the Edmonds Food Bank for distribution to veterans), personal hygiene items including deodorant, toothbrushes, toothpaste, razors, lotion, body wash, and sanitary napkins, disposable diapers, lightly used or new spring and summer clothing, new socks and underwear, cash and credit/debit donations, checks made out to “American Legion Food Drive,” and used American flags in need of proper retirement.
Who runs the May 9 dropoff event?
The event is co-hosted by Edmonds American Legion Post 66, with Post Commander Dan Mullene, and VFW Post 8870, with Post Commander Duane Bowman. The venue is donated by Wilcox Construction, whose president is Matt Lessard. The Edmonds Food Bank handles food distribution, and Lynnwood Heroes’ Café representatives assist with distribution.
How can I make a financial donation if I cannot attend the May 9 event in person?
Cash and credit/debit card donations are accepted on-site at the event. Checks should be made out to “American Legion Food Drive.” For donation arrangements outside event hours, contact the post information line at 833-924-4636.
Can I drop off a worn American flag at the Edmonds dropoff event?
Yes. American Legion Post 66 will accept used American flags in need of proper retirement and disposal. American Legion posts are authorized under flag code protocol to perform formal flag retirement ceremonies, which is the legally and traditionally correct way to dispose of a U.S. flag that is no longer fit for display.
How does the May 9 dropoff event fit with other Snohomish County veteran services?
The dropoff event provides immediate-need supplies — food, hygiene, clothing — through the Edmonds Food Bank’s veteran distribution channel. It is complementary to the formal VA benefits system accessed through VA Puget Sound’s Everett clinic, the Snohomish County Veterans Assistance Program at the Drewel Building, and accredited VSO claims help. The dropoff event addresses the day-to-day gap that federal benefits do not always cover, especially for older veterans on fixed incomes and for veterans in transition from active duty to civilian life.
Are veterans the only people who can donate at the May 9 event?
No. The event is a community drive open to all donors. Civilian neighbors, businesses, and community members are encouraged to participate. The 50,000-plus Snohomish County veteran population is the beneficiary; the donor base is intentionally the broader community.
Why does the food go through the Edmonds Food Bank instead of directly to veterans?
The Edmonds Food Bank already operates a year-round veteran-targeted distribution program with intake, eligibility verification, and ongoing client relationships. Routing the May 9 donations through the food bank ensures the items reach veterans who are already enrolled in assistance, that the distribution is equitable, and that the volume is matched to actual demand. It also extends the impact beyond a single Saturday — the supplies feed into the food bank’s stockroom and are distributed over the following weeks as veterans request assistance.

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