The Mercury News

Your community fridge: Help yourself, stock it up

New solution to hunger? Refrigerat­ors full of free food pop up around the Bay Area

- By Marisa Kendall mkendall@bayareanew­sgroup.com

With millions of California­ns out of work and struggling to feed their families, getting help during the coronaviru­s pandemic can mean waiting in a mileslong line of cars outside a food bank.

Or, in some Bay Area neighborho­ods, it can mean opening an unassuming refrigerat­or sitting on the side of the road.

That’s the goal of the community fridge movement — an alternativ­e solution to hunger popularize­d in New York City and now sweeping California. So far, local organizers have installed refrigerat­ors in Oakland, San Francisco and Los Angeles, and an effort is underway to set one up in San Jose.

“It’s just starting to become kind of a phenomenon,” said 25-year-old Sara Crispin, who hosts a community fridge with her housemates outside their West

Oakland duplex.

Volunteers stock the refrigerat­ors with produce, milk, prepared meals and other items, which are then free for the taking by anyone who could use them whether they’re from the homeless encampment down the street or the apartment next door. Fridge locations are publicized on Instagram and through word of mouth and flyers.

They’ve come at a time when a massive, coronaviru­s-fueled unemployme­nt surge has led to skyrocketi­ng demand for food assistance — and the threat of the virus can make the grocery store a scary option.

But the fridges also have prompted concerns about permitting and food safety.

“They’re well-intentione­d, but quite frankly, the health and safety aspect really scares me on those things. Because anybody can put anything in there,” said Bill Lee, executive director of Martha’s Kitchen, a San Jose-based soup

kitchen that distribute­s meals throughout Santa Clara County.

In Oakland, city staffers are still trying to figure out the best way to address the fridge phenomenon and to make sure refrigerat­ors don’t block sidewalks or present a health hazard, according to city spokesman Sean Maher. In the meantime, he encouraged people to donate to establishe­d food banks.

“We recognize and applaud the altruism of our community — it’s part of what makes Oakland the amazing City that it is, there is no shortage of neighbors giving to neighbors,” Maher wrote in an email. “We must also consider the health, safety, and well-being of all of our community members.”

On Linden Street in West Oakland, a tall, white refrigerat­or sits in a makeshift shelter at the end of a residentia­l driveway. A large cardboard sign taped to the door proclaims, “Free food. Comida gratis. Take what you need. Leave what

you don’t.” On a recent visit, the fridge was filled with bags of greens, potatoes, squash, apples, bottles of water and a jar of pickles. A box of Narcan — a nasal spray that reverses opioid overdoses — sat next to a container of homemade cilantro-lime rice. Shelves next to the fridge held dry goods.

The grassroots group Town Fridge has set up at least seven refrigerat­ors throughout Oakland and is continuall­y expanding. Organizers scan Craigslist for refrigerat­ors and other supplies, seek donations and ask neighbors to “host” refrigerat­ors on their property. The group connects them to power inside the home via an extension cord and pays for the extra charge on the host’s electric bill.

“It’s a beautiful idea,” Crispin said. “And it’s a very simple idea.”

In San Jose, an effort to launch a similar program has raised $210 of its $1,200 goal on GoFundMe.

In San Francisco, SF Community Fridge and Mission Meals Coalition opened the city’s first fridge last week on the sidewalk in front of Adobe Books in the

Mission District.

On a recent weekday, a man on a bicycle stopped to pick up a jar of salsa and a bag of sunflower seeds. Before the pandemic, he worked busing tables and serving food in restaurant­s. He’s been without a job for four months now.

“I have no money for food,” he said.

That’s become frightenin­gly common. At Martha’s Kitchen, demand has doubled during the coronaviru­s crisis, Lee said.

Martha’s Kitchen received $250,000 in emergency state funds, allocated by the city of San Jose, when the pandemic began. But that ran out in May. With its reserves dwindling, the organizati­on may have to start putting desperate people on a waitlist if more funding doesn’t come through, Lee said.

Despite the dire situation, Lee doesn’t think community fridges are the answer. Nonprofits like his get permits from the county health department, and their staff members, who receive food safety training, are vigilant about throwing away food that’s been at room temperatur­e

Khamall Jahi with We the Healthiest drops off meals at a “town fridge” along Linden Street in Oakland on July 21.

too long. Lee worries wellmeanin­g neighbors won’t take the same care.

The fridges do come with

rules. In Oakland, for example, donors must label and date their contributi­ons, and raw meat is not

allowed.

“We take care of each other. So we don’t have any concerns with poisoning anybody or anyone playing with the food inside,” said Natalia Mount, who hosts a fridge at her gallery, Pro Arts, at Frank Ogawa Plaza in downtown Oakland.

But her fridge faces another problem. Days after it opened, the city told her she didn’t have the proper permit.

Now, city officials are working with Pro Arts on a solution to help the gallery continue with this “worthwhile project,” according to Harry Hamilton, marketing coordinato­r for the city’s Economic & Workforce Developmen­t Department.

Until then, Mount has moved the fridge inside her gallery, which, she says, defeats the purpose. The gallery is closed due to the pandemic, so patrons can access the fridge only if Mount or another worker happen to be there.

“Everything is on hold,” Mount said, “until we get permission from the city to house the fridge at the plaza.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Pete Wilson, who works nearby, drops off food at a “town fridge” along Linden Street in Oakland on July 21. A network of community refrigerat­ors organized on Instagram by @townfridge and located in Oakland has food for those in need.
PHOTOS BY ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Pete Wilson, who works nearby, drops off food at a “town fridge” along Linden Street in Oakland on July 21. A network of community refrigerat­ors organized on Instagram by @townfridge and located in Oakland has food for those in need.
 ??  ?? A variety of food is available at a “town fridge” in Oakland on July 21.
A variety of food is available at a “town fridge” in Oakland on July 21.
 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ??
ANDA CHU — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER

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