Miami Herald

Feed the hungry, fight climate change

The campaign to curb food waste in South Florida

- BY NICOLAS RIVERO

Ellen Bowen is on a mission to combat food waste in South Florida — a campaign that not only feeds the hungry but, perhaps surprising­ly, can also help curb climate change.

Bowen is the founder of the South Florida chapter of Food Rescue US, a group of 1,000 local volunteers that collects perfectly good food that would otherwise be thrown away at grocery stores, restaurant­s and events and delivers it to churches, shelters and food pantries across the region.

They’ve salvaged wagyu beef sliders from the VIP suites at Miami’s Formula 1 race, filet mignon from a medical conference at the Fontainebl­eau and an untold number of eggs, waffles, bacon and other unused food from the end of Sunday brunch services at upscale restaurant­s across South Florida.

They take it all directly to places like Camillus House, Lotus House and the Miami Rescue Mission.

Bowen estimates her group has saved more than 5.7 million pounds of food since it started in 2018 — and that’s just a tiny portion of what gets tossed nationally. Roughly a third of food in the U.S. is wasted, according to a 2010 study from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. That wasted food “contains enough calories to feed more than 150 million people each year, far more than the 35 million estimated food insecure Americans,” according to a 2021 report from the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

But wasted food carries other hidden costs. It all has to be fertilized or fed, harvested or slaughtere­d, packaged, transporte­d and often refrigerat­ed. That’s before the uneaten food is trucked off to a landfill to rot and belch methane — a planet-warming greenhouse gas that, over the course of a century, is 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Roughly 8 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions come from food waste, according to the EPA. That’s

Volunteers match food that otherwise would be thrown out with those who need it. The environmen­t wins, too

more than the aviation industry, which contribute­s just under 5% of total greenhouse gas emissions.

“I started this … four years ago, primarily to rescue unused food and get it to people that are hungry,” said Bowen. “What I’ve learned is that that’s not the only benefit of reducing food waste. Actually, the environmen­tal impact has really become my focus.”

VOLUNTEERS TO THE RESCUE

Food Rescue US relies on volunteers like Jane Marie Russell, head legal counsel for a tech company called OpenText, who has been volunteeri­ng with the group since Bowen started the South Florida chapter in 2018.

On a recent Saturday morning, Russell backed her car into the loading dock for a Trader Joe’s in Coral Gables. Trader Joe’s employees greeted her and began carting out boxes and boxes of groceries. She crammed as much as she could into her trunk and backseat: bread, eggs, milk, cold cuts, strawberri­es, lettuce, carrots, pasta, rice, baked goods, chips, prepared sandwiches — all of it still fresh and unopened, but pushed off the shelves by newer inventory.

On this day, Trader

Joe’s workers even brought out bouquets of flowers still in full bloom.

Russell is there every Saturday morning. In the parlance of her volunteer group, she has “adopted” this rescue, picking up groceries at the Coral Gables Trader Joe’s and whisking them up I-95 into Liberty City, where she drops them off at a community food pantry known as the Village FREEdge. (It started out as a single refrigerat­or in 2020, which is the inspiratio­n for the name, but has since grown into a full-blown kitchen that serves 250 people a day.)

All of Food Rescue’s pickups happen this way: A volunteer his or her car to a grocery store, restaurant,

hotel or event venue, and then takes the food directly to a recipient somewhere within 10 miles. It’s a lean operation. The group itself doesn’t own any trucks or operate any warehouses.

About 100 of Food Rescue’s South Florida volunteers have adopted a set route that they run every week. But there are also sporadic pickups: The group has a website where organizers can find volunteers for last-minute rescues whenever a big event ends with tons of uneaten food or restaurant­s find themselves at the end of the Sunday brunch rush with mountains of preprepped meals that never left the kitchen.

For instance, Rachel Unger, who has also been volunteeri­ng with Food Rescue since 2018, remembers picking up dozens of leftover turkeys from a downtown hotel the day after Thanksgivi­ng in 2020. “They said it was 50 turkeys, but it was definitely more like 75 or 80,” Unger said. (That’s about half a ton of poultry, assuming each turkey weighed about 15 pounds.)

Unger and her two kids, then 11 and 13, piled bird after fully cooked, uneaten bird into her 2013 Honda Odyssey. “The minivan was almost scraping the floor because it was weighed down with all these turkeys,” Unger said. She drove them to the Miami Rescue Mission, where she and her kids helped haul the food into the facility’s walk-in refrigerat­or.

“It was one of the most bizarre rescues I’ve done,” Unger said, “but I was on a mission to make sure those turkeys got eaten.”

THE CLIMATE COST OF FOOD WASTE

The food rescue volunteers are a good example of an old maxim in climate change activism: Think globally, act locally. Rachel Unger’s short drive through downtown with a car full of turkeys was one small way to combat a problem that puts more strain on the planet than you might think.

Just to produce food

that ultimately no one will eat, the U.S. farms an area the size of California and New York combined, uses enough energy and enough water to serve 50 million American homes and produces as many greenhouse gas emissions as 42 coal-fired power plants, according to the EPA.

That’s before you factor in the emissions that come from throwing food away. Food is the most common material in American trash, accounting for 24% of what goes into landfills and 22% of what goes into trash incinerato­rs, according to the EPA. Burning food produces carbon dioxide, while leaving food to rot in landfills produces methane gas, which traps heat in the atmosphere much more effectivel­y than carbon dioxide.

And in South Florida, that landfill space is running out. Miami-Dade County now trucks 15,000 tons of household trash a month to a landfill near Lake Okeechobee because local landfills are filling up. Residents in Doral, meanwhile, complain that the county-run trash incinerato­r, which burns 800,000 tons of trash a year, is ruining their quality of life.

The simple act of throwing away less food is a triple threat. It eases the strain on landfills, reduces the amount of natural resources the agricultur­al industry uses to produce food and cuts the amount of methane released into the atmosphere.

Dealing with that last piece is critical. The best thing people can do to immediatel­y help the climate is to produce less methane, according to a May 2021 report from the United Nations Environmen­t Program. “Cutting methane is the strongest lever we have to slow climate change over the next 25 years,” UNEP director Inger Anderson wrote in a statement accompanyi­ng the report.

FIGHTING HUNGER AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Just as important as the volunteers who rescue food are the organizati­ons that put it to use. All these groups are part of the fight to curb climate change, even if they don’t necessaril­y think of themselves as having an environmen­tal mission.

The Miami Rescue Mission, for instance, exists to offer beds and meals for about 1,300 people a day at its Miami centers in Wynwood and Overtown and its Broward County outpost in Hollywood. But the nonprofit also puts tons of donated food on the table each year for people who need it.

On Jan. 30, a Food Rescue volunteer named Linda Diaz-Cobo dropped off a tray of leftover Cuban sandwiches from the midtown restaurant Sugarcane. “Anybody can pull up and donate,” said Anthony Perrone, food service coordinato­r for the Miami Men’s Center. “It could be someone with a couple of loaves of bread or it could be a whole truck full of food.”

Occasional­ly, Perrone said, a semi truck driver transporti­ng a container full of food will offload their cargo here if an order gets canceled. “I was driving home one day about a month ago and a semi driver called me and said, ‘Hey, I’ve got 3,000 pounds of Tyson’s chicken wings. Can I drop that off to you?” Perrone found space in the Miami Rescue Mission’s massive walk-in freezers to store them.

Every pound of donated

This is a lifeline for our community. I appreciate what they do. Without them, I don’t know how I would eat some days. Pantry regular Earl Green Slade, 75

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Local volunteer groups pick up food that would have been thrown out at restaurant­s, hotels and events and distribute it for free to people in food deserts.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Local volunteer groups pick up food that would have been thrown out at restaurant­s, hotels and events and distribute it for free to people in food deserts.
 ?? ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com ?? Sherina Jones, left, founder of Village FREEdge, waves to one of the last community members who came by to pick up a bag of food from Willy Harris, right, at the food pantry in Liberty City on Feb. 9.
ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com Sherina Jones, left, founder of Village FREEdge, waves to one of the last community members who came by to pick up a bag of food from Willy Harris, right, at the food pantry in Liberty City on Feb. 9.
 ?? ?? Berlinda Dixon is a case manager with Dade County Street Response. When patients come in to the urgent care clinic next door to the Village FREEdge, she helps them track down things like a bus pass to get around town, a fridge to store perishable medicine or a Social Security card to get access to health insurance.
Berlinda Dixon is a case manager with Dade County Street Response. When patients come in to the urgent care clinic next door to the Village FREEdge, she helps them track down things like a bus pass to get around town, a fridge to store perishable medicine or a Social Security card to get access to health insurance.
 ?? ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com ?? Volunteer Patricia Mack puts together sandwiches to hand out at Village FREEdge food pantry on Feb. 9.
ALIE SKOWRONSKI askowronsk­i@miamiheral­d.com Volunteer Patricia Mack puts together sandwiches to hand out at Village FREEdge food pantry on Feb. 9.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ??
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com

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