Leading with Compassion: Peter Warda and the Future of the SCV Food Pantry
For more than 40 years, the Santa Clarita Valley Food Pantry has been a lifeline for local families facing food insecurity. Today, under the leadership of newly appointed Executive Director Peter Warda, the organization is preparing to expand its impact while remaining grounded in the compassion and reliability that have defined its mission for decades.
Warda officially stepped into the executive director role after serving as interim executive director, bringing with him a career rooted in public service, advocacy, and nonprofit leadership. For him, joining the Pantry felt like a natural next step.
“I’ve spent my career working to improve communities,” Warda says. “The opportunity to lead an organization that directly helps thousands of individuals and families every month was incredibly meaningful.”
During his first months in leadership, Warda gained a deeper understanding of a challenge many people do not realize exists right here in Santa Clarita.
“One of the biggest misconceptions is that food insecurity only happens in large urban areas,” he explains. “The reality is that many of our neighbors are working families, seniors on fixed incomes, students, and individuals facing unexpected hardships.”
As the cost of housing, healthcare, transportation, utilities, and groceries continues to rise, more residents are finding themselves in need of assistance. Warda has seen demand increase across nearly every Pantry program, particularly among seniors and working families whose paychecks simply do not stretch as far as they once did.
Despite the growing need, Warda remains optimistic, pointing to the extraordinary generosity of the Santa Clarita community. Partnerships with businesses, schools, faith organizations, nonprofits, service clubs, and local government agencies are essential to the Pantry’s success.
“Santa Clarita has a remarkable spirit of generosity,” he says. “People genuinely care about making sure their neighbors are taken care of.”
One moment from his very first day at the Pantry continues to motivate him. A young boy accompanying his mother during a food distribution asked if the Pantry had any Legos available. Unfortunately, they did not.
“It was such a simple question, but it reminded me that when families are struggling to put food on the table, even small joys can become luxuries,” Warda recalls.
Looking ahead, his priorities include strengthening operations, improving facilities, expanding partnerships, increasing volunteer engagement, and ensuring the Pantry can continue meeting growing demand.
Ultimately, Warda defines success simply: making sure anyone who needs help can access it with dignity and respect.
“The Pantry is more than a place that provides food,” he says. “It is a community resource that offers hope, support, and dignity. Together, we can make a meaningful difference.”
For Warda, that mission is what makes this work so important, and what will continue to guide the SCV Food Pantry into its next chapter.
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