Big Spring Herald Weekend

Doordash’s technologi­cal know-how offers help to food banks

- By GLENN GAMBOA AP Business Writer

Susan Goodell needed help.

In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, Goodell, CEO of the El Pasoans Fighting Hunger Food Bank, would look out the window at the long line of clients picking up the food available that day, while she and others answered calls from others who couldn't travel to a distributi­on point.

"We were getting just horrible phone calls from our seniors, from people with disabiliti­es, people who were Covid-positive and couldn't leave their homes to get food," Goodell said. "We were distributi­ng food here at the site and other sites from about 6 a.m. till about 7 at night. Then, at the end of the day, the staff would pack up food and deliver it to people's homes."

So, earlier this year, when the food delivery service Doordash approached the food bank, offering help, Goodell was elated by the support, and demand quickly ramped up. The program, in El Paso, Texas, now delivers 2,100 orders of food banks supplies each week, and there's a waiting list to join.

It's just the result that Doordash had intended. By offering its delivery platform technology to food banks for free, Doordash, like a growing number of companies, is providing something that many nonprofits say is even more valuable than cash — knowhow.

Corporate donations of "non-cash" — which includes a company's own products, services and technology — grew to 22% of all community investment­s in 2020, according to the Chief Executives for Corporate Purpose, a coalition of business leaders. Over the past five years, the coalition says, non-cash is the fastest-growing segment of corporate giving.

Corporatio­ns "know that they have unique ways to leverage some of their value," said Kari Niedfeldt-thomas, a managing director of the group.

During 2020, food banks distribute­d 6 billion meals in America. In 2021, they are serving about 55% more people than they did in 2020 before the pandemic, according to Feeding America. The increased demand is straining many food banks, a problem that is worsening as supply chain disruption­s, diminished inventorie­s and labor shortages magnify food costs.

"Food banks have really had to rise to the occasion with innovating and definitely changing the way that they're engaging with their clients and the way that they're distributi­ng food," said Brittany Graunke, Doordash's general manager of government and nonprofit. The company modified one of its existing programs, Project DASH, to help them out.

Project DASH had emerged in 2017 from an idea that originated with employees, who proposed it as a way to pick up excess food from restaurant­s and distribute it to community organizati­ons.

When COVID-19 hit, Graunke said, Doordash saw how much demand food banks across the country were facing and realized that Project DASH could be modified to help. Doordash began reaching out to food banks across the country through Feeding America and was surprised by the intensity and ingenuity of the responses.

Julie Yurko, Northern Illinois Food Bank's CEO, said she recognized how Doordash's technology could enhance its programs. Doordash brought its technologi­cal expertise and platform for last-mile delivery. Her food bank brought its online communicat­ion skills and the networks to connect people with the food they need. "Just like that," Yurko said, "the world changes for us."

Previously, Northern Illinois Food Bank's My Pantry Express program was unavailabl­e to its homebound clients because someone had to go to a collection point to pick up the food. But with Doordash's technology, homebound clients can go to the My Pantry Express website and choose from the available food — including macaroni and cheese, cereals, potatoes and apples, on a recent day — just as shoppers do on Amazon Fresh or a local supermarke­t site and then schedule a time for delivery.

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