The Kansas City Star

Grocery delivery program a lifeline for immigrant families

- BY NATE FILE

If your family were immigrants newly arrived to Philadelph­ia from Latin America, you might be focused on any number of things: finding a job, getting your children into school, learning a new language, or paying off debts from a long, arduous journey. But then, something both more basic and urgent comes to mind: How can you afford groceries, and where would you get them?

Two local community organizati­ons have partnered together to ease the weight of those questions. Recently, Old Pine Com(when munity Center and Puentes de Salud, a nonprofit promoting health and wellness for Philly’s Latino immigrant population, celebrated the fourth anniversar­y of their partnershi­p to deliver free groceries to immigrant families in Philadelph­ia.

Focusing primarily on South and Southwest Philly, the two organizati­ons identify families in need of assistance, organize and package food donated by Philabunda­nce, Sharing Excess and individual­s, and hand deliver the bags of groceries to families every Sunday. On average, the partnershi­p serves 110 to 120 families a week.

“It’s a huge support for people to be able to use their resources on other For some people, it plays that role where, truly, they wouldn’t have any food if they weren’t receiving this,” said Olivia Pandolfi, food access coordinato­r with Puentes.

The partnershi­p began shortly after the onset of the COVID pandemic in 2020. Many of the people served by Puentes have jobs in the restaurant industry or other work in the informal economy that was hit first and hardest when the world shut down. When Puentes asked its families what help they needed, people mostly asked for food support.

Meanwhile, Old Pine Community Center had a preexistin­g program that offered free, in-person meals on the weekends that was shuttered because of COVID. But Old Pine’s staff and volunteers still wanted to help community members in need of food, and got in touch with Puentes. Mark Atwood, the executive director of Old Pine Community Center, said the free groceries program also gave their staff and volunteers a reason to stay connected during a particular­ly lonely, isolating time.

“They’re a part of this bigger thing … there’s all of us that are working on this same thing together,” he said.

“These folks that we’re working with are dealing with other challenges in their life, and [the partnecess­ities. nership] is really just trying to make food easy and [have] as few barriers as possible.”

Now, the partnershi­p serves double the number of families it did in March 2020, and distribute­s 3,000 to 4,000 pounds of nonperisha­ble food items a week. The offerings also include fresh fruit and vegetables, as well as meat and dairy depending on donation availabili­ty. Since the start of the program, Old Pine and Puentes have delivered more than 14,000 bags of groceries.

The deliveries are customized to fit each family’s particular adult-tochild ratio, dietary restrictio­n, likes and dislikes, and even diaper size

the organizati­ons can secure items such as diapers). All of the families in the program come from Puentes referrals, and typically are people who have some barrier that would keep them from visiting Puentes’ food pantry easily.

Many of those whom Puentes works with are recent immigrants, and those families are also often invited into the program while they get acclimated.

“Since we started [this partnershi­p] as an emergency response program, it’s really transition­ed over time into a key part of our clinical offerings. It uncovered the insecurity that was already in the community. So it wasn’t because of COVID necessaril­y that all of these families suddenly became food insecure,” Pandolfi said.

“It just revealed to the Puentes team – this is really a huge part of people’s well-being. It’s a need that’s not getting met.”

 ?? DAVID MAIALETTI The Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS ?? Rosemary Noce-Murphy loads up bags at Old Pine Community Center in Philadelph­ia, Pa., for a grocery delivery program that focuses on immigrant families in South and Southwest Philadelph­ia.
DAVID MAIALETTI The Philadelph­ia Inquirer/TNS Rosemary Noce-Murphy loads up bags at Old Pine Community Center in Philadelph­ia, Pa., for a grocery delivery program that focuses on immigrant families in South and Southwest Philadelph­ia.

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