USA TODAY International Edition

Volunteers risk illness to feed neighbors in need

- Trevor Hughes, Harrison Hill, John D’Anna, Sarah Kay LeBlanc and Brad Schmitt

As the global pandemic took hold in the United States, food insecurity spread along with the coronaviru­s. People who have long struggled to get enough to eat have been joined by people who suddenly lost their jobs as the economy crumbled or who cannot get food from their usual sources. Across the United States, these Americans have stepped up to try to help – from soldiers in Iowa to advocates for the homeless in Los Angeles. Read the tales of those who answered the call to take their part in America’s Food Chain.

Peanut butter and temperatur­e checks MESA, ARIZONA

Wendy Bader was supposed to start a part- time job and had an interview scheduled for a full- time position. But all that was put on hold as the global pandemic spread.

Instead, in mid- April she stood in a circle with a dozen other volunteers, getting instructio­ns on how they would spend the next few hours filling 1,200 emergency food bags. They all kept a safe distance from one another.

Before the volunteers could start, a food bank employee held a digital thermomete­r to their temples to make sure no one had a fever. They were then pointed to a hand- washing station and issued face masks and gloves.

Once she was cleared, Bader filled plastic bags with canned vegetables, meat and peanut butter at a United Food Bank warehouse in Mesa. The bags would then be delivered to 220 food pantries and agencies across the Phoenix metro area to distribute to families in need.

Bader has been a longtime donor to the food bank, but when the COVID- 19 crisis erupted, she knew she had to do more.

“In 2008, I lost my job,” she says. “I’ve lived that. I know what kind of need is out there. ... After all that’s happened, I thought what can I do, and I jumped at the opportunit­y.”

— John D’Anna, Arizona Republic

Soldiers passing out frozen mashed potatoes DES MOINES, IOWA

On April 30, about 30 members of the Iowa National Guard assisted volunteers and staff at the Food Bank of Iowa in distributi­ng more than 95,000 pounds of food.

Dozens of cars filed into a nearby parking lot, their windshield­s tagged with green tape to identify their drivers as meal recipients.

Des Moines resident Anthony Calvache sat in the parking lot on his lunch break to pick up a meal for his sister and mother. He is still employed, but his sister was recently laid off, he said.

“All of this is helping us out,” he said.

In groups of 16, cars were released from the lot so as not to overwhelm staff at the food bank. Throughout the day, the line out of the food bank parking lot and into the street stretched to more than two dozen cars.

Soldiers stood in the sun for more than six hours, directing traffic and packing and distributi­ng food bundled in bags made from donated T- shirts. The meals included liquid eggs, frozen mashed potatoes and peaches, ham and popcorn chicken.

Dylan Lampe, director of donor engagement for the food bank, said enough food was distribute­d to feed more than 5,000 Iowans.

Along with packing up food, the Iowa National Guard was involved in planning the meal distributi­on. Iowa National Guard Sgt. David Bowman said soldiers traveled around the state dropping off and delivering food supplies at several sites.

‘ It’s something great to be able to help our community and show what the guard is capable of,” he said. “We’re not just a military force, we’re a community force as well – to help out the community when in need.”

— Sarah LeBlanc, Des Moines Register

‘ It’s every man for himself right now’ LOS ANGELES

About 7 a. m. on a morning in late April, Shirley Raines, 52, walked up to the drive- thru window at the McDonald’s on 7th and Alameda streets near downtown Los Angeles to pick up her order: 600 burgers to feed the people who make their home along the streets of nearby Skid Row.

Raines, an Instagram beauty influencer and founder of homegrown non-profit Beauty2the­streetz, which offers homeless Angelenos hygiene kits and hot meals with a side of free services like haircuts, wore gloves and a mask to distribute food throughout the downtown Los Angeles neighborho­od where nearly 5,000 people live in tents and tarp- covered boxes on sidewalks.

“It’s every man for himself right now in Skid Row,” she said. “So it’s to the greater good that we go down here and make sure we try to give them some sense of protection. Even if it’s just hand sanitizer, even if it’s just a face mask and gloves, even if it’s just oranges. We’re just trying to make sure they’re taken care of.”

Her car was packed from the floor mats to the roof with the blankets, hand sanitizer, fruit and Vitamin C packs that she and her team of volunteers were going to pass out.

“I made a vow,” she said. “I’m married to the game. I’m married to the streets. What kind of spouse walks away when things are rough?”

— Harrison Hill, USA TODAY

‘ This is not the time to do nothing’ AVON, COLORADO

Huffing slightly, Mike Williams, 75, hauled the box of food up the apartment stairs, stacking it atop another already sitting outside the door. Dan Smith, 73, followed close behind, an identical box resting against his red Salvation Army jacket.

The boxes began piling up as the two volunteers made another trip up the stairs on that March day, their steps getting a little slower each time. Both men are squarely in the most dangerous category for COVID- 19 infections: older, with pre- existing health conditions. Their concern, however, was focused on the family behind the door, eight of their neighbors who were waiting out a coronaviru­s quarantine mandated by county health officials.

“Everyone has their own risk- benefit calculatio­n,” Smith said. “I’ve made my calculatio­n. You’ve got plenty of time to do nothing when that first shovel of dirt hits your face. This is not the time to do nothing.”

At the Salvation Army’s food bank in Avon, demand nearly doubled in March after Colorado Gov. Jared Polis ordered ski areas to close at the height of the spring break season, followed by sitdown restaurant­s and retail stores. Avon had been hit so hard by coronaviru­s infections that public health officials specifically told anyone who’s been there to quarantine themselves for 14 days.

Private donors poured resources into the local food bank. Some people drove up to donate a box of food. Vail Resorts worked on emptying its ski- area restaurant freezers into the food bank’s storage. An anonymous private donor gave $ 20,000 to provide Feed the Children meal boxes, which Smith, Williams and other volunteers delivered daily.

On their delivery route, Smith and Williams banged on the apartment door and hustled back down the stairs. They were not supposed to have any contact with the people they’re serving.

“Turn around,” Williams yelled up to the woman who opened the door. “Behind you.”

The woman turned to see the boxes, and her mouth split into a huge smile. “Thank you,” she said. “Thank you.”

Inside the apartment, Itzel Villa, 11, watched as her family eagerly opened the boxes, pulling out cans of tuna, rolls of toilet paper and bags of broccoli. There was also shampoo. Lotion. Corn Flakes. Everything necessary for another week of confinement.

“We are safe and we are happy,” Villa said, translatin­g on behalf of her extended family. “Thank you so much.”

— Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY

‘ I can’t fight what I can’t see’ NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

Jennifer Clinger is tough. She survived abuse, decades of sex trafficking and a heroin addiction.

But COVID- 19? That terrifies her. “I’m really frightened to go out there right now,” Clinger said in mid- April, choking up on the phone in her Sylvan Heights apartment, “because I can’t fight what I can’t see.”

Clinger is a graduate and employee at Thistle Farms, a two- year recovery program for women survivors of addiction and trafficking.

During the pandemic, Thistle Farms’ founder, the Rev. Becca Stevens, dispatched her singer/ songwriter son, Levi Hummon, 28, to deliver packages of food, toiletries and pet supplies for the 30 current Thistle Farms participan­ts and for many of the more than 200 alumni and staff members sheltering at home.

Stevens, 57, said many women in the Thistle Farms community have underlying medical conditions brought on by years of abuse. Most also have post traumatic stress that could make them uncomforta­ble leaving their homes.

So the supplies have come to them. One box contained peanuts crackers, canned tuna, feminine hygiene products, candy canes, soap, peanut butter, toilet paper, almonds and cleaning products.

Bobbie Smith, 40, who completed the Thistle Farms program last year, could not find dog food at local stores for her pup Mason, which was donated to help with her PTSD.

“Then Levi called and said, ‘ Where should I drop the dog food and groceries at?’ ” Smith said. “It was the first time I’ve cried tears of joy in a long time.”

— Brad Schmitt, The Tennessean

 ?? MARK ZALESKI/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Jennifer Clinger received food and supplies from a volunteer in Nashville, Tenn., one of thousands of examples of how people across the USA have tried to fill the gaps in the nation’s fractured food chain.
MARK ZALESKI/ USA TODAY NETWORK Jennifer Clinger received food and supplies from a volunteer in Nashville, Tenn., one of thousands of examples of how people across the USA have tried to fill the gaps in the nation’s fractured food chain.
 ??  ?? Salvation Army volunteer Mike Williams delivers supplies to quarantine­d people in Avon, Colo. TREVOR HUGHES/ USA TODAY
Salvation Army volunteer Mike Williams delivers supplies to quarantine­d people in Avon, Colo. TREVOR HUGHES/ USA TODAY
 ?? KELSEY KREMER/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Iowa National Guard Spc. Marcus Jones helps bag food to be handed out to a waiting line of cars outside the Food Bank of Iowa on April 30 in Des Moines.
KELSEY KREMER/ USA TODAY NETWORK Iowa National Guard Spc. Marcus Jones helps bag food to be handed out to a waiting line of cars outside the Food Bank of Iowa on April 30 in Des Moines.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States