Custer County Chief

38,785 pounds of food delivered March 26

Second distributi­on date set for April 6

- BY DEB MCCASLLIN Broken Bow Area Rotary

BROKEN BOW - Wow! Hard to imagine, 38,785 pounds of food - fruit, veggies, dairy and protein - were delivered into Broken Bow last Friday as part of the USDA COVID Relief Farm to Table Program. Broken Bow Area Rotary, the City of Broken Bow, Broken Bow Wind II and Jennie M. Melham Memorial Center teamed up to make it happen, and the partnershi­p didn’t go unnoticed. Dick Cochran, head of HotMeals USA was on hand and he said the cooperatio­n he witnessed in Broken Bow was just plain wonderful.

“I am so proud of this community. The way these community partners pulled this together in such a short amount of time is something special and demonstrat­es the community-mindedness that Bow is known for,” Rotary President Veronica Schmidt said.

And now a second semi of food is coming - 960 boxes of food – US sourced fruit, vegetables, dairy and processed meat products with each box is designed to feed a family of four for a week. In addition 960 gallons of milk will be added to the mix.

Second distributi­on set

• Delivery is set for April 6, 2021

• Distributi­on begins at 9 a.m. at Melham parking lot across from the swimming pool next to the soccer fields. Enter the road to the swimming pool off Memorial Drive coming from the east so that you have a right hand turn as you enter.

• Please do not enter the line before 8:30 am. Look for the sign that says ‘Line Starts Here.’ And as you go through the line our volunteers will place your box and milk into your car for you. There will not be a need to exit your vehicle.

• There are no sign ups. No names are gathered. Food boxes are distribute­d first-come firstserve­d.

• Distributi­on is not limited to residents of Broken Bow – citizens from surroundin­g communitie­s/counties are invited. It’s important the food be placed where it can be used.

“The city is excited to have the opportunit­y to do this again. The first one was a great success and we are proud to truly serve our community. The Mayor, Council and I are so humbled by having this opportunit­y to assist all the great organizati­ons that make this happen!” Broken Bow City Administra­tor Dan Knoell said.

The distributi­on is part of the Families First Coronaviru­s Response Act to purchase and distribute US agricultur­al products to those in need. Through this program, USDA’s Agricultur­al Marketing service is partnering with national, regional and local distributo­rs. The goal is to purchase $6 billion in fresh produce, dairy and meat products from American producers of all sizes. Nebraska’s distributo­rs through HotMeals USA reached out to Rotary Clubs across the Midwest for assistance in planning the logistics.

“This is just so much fun, it makes one grateful to live where we do,” Rotarian Deb McCaslin said. “What sets our corner of the world apart is that when something needs done we don’t care who gets the credit. Rural Nebraskans time and time again exemplify Rotary’s motto of ‘Service Above Self,’ from the partnershi­ps demonstrat­ed here, to neighbors thinking of neighbors as they picked up boxes for others. Thanks everyone! See you April 6.”

 ?? Deb McCaslin ?? Pictured here are twenty-six volunteers from the city and Broken Bow Area Rotary who helped distribute nearly 39,000 pounds of food March 26 as part of the USDA COVID Relief Farm to Table Program.
Deb McCaslin Pictured here are twenty-six volunteers from the city and Broken Bow Area Rotary who helped distribute nearly 39,000 pounds of food March 26 as part of the USDA COVID Relief Farm to Table Program.

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