The Day

Norwich food handout opens early, runs late to feed a need

Volunteers distribute milk, turkey, potatoes, fruit, soup and more to fight hunger, offer hope

- By CLAIRE BESSETTE Day Staff Writer

Norwich — Vehicles snaked along the entire perimeter of a former 33-acre Foxwoods employee parking lot and backed up onto Route 2 on Monday morning for the start of the first weekly Connecticu­t Food Bank/ Foodshare food distributi­on here.

Organizers and volunteers arrived at 7 a.m. to set up for the planned 9:30 a.m. start, but with vehicles already in line, they opened the distributi­on lines an hour early and kept it open through the noon closing time. Lines eased up by about 11 a.m. but picked up again in the final hour. No one counted, but organizers had 40,000 pounds of food on hand to distribute to about 1,500 families. Leftovers were repacked into the Connecticu­t Food Bank trucks for the next distributi­on site.

While designated as a drive-thru distributi­on, Shawn Fleck, 49, walked 35 to 40 minutes from his home in Greenevill­e pulling a small wagon. Police directed him to the front of the line so he wouldn’t have to walk the parking lot perimeter with the vehicles.

“This helps me tremendous­ly,” Fleck, who is on disability, said about the food distributi­on. “You wouldn’t even understand how much. I want to thank everybody for doing this.”

Next Monday, the food distributi­on will run from 9 a.m. to noon, Mayor Peter Nystrom said.

Police and traffic volunteers directed drivers along the edge of the giant parking lot and back toward the front, where the line was split along the sides of the food stations in the center. Volunteers grabbed bags of apples at one station, bottles of vitamin water at another, half-gallons of milk, packages of frozen ground turkey, bags of potatoes, cans of ravioli and soup, bags of lentils and rice and packages of fruit snacks at other stations. The food was placed directly into trunks, rear seats and hatches as the vehicles were directed to keep moving forward slowly.

Drivers shouted, “thank you!” multiple times, and volunteers waved and returned greetings as they grabbed items for the next vehicle.

“You’ve got a pretty buoyant crew here,” volunteer Mike Kennedy of Groton said.

Kennedy, who is retired, said he read a news story last week that the Norwich food distributi­on needed volunteers and responded.

“I had nothing to do, and they needed help,” he said.

Nystrom had put out a call for about 40 volunteers to run the 2½-hour distributi­on, and about 45 signed up or showed up Monday. Some directed traffic, while others loaded cars, and a person at the final stop closed car doors or trunks to send recipients on their way. Anyone wishing to volunteer for future distributi­ons in Norwich should call the city Human Services Department at (860) 823-3778 or the mayor’s office at (860) 823-3743.

Nystrom thanked Rodney Butler, chairman of the Mashantuck­et Pequot tribe, for allowing the food distributi­on at the Foxwoods lot. Nystrom said the parking lot might be difficult for some people to access, but it is the best location in the city for the weekly distributi­on. Nystrom said one driver was picking up food

for four families who couldn’t get to the site, and volunteers loaded the vehicle with extra shares.

“This is fantastic,” said Jason Jakubowski, president and CEO of the merging Connecticu­t Food Bank/Foodshare. “I’m amazed at the number of volunteers.”

Jakubowski said it takes at least 30 volunteers to run an event such as Monday’s Norwich distributi­on. He thanked Norwich police, city government and private nonprofit agencies for helping to organize and staff the event.

Food Bank and Foodshare expanded their weekly food distributi­ons to include New London on Fridays from 2:30 to 4 p.m. at St. Mary’s Star of the Sea Church, 10 Huntington St., and Norwich this month and holds weekly distributi­ons on Tuesdays at Rentschler Field in East Hartford and Thursdays in Norwalk.

Jakubowski said the organizati­ons run additional smaller food distributi­on programs and have increased the supplies distribute­d to partner food pantries and programs. They also are looking for other possible sites.

“We’re responding to the economic impact of the coronaviru­s,” Jakubowski said. “So many people have been hurt.”

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Volunteers load food into cars at a Connecticu­t Food Bank/Foodshare distributi­on Monday in Norwich. About 45 volunteers and 40,000 pounds of food were in place for those in need at the former Foxwoods employee parking lot on Route 2.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Volunteers load food into cars at a Connecticu­t Food Bank/Foodshare distributi­on Monday in Norwich. About 45 volunteers and 40,000 pounds of food were in place for those in need at the former Foxwoods employee parking lot on Route 2.
 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Volunteer Ruben Montrond of Norwich loads bags of potatoes into a car Monday at a distributi­on from the Connecticu­t Food Bank/Foodshare in Norwich. About 45 volunteers and 40,000 pounds of food were in place for those in need at the former Foxwoods employee parking lot on Route 2.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Volunteer Ruben Montrond of Norwich loads bags of potatoes into a car Monday at a distributi­on from the Connecticu­t Food Bank/Foodshare in Norwich. About 45 volunteers and 40,000 pounds of food were in place for those in need at the former Foxwoods employee parking lot on Route 2.

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