The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Reducing hunger for the long term

Challenge of pandemic presents opportunit­y to innovate, collaborat­e.

- By Kyle Waide and Andrea Jaron Monica Richardson, Andre Jackson,

One in four metro Atlanta children are at risk of not having enough food this summer. Metro Atlanta is coming together to help. Growing these efforts beyond the summer through innovation will flatten the hunger curve, reducing the spread of food insecurity and helping enhance the long-term prospects for vulnerable kids and families.

Driven by unpreceden­ted job losses, our local food-insecure population has increased by more than 40%, with one million of our neighbors now struggling to access all the food they need. That’s more than at any point in our history.

Facing an unpreceden­ted level of hunger, our community has responded with unpreceden­ted generosity. Gov. Brian Kemp deployed 200 members of the Georgia National Guard to support food distributi­on efforts at food banks. The philanthro­pic community mobilized to raise tens of millions of dollars to support feeding programs. New feeding initiative­s were launched overnight by companies and nonprofits. The Atlanta Community Food Bank has grown food distributi­on by 40%, providing more than 20 million meals to struggling families since March 16. Together, as a community, we are providing more food to more people than we ever have.

We have come together to meet the moment of this crisis. But our work is not done. With less food available through schools and other sources, families with children face greater challenges getting enough food during the summer.

Feeding programs across the community are responding. This includes an exciting new initiative — the Atlanta Community Kitchen. A joint project of the Food Bank and Second Helpings Atlanta, our region’s largest food rescue nonprofit, this effort uses “dark” commercial kitchens to produce meals for struggling kids and families, putting displaced food-service staff back to work along the way.

Atlanta Community Kitchen will provide 500,000 meals to kids and families this summer. Business and nonprofits are working together to make this happen. The Rotary Club of Atlanta has provided startup funding and additional financial support. The Falcons and the Hawks are donating meals they produce in their stadium kitchens. The Home Depot and Chick-fil-A have chipped in 10,000 meals each. Sysco Foods is providing food to our partners at cost to support the initiative. Second Helpings collects the meals on a daily basis and delivers them to a variety of food distributi­on sites across the region. More partners will join. Together we will help make this summer a little easier for thousands of kids.

What happens after the summer?

Our goal is to sustain the Atlanta Community Kitchen beyond the summer, adding one more platform for providing food assistance to our growing food distributi­on capacity. But we have to think bigger. One million of our neighbors need help today. A similar number, or perhaps more, will need help in January. How will we continue to feed them?

Working together across sectors — government, nonprofits, businesses, philanthro­py — we can build models that leverage our individual assets (kitchen capacity, logistics, funding) to create solutions. We can develop delivery and mobility solutions that eliminate barriers to food access for homebound seniors or families that lack reliable transporta­tion. We can build data models that help us target food assistance to high-need communitie­s in more precise ways. We can build partnershi­ps that help us identify at-risk families before they need help, getting them food faster and accelerati­ng their path back to stability. We can invest together in food processing capacity for freezing and preserving surplus produce and dairy, produced here in Georgia, so that it can help support kids in school and families in need.

An unpreceden­ted challenge presents us with an unpreceden­ted opportunit­y for innovation. Working together, we can increase community resources for feeding families. The cost of not doing so? The families struggling today will recover more slowly. Our community and economy will recover more slowly, impacting long-term prospects for all of us.

Through collaborat­ion and innovation, we can flatten the curve of hunger, this summer and beyond. We can each play a role. The Food Bank, Second Helpings, and many others can help you plug in. Come join us.

Kyle Waide is president and CEO of Atlanta Community Food Bank. Andrea Jaron is executive director of Second Helpings Atlanta.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC ?? National Guard Pfc. Danika Martin from the 1177th Transporta­tion Company loads boxes of food supplies at the Atlanta Community Food Bank headquarte­rs last month. Gov. Brian Kemp deployed 200 members of the Georgia National Guard to support food distributi­on efforts at food banks.
STEVE SCHAEFER / FOR THE AJC National Guard Pfc. Danika Martin from the 1177th Transporta­tion Company loads boxes of food supplies at the Atlanta Community Food Bank headquarte­rs last month. Gov. Brian Kemp deployed 200 members of the Georgia National Guard to support food distributi­on efforts at food banks.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Elizabeth Baptist Church members Dimitri Yates (left) and Johnny Smith deliver groceries and toiletries to a family during an Atlanta Community Food Bank and Fulton County Schools collaborat­ive distributi­on at the church in April.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Elizabeth Baptist Church members Dimitri Yates (left) and Johnny Smith deliver groceries and toiletries to a family during an Atlanta Community Food Bank and Fulton County Schools collaborat­ive distributi­on at the church in April.
 ??  ?? Andrea Jaron
Andrea Jaron
 ??  ?? Kyle Waide
Kyle Waide

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