INDIANAPOLIS — Food insecurities and inflation — it is two things countless neighbors in the circle city are working through daily. A new plan involving a food delivery service is looking to fight both.
The Faith Hope and Love Community is partnering with DoorDash’s Project DASH to bring free food and groceries to those in need in Indianapolis.
A ribbon-cutting ceremony was held Thursday at the Fay Biccard Glick Neighborhood Center not long after several Doordash drivers came to pick up grocery boxes before delivering them to homebound seniors on the city's Northwest side.
“It feels amazing. I feel blessed because we’re helping bless other people," Doordash driver Antonio Quinn said.
The FHL Community is a non-profit based out of central Indiana whose mission is to help eradicate food insecurity, end hunger and leverage the power of food to build healthy communities.
FHL manages the first step of the partnership process, which is creating “Missional Neighborhood Hubs." These are the DoorDash pickup locations that supply the food for the program. From there, DoorDash distributes the grocery boxes to families in need.
The Fay Biccard Glick Neighborhood Center is the first. The nonprofit is looking to add more hubs across the city and eventually the state. By year's end, the goal is to serve a thousand grocery boxes a week.
Project DASH launched in 2018, first based out of San Francisco. Since then, they have expanded to several states, including New York, Ohio and Texas. The program opens access to families without the means of getting to food banks, which has shown success, especially within the senior community. It also gives families access with convenience and dignity.
Since their launch, there has been an estimated 35 million meals delivered through Project DASH and 2 million deliveries of meals, groceries, household goods and school supplies, according to DoorDash.
Nearly two dozen seniors got Doordash deliveries Thursday from the food pantry at the Fay Biccard Glick Neighborhood Center, but with inflation, this delivery partnership is expected to grow to upwards of an estimated 300 seniors and families in need.
"It's almost saying like we're finally looking at things from a different lens.it's not that we can't. it's what we can do," Fay Biccard Glick Neighborhood Center Executive Director, Patrice Duckett-Brown said.
-
F.A.S.T. program helps families helping families gain financial independence
A program at the Fay Biccard Glick Neighborhood Center is focused on building up and supporting families in the 46260 zip code.Bridging the gap... Literally
There's a new way to travel to the AMP at 16 Tech from downtown Indy and nearby communities. It's a new connector off West 10th Street and Riley Hospital Drive.'It’s stealing joy': Hoosiers react to clash involving Haliburton's dad, Bucks
Despite the Pacers big overtime win to eliminate the Bucks in the first round of the playoffs, an interaction after the game between Tyrese Haliburton’s dad is what made a lot of the headlines.IMPD asking community to help locate missing teen
18-year-old Zachary Bean was last seen on Wednesday in the 300 block of N. Jersey Street, police say.