Lionhearts.ca

Our Programs.

Programs That Feed, Support, and Strengthen Community
Serving London with Care and Commitment

In London, Lionhearts is creating programs that respond to the needs of our neighbours while making the most of local resources. From recovering surplus food and household goods to supporting the frontline organizations that serve our city, our focus is on turning generosity into meaningful action.

Our Food and Household Good Recovery Program is already making an impact-reducing waste, easing hardship, and helping ensure that essentials reach the people who need them most. As we grow in London, new initiatives will join this effort, each shaped to address the challenges and opportunities unique to our community.

Discover the programs that are changing lives today-and the ones we're preparing for the future.


Support Our Work and Make a Difference in Your Community

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From rescuing food and household goods to operating warming shelters, retraining people to help rebuild their lives, providing low-cost groceries, or any other way we serve, our programs are thoughtfully designed to restore dignity and hope.

Norms

April 2026 newsletter
For those who care deeply about inclusion, 2026 marks an interesting 35th anniversary for a photo with global significance - and there's a Canadian angle.   Think back first to 1987. AIDS had only been formally recognized, diagnosed, and named six years earlier, and there remained significant stigma and misunderstanding which contributed to

How we're all connected

March 2026 newsletter
newsletter
How grateful are you?   Research has shown that the average person says thank you about six times a day, or nearly 2,200 times per year. As polite Canadians, we often say "thank you" as a basic reflex. In that way, it can sometimes become unconscious - you don't even think about why you're saying it!    Ancient thinkers understood

Portraits of Resilience now on display at the Tett Gallery

Meet some of the people we help through a unique art gallery
Kingston
At the start of this year, there were 572 individuals documented as experiencing homelessness in Kingston. This week, we have the unique opportunity to learn some of their stories. Join local artists Shari Doseger, Ben Spadzinski, and Kyla Todd as they unveil a new gallery entitled "Portraits of Resilience" at the Tett Gallery. Make a plan to