Minnesota food shelves, already busy, brace for bigger demand
Published 9:04 am Wednesday, July 22, 2020
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By Nina Moini, Minnesota Public Radio News
The COVID-19 pandemic has created huge demand for free or reduced-cost food across the state as Minnesotans have lost jobs and children missed out on school lunches. Food shelves anticipate even more people will rely on them to get enough to eat.
On Tuesday, Biantu Sheriff looked over milk, macaroni and cheese and other items in a cardboard box she picked up outside of Gethsemane Lutheran Church in north Minneapolis.
“I have three kids and really need diaper, formula and wipes for them,” she said.
Sheriff is working fewer hours after the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered schools abruptly in March. Since then, like thousands of Minnesotans, it has been harder for her to make ends meet.
Then, at the end of May, after Minneapolis police killed George Floyd, rioters damaged several businesses including the Cub Foods on Broadway Avenue, which had to close.
“It all of a sudden after the riot, it became a large food desert,” said Jamar Nelson of A Mother’s Love. The grassroots organization partnered with Gethsemane church to set up a makeshift food shelf in the Cub Foods parking lot for about six weeks before the grocery store reopened on Monday.
Gethsemane’s pastor, Jeff Nehrbass, is back in his own church parking lot serving more people than he ever has in his 13 years providing food and other essentials to the community. Nehrbass said prior to the coronavirus, his church served roughly 2,000 north side residents per month — that increased by roughly 5,000 people during the pandemic months.
“After the George Floyd murder we were at 35,000 people and 259,000 pounds of food in the month of June,” Nehrbass said.
City leaders say the need is growing by the minute at 36 food shelves run by churches and nonprofits.
Donations are critical. The city of Minneapolis says it doesn’t have funds available to support food banks or food shelves.
Gov. Tim Walz recently allocated $12 million in federal funding related to the COVID-19 pandemic to help meet demand across the state.
The CARES Act money that since late March has provided an extra $600 in weekly unemployment checks. Should that aid go away as expected, locally run food shelves are anticipating an even greater need in the months ahead.
Second Harvest Heartland, a Twin Cities-based food bank, among one of the largest in the country, released a hunger report last month that anticipated unprecedented demand.
It said that before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, 1 in 11 Minnesotans struggled to afford food. By next month, it’s expected that 1 in 8 Minnesotans will face hunger.
It’s why Jamar Nelson encourages Minnesotans to keep giving what they can to local food shelves.
“This is going to be a long-time recovery, there is no makeshift fix that can do this, so community-wise, we need to continue to band together, and look out for those that are less fortunate of us, and do as much as we can to provide and remember that again, this is what community is about,” Nelson said.
“I have so many examples of that in the last six weeks it’s beautiful, it’s really heartwarming.”