By Neil Armstrong
Photo credit: Danae Peart Chefs of the community meals-to-go initiative are from left to right: Kareema Beckles of Taste So Good, Tony Scott, and Dwight Boswell of Chalice Catering |
A group of community members has started an initiative that
so far has helped over 300 seniors, shut-ins and international students weather
the coronavirus pandemic.
Led by broadcaster Elaine Thompson, with support from JN
Bank, JN Money Transfer, Jamaican Canadian Association, and a team of
volunteers they provided a cooked meal to 300 people over the March 20-22
weekend.
Thompson said on the first day they provided 50 meals, on
the second, 100, and on the third, 150. They repeated this service to the same
numbers over this past weekend, March 27-29.
Three chefs – Boswell of Chalice Catering, Kareema Beckles
of Taste So Good Inc. and Tony Scott – prepared the sumptuous meal of chicken,
rice and peas or mashed potato and a vegetarian meal.
Given the precautions regarding social distancing or
physical distancing there were no more than five people in the kitchen, and 80
per cent of the meals were delivered while 20 per cent were for pickup.
Many of the seniors are not mobile so the three drivers who
volunteered to deliver the meals did so on rotation. The number of drivers
subsequently increased to at least six.
“We gave them their list and the area, they picked up and
they delivered. It’s been really, really phenomenal,” said Thompson.
She said they would evaluate each week to determine whether
or not to continue on the following weekend.
On March 23, the Government of Ontario announced that only
essential services should remain in operation. Food delivery is an essential
service.
Thompson said the initiative falls under that classification
and it helps that they have a public health official onboard their team –
Sylvanus Thompson of the JCA who is an associate director of Toronto Public
Health -- to ensure that social distancing and other protocols were being followed
in the kitchen.
However the JCA is closed to the public and therefore is not
operating business as usual.
“This project targets a specific group and is a special
initiative outside of that criteria so we are permitted to go ahead.”
Thompson said that as a non-profit community organization
the JCA already had a list of vulnerable seniors and works closely with the
coordinators of Jamaican international students so it was easy to identify who
needed help.
People also found out about their initiative through word of
mouth and social media – “It’s 50:50, fifty per cent found us based on the word
being out there and then the other fifty per cent would have been existing
folks who are challenged that we know of.”
Thompson said some of the Jamaican international students
were due to go home but are stuck here.
“Some of them are supposed to be graduating this spring but
there’s a lot of uncertainty; a lot of them are in limbo right now. They have
limited resources so we’re trying to stand in the gap,” she said, noting that
there are about twenty students.
Photo credit: Danae Peart Chef Dwight Boswell of Chalice Catering preparing meals for the community initiative |
Danae Peart, co-coordinator of the meal initiative and one of the volunteer drivers, went to deliver a
meal to a student at York University who was on the phone with her mother who
lives in Jamaica.
The mother thanked Peart for taking care of her child in
Canada and they both were very appreciative. A similar gratitude was expressed
by many of the seniors.
Scarborough, Markham, Etobicoke, North York and Brampton
were all areas serviced by the drivers.
Peart, who works in the heath sector, said what she realized
from this experience is that seniors don’t eat a lot; many were willing to
leave some of their meal for the next day although they were offered three days
of food.
“Our Caribbean seniors are very vulnerable,” said Peart,
noting that most are by themselves, did not marry, or their spouses are
deceased and it does not seem that they have familial connections.
In some instances, their kids are also in need and the
seniors are living in low-income housing.
Peart said self-isolation is a serious issue for seniors
because for some of them just walking to the shopping mall “is a little pep in
their day and now we’re telling them they can’t go out.”
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