INDIANAPOLIS – On Wednesday, Mayor Joe Hogsett, along with numerous community and faith leaders, joined together to announce a partnership between the city and DoorDash to provide free home deliveries of groceries, sanitary items and other necessities.
The partnership, part of Project Dash, aims to deliver necessary food and household items to families across Marion County who are either unable to leave their home, lacking transportation, facing mental/physical disabilities or otherwise unable to access charitable food.
DoorDash covers the cost of delivery up to 10 miles from the original site, according to a press release.
The Office of Public Health and Safety (OPHS) Division of Community Nutrition and Food Policy provided more than $100,000 to Faith, Hope, and Love. The organization trains and supports missional food pantries across Central Indiana.
In creating pick-up sites across Indianapolis, the organization is aiming to deliver up to 1,000 boxes of groceries per week by the end of 2022.
“Too many Indianapolis families struggle to put dinner on the table, and although free and affordable groceries are available throughout the city, there are often barriers in the way of accessing those resources,” Hogsett said. “This partnership aims to help households overcome those barriers and bring much-needed relief right to families’ doorsteps.”
"This is a very vulnerable time for many people in our community. They are afraid and their families are hungry. Food insecurity locally is real. With the help from the private sector, like DoorDash, we are going to do our part to serve families with food and hope," said Merlin Gonzales, President of Faith, Hope, and Love.
If interested in donating cash, donating groceries or volunteering, visit Faith, Hope, and Love’s website.
-
President Biden welcomes US-backed ceasefire between Israel-Hezbollah
President Joe Biden lauded Israel and its Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for agreeing to a U.S.-brokered ceasefire agreement that would pause the fighting with Hezbollah militants in Lebanon.Johnson County Sheriff's Office investigating 100 baseballs thrown on I-65
Johnson County Sheriff's Office is trying to figure out who could be throwing rocks and hundreds of baseballs along I-65.State moves to drop case against Carmel doctor
The Indiana Attorney General’s office is moving to drop its case against a Carmel doctor it had previously accused of misconduct and being “unfit to practice.”TSA shares how to make your trip to the Indy Airport smooth this holiday season
From now until December 2, TSA expects to screen 18.3 million people. That’s a 6 percent volume increase from last year.