Gleaning program provides fresh produce to the needy

February 19, 2013 6:36 PM

Share this Article

Author:

022013_HLTHfarmersmarketglean 1DOWNTOWN — Standing amidst the bounty of the Santa Monica Farmers’ Market, a raggedly dressed man with a tired face holds up a tattered cardboard sign: “Hungry, please help.”

Just half a block south is Step Up on Second, one of three local social service agencies that could offer him fresh produce from the market, brought in just that day.

On this particular winter Wednesday, 26 labeled boxes containing 554 pounds of apples, citrus, salad greens, kale, squash, garlic, turnips, cucumbers and radishes have been collected by friendly volunteers wearing hats and aprons that say “Food Forward.”

They’re members of “Glean Teams” representing the 4-year-old non-profit organization Food Forward, whose new Farmers Market Recovery Program collects fresh produce donated by the farmers at the end of the market day. Here in Santa Monica, it’s distributed to Step Up on Second, The Clare Foundation and St. Joseph Center in Venice, Calif. Some of their clients are homeless, have a mental illness or an addiction to drugs or alcohol — many times all three.

Santa Monica’s Wednesday and Sunday markets are two of four area markets participating in this new venture, which is on track to serve nine markets by its one-year anniversary in August. Collections at Mar Vista Farmers’ Markets begin March 3.

Glean Teams extend the group’s mission: helping to prevent hunger by recovering food that might otherwise go to waste, and donating 100 percent of it to agencies serving those in need.

Today’s Glean Team includes Christine Kwon, who glided up the sidewalk on skates (she recently joined a roller derby team). She’s joined by Kat Thomas, a food blogger and burlesque-dancing aerialist just back from performing at Sundance; and Alex Melinkoff, who runs a landscape business, riding in from Woodland Hills, Calif.

Herding this eclectic crew and a few others is Mary Baldwin, Food Forward’s Farmers Market Recovery Program manager, who joined the organization in August of 2012 and launched the program just two weeks later at the Santa Monica Farmers’ Market.

“We had to create — and along the way refine — the collection tracking system,” Baldwin says as she hands out collection kits to the volunteers.

“We needed to put together the infrastructure, reach out to the receiving agencies, find the volunteers and get acquainted with the farmers,” Baldwin says. “[Santa Monica] Farmers’ Market Manager Laura Avery introduced us to each of the farmers so we could explain the program … . At the end of the market, we distribute Food Forward boxes so they don’t have to use their own. If they have extra unsold produce, they’ll fill our box with anything they have to give, and we take care of the picking up, weighing, distributing and providing tax receipts for their donations.

“As a matter of fact,” Baldwin says, “on that first day, we expected maybe 300 pounds of food, but ended up with more than 1,300!”

“The agencies couldn’t fit it all in their vans,” Avery says with a laugh. “So Food Forward’s Managing Director Meg Glasser, superstar volunteer Anne Burmeister and Mary put the rest in Meg’s car and drove it to the Downtown Women’s Center. Food had to go to the people who needed it and they were going to make it happen!”

Avery says Food Forward and the markets are a perfect match. “They help us fulfill the city’s sustainability mission. And the market is always trying to do more for the local population. We didn’t have the contacts to start a program on our own, so when Food Forward stepped in, we were thrilled.”

“They make it easy to be generous; it’s so efficient,” says Alex Weiser of Weiser Family Farms, who handed over 30 pounds of garlic, estimated at $4 a pound. “I like that we’re helping people right here in our community. We always have food left at the end of the day, and instead of composting it, this great service lets us give it to a good cause. Everybody wins.”

At Step Up on Second, program manager Len Lovallo allows Food Forward to leave their cardboard boxes and hand trucks in his storage room between Glean Team collection days because the transitional living facility benefits from the program.

“I run a vocational program for job training in our kitchen, and in our cafe we serve two meals a day, seven days a week,” Lovallo says. “Farmers’ Market donations go beyond what I can get from the Food Bank, like fresh Brussels sprouts, beets, mushrooms, stuff we incorporate both to feed and teach our clients.”

St. Joseph Center always wanted to connect with local markets to enhance their food pantry. “Produce items are the healthiest and most requested items in our food pantry,” said Executive Director Va Lecia Adams.

But they too lacked the relationships and logistical capacity to sustain such a program. “Food Forward’s ability to network with the farmers and market managers, along with their commitment to packaging the donations for easy pick up” made it possible, she said.

By increasing the amount of produce they offer, Adams estimates that, “a weekly visit to our pantry gives our clients food that would cost about $40 at a supermarket.”

“With a median household income of around $1,500, it’s kind of like getting a 10 percent raise,” she adds, leaving money for other essentials like rent and utilities.

So far, Food Forward has harvested and recovered more than 1.3 million pounds of food, primarily from backyard “picks,” or harvests, accomplished by an army of volunteers who hand-collect a variety of fruit and avocados. Additional programs include private estate picks, specially-designed “corporate picks” that encourage employee community service, recovering food from distribution hubs, and now the Glean Teams.

In no small part, it’s the upbeat volunteers and the warm relations they’ve established with the farmers that make the Farmers Market Recovery Program such a success. Example? Chris at Rancho La Vina’s walnut oil booth jokingly proposed to the effervescent Mary.

She smiles and says, “We try to keep it light at the market, but food rescue is a serious mission. At our core, the Glean Teams are food security advocates, who believe access to good food is a basic human right.”

Statistics tell the story in numbers: in 3.5 months in 2012 across all markets, 49 total collections resulted in 54,534 pounds of produce gleaned, donated by 157 farmers, serving 22 agencies, benefiting approximately 31,600 people, providing 71.300 meals, courtesy of 36 dedicated Glean Team volunteers.

And that was at just three markets.

Which leads to Food Forward’s “ask.”

“Now with four markets all across the city, and five scheduled to launch, we really need more volunteers,” Baldwin says. “If we’ve done this much good so far, imagine how much more we could do!”

To join a Glean Team for Food Forward’s Farmers Market Recovery Program, contact fmrecovery@foodforward.org, or sign up online at foodforward.org/events.

 

editor@smdp.com

READ MORE Business Non Profits

Other News

  • Q-Line: Cash from overseas

    The Santa Monica Convention & Visitors Bureau held its fourth annual Travel and Tourism Summit last week during which they released figures that showed tourists and the hotels they stay in pumped $1.5 billion into the local economy in 2012. Of that, $48.4 million went directly into City Hall’s General Fund, which supports basic city services.   This week, Q-Line asked:   A handful of hotels are being planned for Downtown, but some residents are working to put a stop [...]

    Read more →
    Opinion Qline
  • pch+crash+1

    PCH safety study finds 90 areas of concern

    MALIBU — There are over 90 existing conditions targeted as potential safety concerns along Pacific Coast Highway that the city of Malibu should address, according to a months-long, $375,000 engineering study of Malibu’s 27 miles of PCH. While some of the possible safety issues were “pervasive,” meaning they occur along the entire corridor of PCH in Malibu, other problems were location-specific. Areas of particular concern included the intersections of Las Flores Canyon Road, the Malibu Pier and Paradise Cove Road, [...]

    Read more →
    Featured News Transportation
  • trafficon405freeway

    Congressman can’t stomach 405 delay

    DOWNTOWN Rep. Henry Waxman (D-Santa Monica) fired off a letter Friday to Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood asking him to investigate delays in the construction of the Interstate-405 Sepulveda Pass Improvements Project. The project, which had previously been scheduled to be completed by spring 2013, won’t be finished until fall 2014, according to reports. “I am asking Secretary LaHood to investigate the delays and do everything in his power to speed completion of the project,” Waxman said. The $317 million [...]

    Read more →
    Briefs Featured News
  • Catherine Greig (Photo courtesy Google Images)

    8-year term for Bulger girlfriend upheld

    BOSTON — The longtime girlfriend of reputed gangster James “Whitey” Bulger lost her bid to reduce the eight-year prison sentence she received for helping Bulger during his 16 years as a fugitive. A three-judge panel of the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Friday that it found no basis to change the sentence that Catherine Greig received after she pleaded guilty to conspiracy to harbor a fugitive, identity fraud and conspiracy to commit identity fraud. The panel included retired [...]

    Read more →
    Crime Featured News
  • Nueske's apple-smoked bacon and chicharrones mingling with fresh avocados make up Tinga's bacon guacamole. (Photo courtesy Tinga)

    Tinga offers bold flavors in a familiar place

    It probably came as a surprise to many locals when Renee’s Courtyard Cafe closed its doors for good a couple of months back. But then again Santa Monica’s landscape is undergoing some serious transformations. With the exception of Chez Jay, it seems like no place is safe from new development or trendier competition. Renee’s did sadly seem antiquated when pitted against some of the hot new bars and restaurants hitting the Santa Monica scene. And one eatery that exemplifies this [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Food Life Tour de Feast
  • coke-smoke-b

    Treating processed food like Big Tobacco

    Are food companies to blame for the rise in obesity in America by creating specially formulated junk food that is addictive? According to the Feb. 20 article in the New York Times, food companies are being compared to tobacco companies. They are advertising and marketing to children, they hire food scientists and psychologists to formulate a more physically and psychologically addictive food and they target the poor and uneducated. The last statement I have a moral issue with; food companies [...]

    Read more →
    Featured Food The Better Option
  • Head in the sand

    Editor: The Torrance, Calif. man’s rebuke (“Obama gets a free pass,” Letters to the Editor, May 15) to Jack Neworth’s column “Bush painted U.S. into corner,” May 3, Laughing Matters, is an example of someone whose head has been stuck in the sand and can’t — or won’t — see the obvious. Mr. Neworth’s column simply pointed out the deficiencies in the Bush administration. I should think it would be obvious to everyone. It is appalling that the barrages of [...]

    Read more →
    Letters Opinion
  • Dancing to the beat of a different drum

    If you don’t have any young kids, you better go out and borrow a couple for Sunday. If they’re younger than 2, even better because you might feel a little conspicuous going by yourself to McCabe’s at the far east end of Pico Boulevard, from 11 a.m. to noon, to catch the kids’ matinee show with the Masanga Marimba Ensemble. But if you don’t, you’ll be missing something good. I caught this colorfully costumed “waka waka” large band enlivening the [...]

    Read more →
    A Curious City Columns Curious City Opinion
  • Baseball: Samohi eliminated from playoffs, 8-3

    SAMOHI  — Santa Monica baseball hasn’t won in the postseason since the 2008-09 season, where they defeated Knight to advance to the second round. For the past three years, the Vikings have been sent packing in the first round, a fact they hoped to fix Thursday in round one of the CIF-Southern Section Division 3 playoffs at home. But, unfortunately, Samohi’s championship dreams were dashed in an 8-3 loss to that same Knight team. Samohi starting pitcher Alex Gironda displayed [...]

    Read more →
    High School Sports
  • CAUGHT: SMPD Investigator Jason Olson holds a sign letting drivers know that they will be ticketed for using cell phones during a sting operation on Fourth Street on Thursday. Those busted had purple cones placed on their hoods to notify awaiting offers to issue citations. (Photo by Ashley Archibald)

    Cops nab 29 cell phone users in sting

    FOURTH STREET —  They’re everywhere, they’re dangerous and the Santa Monica Police Department is making it a priority to take them off the road. SMPD officers ran a sting operation Thursday morning targeting distracted drivers, specifically those caught talking or texting on cell phones. The operation is part of a three-month push by the Traffic Division to crack down on drivers using their cell phones without hands-free devices, conduct that became illegal in the state in 2008. Officers netted 46 [...]

    Read more →
    Crime Featured News Transportation
  • Colorado Esplanade (Rendering courtesy city of Santa Monica)

    Colorado Esplanade moves forward

    CITY HALL — The City Council unanimously gave the green light Tuesday to a scaled-down version of a project that aims to convert the westernmost section of Colorado Avenue into the southern gateway to the Downtown and Santa Monica Pier. The Colorado Esplanade, as it’s called, is first and foremost a street project that will make Colorado Avenue one-way between Fourth Street and Ocean Avenue to provide more space for pedestrians and bicyclists disembarking from the Exposition Light Rail line, [...]

    Read more →
    City Council Featured News Transportation
  • Crime Watch: Aggressive panhandler beats man, police say

    Crime Watch is a weekly series culled from reports provided by the Santa Monica Police Department. These are arrests only. All parties are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.   Friday, May 10, at 10:40 p.m., Santa Monica police officers responded to the 100 block of Colorado Avenue regarding a report of a man who was beaten by a homeless beggar after he refused to give the man any money. Police said the alleged victim had just [...]

    Read more →
    Crime Featured News
  • Who needs the aggravation phase?

    Paddy Chayefsky died in 1981 but still remains one of my writing heroes. He’s the only writer to win three solo Oscars. (Woody Allen, Francis Ford Coppola, Charles Brackett and Billy Wilder all shared with co-writers). But my admiration for Chayefsky plummeted after I saw “Network” which he wrote. “Network” starred William Holden, Faye Dunaway, Peter Finch and Robert Duval. (Not a bad cast, eh?) It was about a TV network cynically exploiting a deranged TV anchor. (No, not Glenn [...]

    Read more →
    Columns Laughing Matters Opinion
  • Letter: Change the chamber

    Editor: It comes as absolutely no surprise that the Santa Monica City Council is anti-business, so its recent vote to endorse taking away the constitutional rights of mom-and-pop business owners is consistent with the city’s other hostile actions toward the business community (”Council calls for end to corporate protections,” May 16, page 1). But I want to know, where was the Santa Monica Chamber of Commerce in advocating for business owners, especially the small business owners which make up a [...]

    Read more →
    Letters Opinion
  • Santa Monica police place the suspect in Thursday's threat at SMC into a squad car. (Photo by Paul Alvarez Jr.)

    Update: Police make arrest following college threat

    SMC — Officers arrested a self-described suicidal Santa Monica College student connected to threats at both SMC and East L.A. College following a lockdown on Thursday morning, according to police. The Santa Monica Police Department received a threat of a possibly-armed man at SMC at approximately 8 a.m., prompting the lockdown at the college, John Adams Middle School and Will Rogers Elementary School. Police established a perimeter around the campus, but the 19-year-old suspect turned himself into the college’s health [...]

    Read more →
    Crime Featured News
  • Juliana Redding

    Prosecutors: Aspiring actress fought for her life

    DOWNTOWN L.A. — Juliana Redding, a 21-year old aspiring actress and model, had dreams of making it big in Hollywood. Instead she spent her final minutes fighting for her life, prosecutors said Wednesday in a Downtown Los Angeles courtroom. The jury trial began in the case of Kelly Soo Park, the woman accused of strangling Redding to death in her Santa Monica apartment in 2008. Park, who has been out on $3.5 million bail, appeared in court wearing a white [...]

    Read more →
    Crime Featured News