@marinelife ‘s excellent link, is it in a nutshell.
I volunteer at our local food pantry. It is organized, and has an all volunteer staff provided by a group of local churches. They are of all denominations, and they are all Christian churches, but if there was any other religions with organizations in our area I’m sure that they would be represented as well.
We get food from, government surplus, local hunters (venison, and turkeys) local food retailers and businesses, farmers and garden growers. Mostly we get the food from donations from community members and church parishioners, food drives by organizations like the Boy and Girl Scouts. National Honor Society and other such groups.
We get fresh produce from gardeners who have too much, we get (frozen day old) baked goods from local stores.
Like @trailsillustrated said, we give a big box of food, the amount depends on how many people are in the household. It usually has canned soups, fruits and vegetables, and meats, cereal, crackers, dry pasta, and beans. Usually we have some kind of frozen meat to add to their box. Included is also personal supplies, like soap toothbrushes and paste, toilet paper, and tissues, laundry detergent, deodorant and tampons or pads for women if they want them.
We co-ordinate with other food pantries from our wider surrounding area, we share resources and information. I don’t know if we are licensed I’m not sure how that part of it works. We do get some government resources so we have some rules to follow about who can get food and how often. We have to ask for verification of identification and address. How many people live in the home , their names and ages. We make a copy of their drivers license or some other identification, we ask them if they get any other kind of assistance and approximately how much money they have coming into their household every month. We don’t do much to verify any of this information, we go mostly on trust that they are being truthful. If we find out that they have lied to us we might not help them again. Our clients can come to us for help every sixty days. We are classified as an “Emergency Food Pantry”. I’m not sure just what the differences are, but we often see the same people every two months. Sometimes we will see someone only once.
As for equipment to set up a food bank, we have quite a bit of storage space at a local church. They added on to their building for just this purpose. We have a freezer and a refrigerator for food storage as well as the use of the church secretary for information over the phone for our clients.
We try very hard to protect people’s privacy. We will only see one client at a time and ask the others to wait in a waiting area so that they don’t have to give information with anyone else present. We don’t talk about our clients or their business with anyone outside of the food pantry. I have never shared any personal information about what goes on when I’m there with my husband or anyone else.