Slog

News & Arts

The Stranger Suggests

Critics' Best Bets
Music Arts & Food


Line Out

Music & the City
at Night

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Want to Feed the Hungry? Can the Cans; Give Cash!

Posted by on Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 2:03 PM

Matthew Yglesias has sparked a bit of a hubbub over on Slate, by suggesting that "food drives are a terrible idea," and encouraging potential donors instead to "Can the cans. Hand over some cash."

All across America, charitable organizations and the food industry have set up mechanisms through which emergency food providers can get their hands on surplus food for a nominal handling charge. Katherina Rosqueta, executive director of the Center for High Impact Philanthropy at the University of Pennsylvania, explains that food providers can get what they need for “pennies on the dollar.” She estimates that they pay about 10 cents a pound for food that would cost you $2 per pound retail. You’d be doing dramatically more good, in basic dollars and cents terms, by eating that tuna yourself and forking over a check for half the price of a single can of Chicken of the Sea.

Beyond the economies of scale are the overhead costs. Charities are naturally reluctant to turn down donations for fear of alienating supporters or demoralizing well-wishers, but the reality is that dealing with sporadic surges of cans is a logistical headache. A nationwide network of food banks called Feeding America gingerly notes on its website that “a hastily organized local food drive can actually put more strain on your local food bank than you imagine.” Food dropped off by well-meaning citizens needs to be carefully inspected and sorted. A personal check, by contrast, can be used to order what’s needed without placing extra burdens on the staff.

There you go. All the more reason to fork over a few bucks to our Slog vs. Gawker Holiday Charity Challenge. Sure, dumping a few packs of mac and cheese into the bin at your local food drive may make you feel almost as warm and fuzzy inside as eating them, but you'll feed a lot more people donating the cash equivalent. According to Northwest Harvest, it costs them "only 67 cents to feed a family of three a meal." Bet you can't feed yourself for 67 cents, let alone your whole family.

Think about it: A mere $60 donation would be enough for Northwest Harvest to feed a family of three for an entire month! So give today, then email your receipt to ih8gawker@thestranger.com to enter in a drawing to win fabulous prizes, plus earn yourself the coveted "Awesome Person" tag.

[via Atrios]

 

Comments (5) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
1
My mother worked at an organization which helped children and families in the legal system. Because of this, even though this was not the organization's mission, occasionally people would come by the front door and dump a huge pile of crappy, dirty, often dingy toys and stuffed animals. She had to waste time dealing with this misplaced kindness, and meanwhile her org could barely afford stamps. Moral of the story: give money. People bitch and moan about "charities have too many overhead costs!" but giving helpfully means giving thoughtfully.

Anyway. Go Northwest Harvest!
Posted by sahara29 on December 20, 2011 at 3:12 PM
Posted by merry on December 20, 2011 at 3:14 PM
Fnarf 3
@1, oh lord, don't get me started. The broken car seats. The torn blankets with bedbugs that caused us to have to treat the entire building. The boxes of old textbooks. The strollers that turned out to be on the recall list. Mounds of dirty clothes. Ancient computers -- we were given one with a working installation of Windows 2.0 on it, something I had never seen before (it also weighed about 75 pounds). The dozens of crappy inkjet printers with permanently dried-up heads. More giant 14" CRT monitors than I can count. Stuffed animals covered with, what the hell IS that, tar? Ten cases of extremely dubious-looking hair gel in quart bottles. Opened cans of paint.

You know all that shit got deducted from their tax returns too, at full retail no doubt.

PEOPLE: YOU LOCAL CHARITY IS NOT A GARBAGE DUMP.
Posted by Fnarf http://www.facebook.com/fnarf on December 20, 2011 at 3:30 PM
4
Thanks for this Goldy.

Also, wanting to volunteer at a soup kitchen, food bank, etc. is great.

Wanting to do it only on Christmas or Thanksgiving is self-indulgent crap and often creates a logistical nightmare for the agency. I can't believe how many people get pissed off and all self-righteous when they call an agency the Monday before Thanksgiving and are told there are no more slots available. "Fine," they sniff "I guess you don't need our financial support either."

No asshole, they need your support the rest of the year.
Posted by gnossos on December 20, 2011 at 3:35 PM
5
@3,

I've heard tell of people "donating" used motor oil to Goodwill. I guess it's better than dumping it in a storm drain?
Posted by keshmeshi on December 20, 2011 at 5:05 PM

Add a comment

Advertisement
 

All contents © Index Newspapers, LLC
1535 11th Ave (Third Floor), Seattle, WA 98122
Contact Info | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Takedown Policy