The Morning Call (Sunday)

Philly food bank one of DoorDash’s busiest pickup spots

Share Food Program sends out boxes to seniors in need

- By Alfred Lubrano

PHILADELPH­IA — In the parking lot of the Share Food Program warehouse in Philadelph­ia’s Hunting Park neighborho­od, stacks of food boxes marked for low-income area seniors were being loaded into the cars of drivers for DoorDash, the online food-ordering and delivery service.

After one car was filled, the next one rolled up, the operation rapid and crisp outside the food bank, one of the two largest in the region, along with Philabunda­nce.

When it was over in about two hours, more than 500 of the 32-pound senior boxes had been dispatched to older people in need in Philadelph­ia, Montgomery, and Chester Counties. Share does such distributi­ons on Fridays and Saturdays.

It sends out more than 1,000 deliveries of food boxes via the DoorDash app over twice a week, over two hours on each day — averaging around 4,500 a month.

That earns Share a unique distinctio­n: During the four weekly hours it’s giving out senior boxes, Share handles a greater number of delivery orders than any store or restaurant in the world on the DoorDash app, according to DoorDash executives.

That includes more than 400,000 stores and restaurant­s in 7,000 cities throughout 25 countries, according to figures from DoorDash executives, as well as from delivery-industry experts.

“It’s a pretty incredible what Share has developed,” said Daniel Riff, a DoorDash senior manager. “They have a remarkable pickup operation.”

Share has an additional distinctio­n: an ability “to adjust volume to acute needs,” according to Keith Fernandez, another DoorDash senior manager.

During the food bank’s largest distributi­on days, such as last Nov. 17 and 18 — the Friday and Saturday before Thanksgivi­ng — Share had ratcheted up its senior-box delivery schedule and “fulfilled more orders for its clients than any individual restaurant on [the] DoorDash …[app], globally, for the entire two days,” Fernandez added. He didn’t offer specific numbers.

According to industry figures, DoorDash, at more than 60% of the market, is the largest online food-delivery service in the United States.

“From our perspectiv­e,” said George Matysik, Share’s executive director, “if somebody of means can order food to get to their doorstep, somebody without means should be able to also.”

Growing need

Eligible seniors receive one box a month via DoorDash. Inside are juice, cereal, canned goods, and other shelf-stable food purchased by the federal government. Deliveries also include cheese.

Seniors can sign up for the Senior Food Box Program through mail-in applicatio­n, over the phone with Share, or on Share’s website. Some people are signed up via caseworker­s or family members.

Share executives realized that older Philadelph­ians in need had a hard time picking up and transporti­ng the heavy senior boxes themselves, and many simply didn’t take them. Or, seniors were too embarrasse­d to queue up and wait to be handed food. Others didn’t

know they were eligible. DoorDash was utilized to fill in the gaps, executives say.

Share’s DoorDash deliveries have increased 300% since 2022 because of growing need, a Share spokespers­on said.

DoorDash began making senior-box deliveries for Share and nine other Pennsylvan­ia food banks in 2021, according to Sheila Christophe­r, executive director of Hunger-Free Pennsylvan­ia. The nonprofit, headquarte­red in the Pittsburgh area, is a statewide network of food banks and charitable organizati­ons.

The organizati­on pays DoorDash $450,000 a year for 8,000 statewide deliveries per month, underwritt­en by the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Agricultur­e, Christophe­r said. More than half of the state’s deliveries originate at Share. Philabunda­nce uses DoorDash for around 100 monthly deliveries;

it relies on its own trucks to move food out, Christophe­r said.

DoorDash offers a discounted fee to HungerFree Pennsylvan­ia, and makes no profit from the partnershi­p, DoorDash executives said.

“You pay DoorDash $8 to bring you a McDonald’s burger,” Christophe­r said. “They charge us only $4.50 per senior box, part of its charitable program.

“It’s a lifesaver, enabling us to bring food to seniors’ doors. Before DoorDash, we were under-serving seniors by thousands, and they were really struggling to get food.

“DoorDash pretty much saved the senior-box program in Pennsylvan­ia.”

‘I came from starvation’

On Feb. 23, around 40 DoorDasher­s waited in their cars for Camille Carr, home-delivery program coordinato­r, to give them the go-ahead to enter the parking lot and load senior boxes.

“How are you today?” she greeted the drivers, many of whom speak only Spanish. Summoned by notificati­ons on their smartphone­s by the same method they use to pick up meals from restaurant­s, a few drivers didn’t know what they’d be getting at Share.

But Frely Garo was an old hand at this. “This pickup is good for me for the money,” said Garo, 37 of Northeast Philadelph­ia as he loaded his Red Toyota hybrid with boxes. Most drivers take 10 boxes, but Garo was pushing in 20. “I’ve been doing this a long time,” he added, saying he likes “helping older folks.”

There was some discrepanc­y about how much drivers make. Some sources say they earn $2 a box from DoorDash, while others indicate it’s $5. DoorDash won’t discuss driver compensati­on.

Later that morning, people like Bela Hauser, 82, of Northeast Philadelph­ia, received their food.

“It comes right to my doorstep,” said Hauser, a widow who immigrated from Eastern Europe 60 years ago and now lives on a low, fixed income. “I benefit from these boxes.

“I came from starvation as a child. It feels good to get this food.”

For Matysik of Share, the DoorDash deliveries to Hauser and others are just the beginning.

“The ultimate goal,” he said, “is to someday be able to deliver food to all people in need, 24/7 — not just seniors.”

Matysik called it “a matter of dignity.”

He added, “We don’t want people waiting in line for an hour waiting for food. If we’re still doing that in five years, then we’ve failed.”

 ?? ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Volunteer George Moody loads the car of a DoorDash driver with a senior food box outside Share Food Program in Hunting Park.
ALEJANDRO A. ALVAREZ/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Volunteer George Moody loads the car of a DoorDash driver with a senior food box outside Share Food Program in Hunting Park.

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