In Memory of Former CEO, Joe Schoeningh


Remembering Our Former CEO Joe Schoeningh: A Lifelong Food Banker and Friend

Joe Schoeningh headshot
Joe Schoeningh 1937 – 2025

At Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County, our mission has always been simple — feed people in need. And no one lived that mission more deeply or more humbly than our former CEO Joseph “Joe” Schoeningh.

Born in 1937 in Petaluma, California, Joe’s roots were grounded in faith, family and hard work. He dug graves by hand as a young man and later built a successful career in the office products industry — proudly saying he earned a living “one paper clip at a time.” But Joe’s true calling came when he joined the Food Bank in the early 1980s.

Introduced to Second Harvest by founder Dan Harney, Joe became a founding board member in 1983. After retiring in the mid-90s, he couldn’t stay away. He returned in 1999 as assistant director and became executive director (later titled CEO) in 2003. Joe led with humility and vision, overseeing the Food Bank’s move to our current expanded Irvine facility in 2007 — a milestone that transformed our ability to serve Orange County. Joe was never one for fanfare. With his gravelly voice and gentle demeanor, he always kept the mission front and center. “If you’re hungry, you’re hungry,” he once said. “How you got here, whatever your situation, is of no consequence to us. We feed hungry people.”

Even after retiring in 2012, Joe remained a steady presence at the Food Bank, especially at the “No Lunch" Lunch and Harvesters Fashion Show & Luncheon. In our 40th anniversary video, he summed up his commitment simply: “There’s something inside you that just has a good feeling about it… doing something that will make a difference or help."

In February 2025, Joe passed away after a brief illness. He was a mentor to those who followed in his footsteps and a friend to all who knew him.

We miss him deeply — but Joe’s spirit lives on in our work and in the mission he helped shape, and in our newly named “Joe Schoeningh Lobby".

Read More Stories