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Food Rescue Hero Now Makes Home Deliveries of Potential Food Waste

by Ashlen Wilder
June 2, 2021June 2, 2021Filed under:
  • Featured
  • Food Waste
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According to the EPA, 20 percent of what ends up in municipal landfills is food. Yet at the same, 35 million Americans experience food insecurity, and that number jumped to 42 million due to the effects of the pandemic. Keeping food out of the landfill and redistributing those in need of it is an ideal solution to this massive problem, and one non-profit trying to do this is Food Rescue Hero.

Food Rescue Hero, which calls itself the “DoorDash of food waste”, was launched in 2016 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The non-profit uses an app (available for both iOS and android) to notify its volunteers when food donations are available for pick-up at different retailers like Trader Joe’s, Whole Foods, Giant Eagle, Ralph’s Market, and Albertson’s. From there, volunteers are routed to the end destination, typically a food bank, community center, or non-profit with the food. According to the company, about 99 percent of the donations are successfully picked up and dropped off.

This week, Food Rescue Hero announced that it will now be offering home delivery of food that its volunteers rescue. This will also be operated through the app, and volunteer drivers will need to pass a background check to participate in these home deliveries. Throughout the pandemic, those who have the funds to do so could order through grocery delivery services like Instacart and Postmates. However, these services are often too pricey for those who face food insecurity. Additionally, many who depend on food assistance do not have access to a car or transportation, or may be housebound.

Local non-profit food banks often take on the task of rescuing wasted food independently, but there is often an issue with food transportation and delivery. Food banks typically only collect shelf-stable foods because they usually schedule pick-ups and deliveries on specific days. Food Rescue Hero employs volunteers able to pick up food on-demand, so therefore it can rescue and distribute fresh fruits, veggies, and bread products.

Too Good 2 Go is another start-up that uses an app to distribute soon-to-be food waste to consumers, and it operates throughout Europe and the U.S. Flashfood’s app allows consumers to select imperfect food items from their local grocer, and earlier this year the company partnered with Meijer to expand throughout the Midwest.

Food Rescue Hero currently operates in 12 cities throughout the U.S. and Canada. The non-profit aims to be in 100 cities by 2030 and is currently accepting more donation partners and volunteer drivers.


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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Donald Blake says

    June 8, 2021 at 12:47 pm

    I wonder what the source was for that claim that “typically” food banks focus on non perishables. Seems bogus to me.

    I’ve been studying food security and food sovereignty for a long time now, and lately with the pandemic reading about and watching webinars related to Feeding America Food Banks. It seems to me that nationwide, rescue of perishables seems to be a top priority, with even small and mid size food banks rescuing millions and millions of pounds of produce, fresh meat, and dairy every year (per food bank) from farms, retail stores, packers, distributors, etc.

    If the source for that claim was a press release from FRH, well… that makes me wonder what the metric for a “99 % successful” Food Rescue Hero donation is. When you study anything related to measuring social programs, you learn that outputs, outcomes, and impact are–in that order increasingly–difficult to measure. For example, is it 99% of donations successfully went from one place to another (output)? Was the donation received with signature from a trained nonprofit with civil rights and food safety obligations who will ensure its safe and equitable distribution to people in need, or dropped off on the back stoop of a church with no food safety training in the blazing sun without timely acknowledgement of receipt, only to be thrown in a different dumpster with the added carbon of a personal vehicle loaded into it (or even worse, given away to people seeking help after becoming extremely unsafe)? In other words, was the outcome increased food security, increased carbon, or increased food- borne illnesses?
    After receipt by an agency, was the product good enough to eat? Did someone take it? Did they use it? Did it improve their lives, or stick them with an expensive medical bill? That’s impact.

    I’m confident the majority of FRH’s impacts are positive. But I seriously doubt they can claim with confidence and competence anything close to 99 percent.

    Reply

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