Date: Fri 06-Jun-1997
Date: Fri 06-Jun-1997
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDREA
Quick Words:
Harvest-food-cooperative-share
Full Text:
Harvest Food Co-op Becomes SHARE
(with photos)
BY ANDREA ZIMMERMANN
There is more buying power in numbers, and that is the reason the local
Harvest program has switched to SHARE, a food cooperative with 12,000 members
in New York alone.
"Harvest was sponsored by the Council of Churches and Synagogues, and it was
run only in Fairfield County. We started out with 1,400 people involved in all
the different towns, but went down to under 1,000," said Director of Human
Services Karen Hoyt. "To buy in bulk, you have to buy in numbers, so the
council was losing money and couldn't afford to keep underwriting the
program."
The price to participate in SHARE is the same for a regular share ($15), and
consumers get food valued at about $32. But also available is a NU-SHARE
Package which has no meat and a wide variety of fruits and vegetables ($15),
and Mini Meat Package that costs an additional $9 when you buy one of the
other packages.
"Participants receive more value than they were recently getting with the
Harvest program. With Harvest we were only getting two meats; SHARE offers
five," said Mrs Hoyt.
In May, the Traditional Package included chicken breast fillets, ground beef,
fish fillet, maple sausage, turkey bologna, Vidalia onions, lettuce, broccoli,
green peppers, potatoes, apples, bananas, cantaloupe, barbecue sauce,
mini-muffins. The NU-SHARE had cereal, English muffins, apple juice, cheddar
cheese, tortillas, salad dressing, pasta, tapioca pudding, potatoes, zucchini
squash, broccoli, tomatoes, lettuce, spinach, black beans, apples, oranges,
and nectarines. The Mini-Meat had hamburgers, beef hot dogs, Italian sausage,
fish, and deli meat.
As with the Harvest co-operative, two hours per month of volunteer work is a
prerequisite for participating in the SHARE program. But, as Mrs Hoyt pointed
out, this can be anything from folding newsletters for an organization,
cooking brownies for a bake sale, checking on a neighbor, or knitting garments
for babies.
"SHARE is nice for even single people because you don't get an overwhelming
amount of any one item," she said. "With the NU-SHARE, you get a really
different variety, they don't just double up on items."
Some people sign up for themselves, or buy packages for friends who might be
on a tight budget. Those who take part in the cooperative do so on a
month-by-month basis.
Anyone interested in the June distribution can sign up by June 13 at the
Senior Center in the Multi-Purpose Building on Riverside Road. Cash, money
order, or food stamps are accepted. Pick-up is scheduled for June 27 between
4:30 and 6:30 pm at the Senior Center.