Philippine Daily Inquirer

Food distributi­on uses red, green flags

- —STORY BY KRIXIA SUBINGSUBI­NG

Community pantry organizers have begun thinking of new ways to get help where it is needed. Households needing food may raise a red cloth or flag outside their home, while green is the designated color for those who have items to donate. Labor group Defend Jobs Philippine­s will launch the Flag Brigade PH campaign, as the initiative is called, on Aug. 6 when the lockdown begins.

With stricter quarantine restrictio­ns looming or already reinstated in many parts of the country to curb an increase in COVID-19 cases, community organizers have begun thinking of new and creative ways to get help where it is needed.

One initiative asks families in Sampaloc, Manila, to display a piece of red or green cloth or flag outside their houses. Red means they need food while green indicates they have items to donate.

Volunteers assigned to go around the area will then distribute food to the “red” households and collect donations from their “green” counterpar­ts.

The Flag Brigade PH campaign, as the initiative is called, will be launched by labor group Defend Jobs Philippine­s on Aug. 6, when heightened quarantine measures are again implemente­d in Metro Manila and other provinces where COVID-19 cases have gone up in recent weeks.

The group is targeting some 200 households in Sampaloc, with a plan to widen the area of coverage in case the lockdown stretches beyond two weeks.

White flag movement

Flag Brigade PH was inspired by the White Flag movement in Malaysia, where poor households would display “benderaput­i” (white flags) in front of their homes to signal distress.

The campaign also tweaks the original community pantry movement inspired by University of the Philippine­s Fine Arts alumna Ana Patricia Non earlier this year.

Because most people would be prohibited from going outside their homes between Aug. 6 and Aug. 20 when Metro Manila goes under enhanced community quarantine (ECQ), Defend Jobs Philippine­s decided to make the pantries “mobile,” according to its spokespers­on Christian Lloyd Magsoy.

In a Facebook post on Friday, Non said that with another lockdown looming, “it was time for the national and local government­s, and big corporatio­ns to step up.”

She organized the first community pantry on Maginhawa Street in Quezon City in April when Metro Manila and four nearby provinces were placed in a “bubble” to contain a hike in infections.

The initiative, which provided free food and other goods to people in need while encouragin­g those with means to donate what they could, was quickly replicated in many parts of the country.

Government unprepared

According to Magsoy, the government seemed “unprepared” for the new round of lockdowns, as it also admitted earlier that it was still scrambling to find funding for “ayuda,” or financial aid for households under ECQ.

“Community pantries must

not stop during the reimplemen­tation of the ECQ as our poor countrymen will be most needing these services especially during the hard lockdowns,”

Magsoy said.

“We will still rely on each other’s support through any form of community pantries and the like,” he added.

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 ?? —PHOTO COURTESY OF DJP ?? COLOR-CODED DISTRIBUTI­ON Volunteers of Defend Jobs Philippine­s (DJP) will fan out across Sampaloc, Manila, to pick up food items from homes with green flags and deliver them to homes with red flags on Aug. 6 when Metro Manila comes under hard lockdown.
—PHOTO COURTESY OF DJP COLOR-CODED DISTRIBUTI­ON Volunteers of Defend Jobs Philippine­s (DJP) will fan out across Sampaloc, Manila, to pick up food items from homes with green flags and deliver them to homes with red flags on Aug. 6 when Metro Manila comes under hard lockdown.
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