Poverty in the midst of PlentyIn our beautiful city, no child should go to bed hungry.Last year, the Greater Pittsburgh Food Bank distributed over 13 million pounds of food.It was in this atmosphere that the food bank movement was born, as part of the "War on Poverty". The concept - recycling food - elegant in its simplicity - is that of collecting food that would otherwise be wasted and distributing it to those in need.
Pittsburgh's food bank started small, in rooms above the Jubilee Soup Kitchen in the Hill district. Soon they outgrew that space and moved to the South Side. Each move reflected growth, and the fact that it was filling a real need.
As this food comes in, it must be inventoried and sorted. Some food comes in large quantity containers and must be broken into smaller units. This is all hand work, and for this hand work the food bank relies on volunteers. The volunteers come in all ages and abilities. The minimum age is 12. School groups, handicapped groups, senior citizens are all counted among the Food Bank volunteers. Last year, over 7,000 volunteers donated 39,000 hours of their time. There is a very strictly kept inventory of all foodstuffs in the warehouse. The inventory is placed on a telephone recording and the associated agencies call in each week to see what is available. They then make their orders up from this inventory and phone it in. Workers at the food bank fill the order and take it to the loading dock where it is picked up the next morning. The Greater Pittsburgh Food Bank serves over 350 agencies -- soup kitchens, food pantries, shelters, after school programs, personal care homes, senior programs, affiliate food banks. These agencies work directly with the hungry.
The food bank has a "gleaning" program where produce from local farms is donated, but food bank volunteers must go to the farm to harvest it. In 1999, for instance, over 59,000 pounds of produce was gleaned in this manner - produce that might have otherwise rotted in the fields. The food bank also provides nutrition education in some of these neighborhoods. Finally, Three Rivers Table is the Food Bank's prepared food rescue program. TRT drivers pick up prepared but unsold dinners from restaurants, caterers, hotels, hospital cafeterias, school cafeterias, and transport it directly to soup kitchens and shelters.
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