Food for Good
IN BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA, VOLUNTEERS JOIN TOGETHER TO FACE THE PANDEMIC WITH LOVE.
•An Alabama couple and their crew dole out produce and hope.
WHEN RETIREE ERIC CALHOUN FOUNDED HIS NONPROFIT, SOLUTIONS INC., IN 2008, HE SET OUT TO AID HIS COMMUNITY
in any way possible. The organization has helped with everything from advocating for ex-prisoners’ voting rights to increasing local students’ access to arts. And in May 2020 they added another service: feeding a community in need during a global pandemic.
Last spring, Jefferson County Commissioner Lashunda Scales approached Eric with the opportunity to partner with Forestwood Farm Inc., one of Alabama’s largest produce distributors. Together, through the USDA’S Farmers to Families Food Box program, they would deliver 20-pound boxes of fresh produce to local residents.
On the first distribution day, Eric hauled nearly 500 boxes from the truck into recipients’ cars—an endeavor that landed him in the chiropractor’s office. “I just thank God I was able to withstand it that day,” Eric says. “I didn’t want to not take care of what I promised to take care of.” Soon after, he realized he’d need a little help.
Now, he and his wife, A. Faye, who serves as the chairperson for Solutions Inc., team up with faith groups and a nearby high school, which provide volunteers and—maybe just as important— forklifts. Eric coordinates the distribution of boxes at two sites every Tuesday. Each week, they give away as many as 1,680 boxes of produce.
Maggie Smitherman, a retired teacher, has received at least 10 boxes. And though she’s tempted to save the sweet potatoes—her favorite—for herself, she redistributes much of the produce to family and neighbors. “This lets us know we have people who care,” Maggie says. “It doesn’t take but a few to spread love.”
Those served primarily include older adults, caretakers or the needy, but they do not limit who can receive this service. When a man hesitantly approached A. Faye in hopes of help, he said, “I understand that y’all feed the hungry,” and she corrected: “No, we feed people.” And she loaded up his car with 60 pounds of squash, potatoes, oranges, melons and more for his family. No one owes them an explanation, she says. “COVID-19 has affected everyone in the whole wide world.”