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.

CNOY 2026 - Thank You!

Over $117,581 has been raised to support our work
media release news
Wow! That's all we can say after another great Coldest Night of the Year(CNOY) walk! Thank you to the volunteers, the donors, the sponsors, our performers, and the walkers - really, everybody who helped make the day a success! So far, across our three walks, we've raised $117,581 - and donations continue to roll in! We also want to thank

The heart

February 2026 Newsletter
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At Lionhearts, we often speak about service, impact, and community. We measure meals served, agencies helped, and people housed. But behind every number, every box packed, and every delivery made is something far less quantifiable and far more powerful: the human heart.   To modern ears, the heart is mostly symbolic. We associate it with

Small things

January 2026 Newsletter
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Isn’t it amazing how it all adds up?   I’m talking about snow, of course.   The Ottawa area, where I’m based, has seen nearly 33 centimetres of snow since the start of winter, and a Kingston-based colleague of mine said, “Farmer’s Almanac called for a cold, dry winter for Eastern Ontario this year. On a totally unrelated note, Farmer’s