New ‘grab and go’ process
The organizations switched to a “grab and go” service model where clients would come to the door, state the size of their household, and then be given enough food for 15 days, Dinglasan said.
At the event in Riverside, 245 cars carrying more than 900 people waited in line for masked volunteers to load boxes of produce, milk, chicken, and nonperishable food into their trunks. The food totaled 500 boxes of shelf-stable items; 500 boxes of produce; 900 whole chickens; 500 five-pound bags of chicken fingers, and 1,920 gallons of milk. Everyone in line was served, said Jennifer Crea Aydjian, chief of staff for state Sen. Troy Singleton, who was helping to load boxes into cars.
Singleton, a Democrat from Burlington County whose district includes Riverside, said the pandemic shutdowns have increased the number of people who were already classified as food-insecure — meaning that they don’t have continuous access to nutritional food.
“We know anecdotally that there are some families that will not have the food necessary to feed their families if not for the great work of the Food Bank of South Jersey,” he said. “We are not seeing the demand slow down.”
Fear of infection
Near the head of the line was Pearline Campbell, 55, of Willingboro, who lost her job as a chef because of the pandemic shutdown, and doesn’t expect to return to work any time soon because she fears being infected or passing the virus on to other members of her household.
“What I can’t buy, I get from food banks,” she said. “It helps me out in a lot of ways. I get fruits and vegetables for the kids.”
Donna Wassmuth, 61, of Riverside, said she has not had a full-time job since last September, and lost a part-time retail job because of the pandemic shutdown. Her benefit payments stopped seven weeks ago, and she has been relying on food bank assistance to build up her supplies. “I had stuff, but this supplemented what I needed,” she said. Wassmuth said she was due to start a new full-time job in retail on Monday.
Although food donations are down at the Community FoodBank of New Jersey, they have increased at the South Jersey bank by 42% compared with a year ago, and that has helped it build up its reserves to a record 3 million pounds, Wasiak said.
He said the Food Bank of South Jersey set successive monthly records for food distributed — rising from 1.5 million pounds in March to 1.7 million in April and 1.9 million in May. He’s expecting to distribute some 2 million pounds in June as joblessness continues to eat into people’s incomes.
“Even though things are opening up, it’s going to take a while for people to get their feet back on the ground,” said. “We’re going to have to fill the gap for months to come.”