INDIANAPOLIS — On Tuesday, Mayor Joe Hogsett announced the Office of Public Health and Safety would receive a $613,000 grant from Partnership for a Healthier America to continue growing their Good Food for All program.
PHA promotes access to healthy, affordable food across the country.
In response to the pandemic, the Good Food for All program started last year in Indianapolis. It provided more than 1,000 low-income households with 800,000 servings of fruits and vegetables over 12 weeks.
The program worked with 15 community partner organizations to increase the number of fruits and vegetables participants ate along with building lasting healthy habits.
“It is important to provide immediate relief to hunger as well as long-term solutions, building healthier consumer habits and allowing retailers to adapt the overall food system. Because of programs like this one, more students will catch a healthy breakfast before they catch the bus, more parents will break for a nutritious lunch before finishing out the workday, and more families will gather around a nourishing meal at dinnertime,” Mayor Joe Hogsett said.
“By making a healthy lifestyle more accessible to more residents, we build on the positive momentum we see reflected in lower unemployment and lower rates of violence," he added.
Paige Turner is a participant of the program through an outreach center on the northeast side. She said participating in the program has allowed her to get help and to give back when she can.
"Sometimes, they come dead on the point. I might be out of milk and can't get to the store because I don't have transportation now," Turner said. "If they have a pantry and I'm not around, they make sure I get a box. Sometimes, they give my mother and sister boxes, too."
The $613,000 will allow the program to reach back out to 1,000 families to provide five additional weeks of free food boxes, followed by 12 weeks of produce at a discounted rate, working hand-in-hand with retail partners to meet residents where they are.
OPHS and PHA will work with existing community organizations to target Indianapolis families most in need.
Updates on the program can be found here.
-
Riverside Adventure Park opens in Indianapolis
Indy Parks has revitalized one of the city's most historic parks with new playground equipment and trials while highlighting nature in the central part of the Circle City.Over 2 million Ninja pressure cookers recalled after reports of burn injuries
SharkNinja is recalling more than 2 million pressure cookers sold in the U.S. and Canada — after consumers reported over 100 burn injuries spanning from a hazard that can cause hot food to spew out.Your Guide to the 2025 Mini-Marathon: Maps, Times, and Closures
The IU Health 500 Festival Mini-Marathon on Saturday will bring tens of thousands to downtown Indianapolis for this annual event. Here’s everything you need to know to prepare for race day.Daughter finds closure as father is identified among victims of Fox Hollow Farm
Coral Halloran is finding closure after DNA confirms her father, Daniel Thomas Halloran, as a victim of Fox Hollow Farm, resolving decades of mystery surrounding his disappearance.