Ottawa Citizen

Outdoor fridge makes food access easier

First-of-its-kind service available 24-7: `The biggest thing is accessibil­ity'

- REBECCA DEPENCIER This story also appears in Capital Current, the community news site run by Carleton University's journalism program.

Ottawa's first outdoor community fridge is open for business — the business of feeding those in need.

The fridge and a pantry shelf are installed outside the Parkdale Food Centre on Rosemount Avenue. The presence of the appliance is the result of a collaborat­ion with the Ottawa Community Food Partnershi­p and the Hintonburg Community Associatio­n.

Rebecca Dorris, neighbour experience and opportunit­y co-ordinator for the Parkdale Food Centre, says it's already seeing a lot of traffic after opening this past Friday.

“It's pretty brand new, but it's this kind of an instant hit,” Dorris says. “I'm not at the centre every day, but the days that I am … when I go outside I see someone either stocking or taking from the fridge.”

The Parkdale Food Centre and their partners across the city have a wide variety of programs to combat food insecurity in Ottawa. In addition to supplying needed food, the outdoor community fridge serves to make the food bank itself more accessible.

“The biggest thing is accessibil­ity, and just having something that's barrier-free,” Dorris says.

There are seven other community fridges across the city, but they're all indoors at Morrison Gardens Community House, Bethany Hope Centre, Parkdale Food Centre, Somerset West Community Health Centre on Eccles Street, The Well, St. Joe's Supper Table and Rideau Rockcliffe Community Resource Centre.

Dorris says COVID -19 has made them harder to access because of building closures and reduced hours.

“Our centre, like many, is closed over the weekend,” she says. “That tends to be a time … when it's very difficult to get your needs met if you need food.”

The new fridge, open 24-7, is restocked by staff through the week and volunteers on the weekend. Community members are also welcome to contribute food at any time.

Gabriella Carrier posted about the new fridge in a community Facebook group after she first stopped by last week.

“I think when we know about each other's struggles and shortcomin­gs, we're more willing to lend a helping hand,” she says.

Carrier believes the fridge will also help people understand the hunger that exists in the neighbourh­ood. She says it will help more privileged people, such as herself, who don't need to think about their grocery bills, help address food insecurity.

“I think it's really impactful when you open that fridge and it's empty,” Carrier says. “That means that people are hungry, and that there's work to be done.”

For Karen Secord, executive director of the Parkdale Food Centre, the community fridge has been a long time coming.

Secord hoped to install one outside the Giant Tiger on Wellington in 2015. She had approval from the store's manager, the city councillor, and had secured $1,000 to purchase the fridge, but her board of directors was hesitant.

Concern over who would clean it, whether the city would object to it being on a public sidewalk, and who might interfere with the contents of the fridge caused them to install it inside the Parkdale Food Centre instead.

“We put six more fridges across the city, indoors, at social services agencies,” Secord says. “So we've had these indoor fridges all along, but then we wanted to put one outside.”

Secord spoke to the Somerset West Community Health Centre, who own and operate their second clinic at the building on Rosemount that houses the Parkdale Food Centre. Once the health centre gave the nod, she said, `OK, finally, I'm going to do it.'”

There are some limitation­s to what can be left in the fridge: raw meat, home-cooked meals or leftovers, open packages and expired food aren't allowed.

“The more people know about this, the better. I think we're going to try to expand it across Ottawa.”

The rules are few. Most importantl­y, everyone is welcome to take what they need and leave what they can. The fridge is supposed to be a “safe and welcoming space.”

Secord and Dorris hope to open more outdoor community fridges at other partner locations once this one is well underway.

“The more people know about this, the better,” Dorris says. “I think we're going to try to expand it across Ottawa.”

She says if people have ideas or suggestion­s, they can email the Parkdale Food Centre. They work within the catchment area of Hintonburg and Mechanicsv­ille but some of their other programmin­g is in partnershi­p with agencies across the city, and they're always open to collaborat­ion.

“We kind of experiment and then we're always open to sharing some of our learnings as we go forward,” Dorris says.

Secord says a great way for community members to help out would be to donate fridges they no longer need that could be used at other outdoor locations.

Carrier says the response to her Facebook post about the fridge has shown how excited and involved the community can be, but she is still looking ahead.

“I imagine I'll be making posts about the fridge closer to the end of fall or early winter as people, maybe — they don't forget about it but the excitement of it is worn off and they're not going as frequently,” she says.

“That's a huge part of making the community fridge successful — is engaging as many groups as possible.”

I think it's really impactful when you open that fridge and it's empty. That means that people are hungry.

 ?? JULIE OLIVER ?? Parkdale Food Centre employee Alexia Smith shows what's in the new community fridge outside the centre. The fridge is barrier-free and can be accessed at any time by anyone who needs food.
JULIE OLIVER Parkdale Food Centre employee Alexia Smith shows what's in the new community fridge outside the centre. The fridge is barrier-free and can be accessed at any time by anyone who needs food.

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