thank you, god bless you all. reporter: these are the faces of hunger and their voices. my name is christa flores. i m furloughed from my job. i m a single mom. my name is diane. i m disabled, and i never thought i d need help. my name is tana hendrix. unfortunately my unemployment did get denied. i never really needed the assistance before. reporter: as the deadly pandemic grips the country, this week marks one month without income for millions of americans. in san antonio, an army of volunteers from the food bank working through the night packing trucks with groceries. this pandemic has forced so many to get help simply to feed their families, and this is what the desperation looks like a line of cars filling the stadium parking lot. reporter: many are like matthew, who was laid off from his warehouse job at the start of the shutdown. he s utilizing the food bank for the first time ever to feed hi it s not easy to ask for help. nobody likes it when your kids ask w
house. people run in the house and close the doors. they don t even talk. there are some people who are not afraid to go outside, and i m one of them. my name is diane. we opened the community center called kids off the block. we re known as kob. we have kids in gangs that are homeless, their mothers do drugs, so they have a lot of issues. i tell kids this is a peace place. this is a safe place. i m really wanting to be a veterinarian. we have preparation, music. there s a lot of things that go on here. we started out with ten young people, and the next thing i knew, i had sgan, and then i had 25. at one point, i had 75 young people including rooms in my hoe. that s where it started, in my living room. we opened the doors to the new kob center in july. last two weeks, 301 people. when they knock on the door, they can come on.