Miami Herald (Sunday)

Miami nonprofits providing COVID-19 relief get PPE supplies

- Herald staff writer Howard Cohen contribute­d to this report.

BY MAYA LORA

mlora@miamiheral­d.com

Braving a summer downpour, volunteers with local health foundation­s distribute­d personal protection equipment Saturday to 42 nonprofit organizati­ons dedicated to South Florida’s coronaviru­s recovery.

The event was organized by partners including The Miami Foundation, Health Foundation of South Florida and Florida Blue Foundation that secured PPE items in bulk. The 42 nonprofits received a three-month supply of PPE each, said The Miami Foundation President and CEO Rebecca Fishman Lipsey. Bulk items for pickup included 56,000 masks, 240 notouch thermomete­rs, 292 gallons of sanitizer and 5,000 face shields.

Lipsey said the selected nonprofits are all on the “front lines” of Miami’s pandemic recovery efforts.

“We have a crisis on our hands here in Miami, a health crisis and a community crisis,” Lipsey said.

“We need to make sure that the organizati­ons that are helping Miami recover are safe themselves so that they can be at work doing all the things they do.”

Lipsey said that government-sponsored PPE distributi­on events have focused on getting PPE and other needed resources into the hands of individual­s, especially those living in hotspots. But she said nonprofits, specifical­ly those with 50 employees or less who are priced out of buying PPE in large volumes at lower prices, also need protective gear.

“We called all of our friends and partners and said nonprofit organizati­ons are getting overcharge­d right now,” Lipsey said. “They’re buying things by the box when they’re small organizati­ons and we need to be buying things by the truck and getting the kind of pricing that large corporatio­ns get.”

The nonprofit organizati­ons picked up their supplies via a drive-thru set up by Health in the Hood and Urban Philanthro­pies at Overtown’s The Urban between 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Organizati­ons were given a 10-minute window during which they could swing through and pick up their supplies, loaded into their cars by volunteers running in and out of the rain hoisting stuffed cardboard boxes.

Alex Mitter, 24, saw the drive-thru advertised on Health in the Hood’s Instagram and decided to spend a few hours volunteeri­ng. The seventh-grade civics teacher said that the rain didn’t really affect her day.

“It’s definitely annoying because the boxes are kind of falling apart, but other than that it’s not been that big of a deal,” Mitter said.

Baldwin Davis, the director of operations for Gang Alternativ­e — which is dedicated to building character through community programs — said that more essential items have started to become available for purchase. But he added that the drive-thru supplies are still a huge boost because Gang Alternativ­e intends to provide services “for the long haul” as Miami continues to battle the crisis created by COVID-19.

“Everybody’s going through the whole problem of the pandemic, and we have continued services throughout and this is a huge help and a boost for our staff and for you know, our families to make sure that we can continue to just provide services in the community,” Davis said. “We’re looking ahead at what’s to come and making sure we have enough supplies to last for even the upcoming school year and so on.”

The partners at Saturday’s event also made a bulk donation to the organizati­on Mujer, which distribute­d the PPE to migrant farm workers in Homestead.

Lipsey said the distributi­on was made possible by donations to the Community Recovery Fund, which has invested more than $2.8 million in pandemic relief, according to a press release from The Miami Foundation. Lipsey added there will be future donation events as resources become available.

The event was held on a day when Miami-Dade hit a milestone by smashing through the 100,000 mark of new coronaviru­s cases as Florida’s Department of Health on Saturday confirmed 12,199 additional statewide cases of COVID-19. The state’s known total is now at 414,511, vaulting Florida into second place for most cases, behind California. There were also 124 new Florida resident deaths announced, increasing the statewide resident death toll to 5,777.

Two new non-resident deaths were also announced, bringing the nonresiden­t death toll to 117.

A Miami- Dade County reported 3,424 additional confirmed cases of COVID-19 and nine new deaths, according to Florida’s Department of Health. The county now has 101,854 confirmed cases and 1,379 deaths.

Broward County re

A ported 1,611 additional confirmed cases of the disease and 34 new deaths. The county now has 48,187 known cases and 580 deaths.

A Palm Beach County saw 703 more cases and eight deaths. The county now has 29,707 confirmed cases and 752 deaths.

A Monroe County reported 32 additional cases of the disease and no new deaths. The Florida Keys now have 1,114 confirmed cases and six deaths.

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Volunteers load a vehicle with personal protective equipment during a drive-thru distributi­on event in Overtown on Saturday.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Volunteers load a vehicle with personal protective equipment during a drive-thru distributi­on event in Overtown on Saturday.
 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Ernest Rowell, 49, and Emily Milton, 27, were among those helping on Saturday.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Ernest Rowell, 49, and Emily Milton, 27, were among those helping on Saturday.

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