Food closet sets up donation bins in grocery stores

Published 6:00 pm Tuesday, March 12, 2019

 

WEST POINT — The Interfaith Food Closet in Valley is giving individuals in the community more opportunities to help those in need.

At Givorns Foods in Valley and West Point, there are donation bins at the entrances of each store. Those bins have been set up for donations for the food closet, according to the Interfaith Board Chairman Donnie Ervin-Brown.

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Ervin-Brown said the idea came from Bob Lemons of Valley, the bins were donated from Super Wash in Lanett and Norman’s Sign Shop created the sign above the bins in Lanett.

He said Givorns Foods employees have agreed to donate $1 a week per employee for every week the bin is in the store.

The food closet has been in operation for 35 years in the Greater Valley Area and it is made up of more than 20 churches within the region.

“We do emergency food,” Ervin-Brown said. “It’s for anybody who finds themselves in need of food. We help them out.”

He said all a person needs is a driver’s license or state identification card and a proof of residency. They don’t perform a financial assessment.

“If somebody comes in and says they are having a financial emergency, we give them food,” Ervin-Brown said.

He said individuals in need could come to the food closet six times a year without board action. After a sixth time, he said a board member needs to sign off on additional food.

Typically, people get food for about five days, and it’s usually items such as bread, eggs, pasta and vegetables. Ervin-Brown said the number of people in the family determines how much food is handed out. The families also get a recipe card that goes up to a family of eight that shows them how to stretch the food for five days.

The organization is a nonprofit, 501c3 and is made up entirely on volunteers. The food closet is open five days a week. On Monday, Wednesday and Friday, it’s open from 9 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. On Tuesday and Thursday, it’s open from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. On Wednesday nights, the organization is also open from 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. The food closet is located behind Langdale Methodist Church at 6313 20th Ave. in Valley.

Ervin-Brown said the organization serves more than 350 people a month, which is about 100 families. He said it usually comes out to about 1,400 meals per month.

Most of the food is purchased by the food closet through monetary donations through the churches but also through grants. There is also a major food drive every year through the U.S. Post Office.

“It is just a call and a need,” Ervin-Brown said. “We have two purposes. One is to give emergency food and also to give opportunities to churches to give back to the community.”