The Columbus Dispatch

Mid-ohio food bank to receive $500,000

- Earl Hopkins Columbus Dispatch USA TODAY NETWORK

The Mid-ohio Food Collective will receive $500,000 in federal CARES Act funding to make up for revenue losses and increased demand for food assistance during the holiday season.

The nonprofit is receiving these funds as part of $1.2 million in grants approved by the Franklin County Board of Commission­ers on Tuesday. The other recipients include the Big Brothers and Big Sisters of Central Ohio, Southside Early Learning Center (SSEL), Columbus Federation of Settlement Houses and the Columbus Urban League.

While the other organizati­ons are receiving funds to provide rent and mortgage assistance and cover unexpected financial losses, Mid-ohio spokesman Malik Persons said the food bank will increase the purchase and delivery of food and pay added operationa­l costs caused by the ongoing coronaviru­s pandemic.

The funding will modify the nonprofit’s current contract with the commission­ers, bringing the total funding to $2 million. And while it’s common to see increases in distributi­on during the holidays, Perkins said there’s been a significant increase in community demand in recent months.

“These funds are crucial in enabling us to continue to connect nutritious food to so many people in need – displaced workers, children who do not have access to a school meal, isolated seniors,” Perkins wrote in an email. “We are working hard to provide meals and groceries to help stabilize families as they work through this pandemic.”

According to the organizati­on’s latest report, 28% of Mid-ohio customers are coming to the food bank for the first time since the onset of the outbreak in

March. Total food distributi­on has increased by nearly 30%, and the number of service visits across the food bank’s 20-county footprint is more than 806,000.

In Franklin County alone, the MidOhio has counted nearly 30,000 new customers who are coming to the organizati­on for the first time. At the on

site pantry, located at 3960 Brookham Dr. in Grove City, Perkins said its members have seen the demand jump from 250 families a day to, most recently, over 1,000 families per day.

To expedite the contract approval process and the disburseme­nt of CARES Act funding, the Board of Commission­ers voted Tuesday to allow County Administra­tor Kenneth Wilson to enter into contracts with the groups for the remainder of the year.

Given these difficult times, Commission­ers John O’grady and Kevin Boyce said there’s no bigger priority in the county than to provide funding to help aid local residents and families in need.

“This increased need is a weight that we all have to share the burden of,” Boyce said. “So, this investment allows the food collective to have increased resources as the hub of distributi­on to the pantries that disburse food throughout this community.” ehopkins@dispatch.com @Earl_hopkins1

 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Volunteers Alaina Wright, left, and Preslee Lama of Centerburg push a cart full of food to the drive-thru pickup point at the Mid-ohio Foodbank in Grove City on Tuesday.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Volunteers Alaina Wright, left, and Preslee Lama of Centerburg push a cart full of food to the drive-thru pickup point at the Mid-ohio Foodbank in Grove City on Tuesday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Volunteers and members of the Ohio National Guards fill a drive-through line of cars with food and household items at the Mid-ohio Foodbank in Grove City on Tuesday.
PHOTOS BY ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Volunteers and members of the Ohio National Guards fill a drive-through line of cars with food and household items at the Mid-ohio Foodbank in Grove City on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? The Foodbank is using $500,000 in CARES Act funding to support food assistance during the holiday season.
The Foodbank is using $500,000 in CARES Act funding to support food assistance during the holiday season.

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