Manitoba

Brandon pay-what-you-can meal program needs help after losing freezer storage space

The John Howard Society has been operating the Everyone Eats program in Brandon, but come November, it will no longer have freezer space to keep the food to make the affordable meals.

John Howard Society program won't have access to freezer trailer used for meal program come November

Everyone Eats Brandon provides meals three times a week for people using a pay-what-you-can model. (Everyone Eats Brandon/Facebook)

A successful pay-what-you-can meal program in Brandon, Man., is losing an essential piece of equipment next month.

The John Howard Society in the southern city has been operating the Everyone Eats Brandon program for the past year. But come November, the organization will no longer have access to the freezer space it's used to store the food used in the affordable dishes.

The organization has been using a refrigerated trailer that will no longer be available, leaving it in urgent need of help, says the Westman region executive director for the John Howard Society.

"What we're looking for is some temporary freezer space," Ross Robinson said in a Saturday interview with CBC Manitoba's Weekend Morning Show.

"We don't need a 42-foot freezer trailer ... but we need more than a couple chest freezers, because we get pallet loads of food and we need to store it properly so that it can be produced into a good, hearty, nutritious meals."

Robinson estimates that the organization will need freezer space for a couple of months.

For now, all the food that can't be easily stored is being donated to local food banks.

Everyone Eats Brandon started in October last year, when organizers realized some people might have difficulty accessing food because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Anyone who wants to try the food can order meals online or over the phone (204-441-4551) and pay what they can. If money is tight, people can request a free meal.

"The intent is that the meals that we provide are good enough that we're going to attract people who are willing to pay," Robinson said. They're also intended to be "presented in a manner in which people don't have to line up at a soup kitchen line or ... for a hamper or anything like that," he said.

"The meals come in regardless of what they pay. It's exactly the same service."

The program is made possible by donations and grants, including donations of food that's perfectly good to eat but may otherwise be disposed of.

"It's incredible ... the amount of surplus food that's out there just looking for a home before it has to get plowed into the ground."

Anyone who is able to help Everyone Eats Brandon access freezer space is asked to contact them via their Facebook page or website.

With files from Bruce Ladan