Miami Herald

After small start, food giveaway serves 16,000 people a month

- BY LYNETTE HAZELTON

Six months ago, Gloria Brown and Yvonne McGhee, best friends since high school, both retired – Brown from ShopRite’s produce department and McGhee from Temple University Hospital. Both discovered a gap between the start of their Social Security payments and the end of their paychecks. And both found a solution to help them eat in the meantime – the TCRC Community Healing Center.

Since the start of COVID-19, J. Jondhi Harrell, founder and executive director of TCRC Community Healing Center, has provided an outdoor weekly food giveaway to help ease food insecurity in the city.

“We started outside because of COVID and now we do it regardless of weather,” said Harrell, as he helped unload and unpack stacks of food boxes as hundreds moved through the line.

This month, Harrell added a third distributi­on day, Monday, in West Philadelph­ia at a church. The other sites are in North Philadelph­ia and are also in collaborat­ion with a churches – on Fridays and on Wednesdays.

Across the city, one out of every 10 households lacks access to affordable healthy food on a consistent basis. During the 2020-21 school year, the School District of Philadelph­ia reported a 16.5% rate of food insecurity among School District households and almost 50% of responding principals said that food insecurity was a great or moderate challenge.

TCRC’s food giveaway is part of the nation’s patchwork effort to make certain there is food available. It is a mixture of federal assistance programs, food banks, community farms and gardens, as well as food pantries and community refrigerat­ors.

“People need food and it’s going to get worse,” Harrell predicted.

Unlike food lines of yore where consumer choice was not an option, people were able to select from an assortment – meat, pasta, dried fruit and nuts, milk (cow or almond), and everyone received a box of fresh vegetables including cabbage, green beans, zucchini and eggplant.

Some came for themselves, while others hauled food home to help the seniors, homebound and those without transporta­tion in their communitie­s.

Part of the organizati­on is the small army of volunteers Harrell has marshaled. Betty Foster has volunteere­d for three or four years and now steps in when Harrell is unavailabl­e. “We have folks of different cultures and people are in need,” Foster said.

If people complain about the line speed, Harrell invites them to join his 60 volunteers. “This is how you build community,” he explained.

McGhee and Brown both decided to volunteer and started helping with setting up, which starts at 6 a.m. When asked about customer favorites, Brown quickly responded: “Pistachios. One big bag is $27 in the store and when we have pistachios it really goes.”

Harrell is originally from Levittown and grew up an ardent Eagles fan. But he is also a returning citizen who spent a total of 25 years in federal prison for bank robbery.

During that time, with the help of mentors as part of a Circle of Consciousn­ess, he decided he needed to change and atone for the harm he did, guided by the question: “How can we heal our community, especially in the areas where we tore it apart?”

Harrell said the experience raised his focus to deal “with what he was doing as a community.” Over the years, he has become a much sought-after reentry expert and has earned a bachelor’s degree in human services management from the University of Phoenix and a master’s degree in social work at Temple University.

In 2010 he started TCRC, a small reentry center on North Broad Street. Food scarcity work became a part of his work offerings as a survival tactic.

When COVID struck, the city stopped funding nonessenti­al programs and his nonprofit was considered nonessenti­al. “How do I become essential?” Harrell recalled pondering.

To change TCRC’s status, he started distributi­ng food. At first it was Harrell, five of his grandchild­ren, and a few friends serving a couple of hundred people. Now, almost 16,000 people a month will stream through TCRC’s doors, said Harrell, and he expects the number to grow.

The problems of COVID have morphed into the problems with food inflation, which is making eating even harder for so many. According to U.S. Department of Agricultur­e research, food prices are predicted to increase between 8.5 and 9.5%.

And as food insecurity has worsened, demand for TCRC’s food pantry has increased. Currently, Harrell said TCRC is Share Food Program’s largest distributi­on site.

“We get 600 cases of assorted food and 600 cases of highdemand food,” Harrell said, but, he added, “We never have enough meat. Also, juices, dairy products, eggs, butter and bread. There are 70 pantries [in Philadelph­ia] and all of us need bread.”

PEOPLE NEED FOOD AND IT’S GOING TO GET WORSE. J. Jondhi Harrell, founder and executive director of TCRC Community Healing Center

 ?? MONICA HERNDON The Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS ?? Volunteers pass out food recently at Nazarene Baptist Church in Philadelph­ia. Since the start of COVID-19, J. Jondhi Harrell, founder and executive director of TCRC Community Healing Center, has provided weekly outdoor food giveaways.
MONICA HERNDON The Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS Volunteers pass out food recently at Nazarene Baptist Church in Philadelph­ia. Since the start of COVID-19, J. Jondhi Harrell, founder and executive director of TCRC Community Healing Center, has provided weekly outdoor food giveaways.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States