New truck to fill mobile food distribution gap
County commissioners approve money to fight food insecurity locally.
On eve of Montgomery County Food Summit, leaders approved more than $170K to purchase a truck for The Foodbank.
On the eve of the Montgomery County Food Summit, county commissioners approved spending more than $170,000 to help fight food insecurity locally.
The money will purchase a truck for The Foodbank to pick up and distribute an unplanned flood of food resulting from a government bailout over the summer of farmers hit with trade tariffs.
e been receiving increased product, and it’s perishable food — gallons of milk, protein items, fresh produce,” said Lee Lauren Truesdale, The Foodbank’s development director. “This is in excess of what we normally distribute.”
The truck will be used primarily in Montgomery County, where more than 93,000 people are affected by food insecurity, but also in Greene and Preble counties where another 27,000 people in the The Foodbank’s area go without reliable access to affordable, nutritious food, according to government statistics.
An estimated 11.8 percent, or roughly 15 million U.S. households, were food insecure in 2017, having difficulty at some time providing enough food for all their members
due to a lack of resources, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Though food security is on average improving nationwide and in the Buckeye State, Ohio’s insecure percentage — 13.7 percent — is among 11 states where the prevalence is statistically significantly higher than the national average, according to the Agriculture Department’s 2017 report.
The new truck will serve area residents — many of whom may be older and immobile — in rural and urban communities without a brick and mortar food pantry, Truesdale said.
Among others, the truck will transport food to mobile farmers markets in Dayton on the east and west sides and at Sinclair College, in Eaton, outside Jamestown, at Lewisburg, Spring Valley, in Wilberforce at Central State University, Yellow Springs and in rural Xenia.
Because so many people in the region don’t have reliable access to transportation, the truck will fill a distribution gap, said Montgomery County Commissioner Judy Dodge.
“All these little things help. No question about it. We need to be proactive and do everything we can possibly do to help these people that can’t get good food,” she said.
The truck’s purchase will come from Human Services Levy funds.
More details about the mobile food distribution program will be announced this morning at the opening of the 8th Annual Food Summit. This year’s theme, “From Farm to Fork: Growing a Stronger Food System,” will focus on local growing and food distribution.
The event’s keynote speakers are Nancy Williams of No More Empty Pots, a grassroots nonprofit in Omaha, Neb., that collaborates with public and private organizations, businesses, communities, and entrepreneurs to strengthen local and regional food systems, and Brian Raison, an assistant professor and field specialist with The Ohio State University Department of Extension.