was created with the specific goal of enlisting local restaurants to cook daily meals for fire victims.
鈥淢y first reaction was that we need to figure out a way for restaurants who are already struggling in this pandemic to be the key point people for making all the food that鈥檚 going to be needed for the immediate and long-term needs of the thousands of people who were impacted,鈥 says Adam Danforth, co-collaborator with Rogue Food Unites.
Danforth, a butcher, author, and educator in Ashland, says they鈥檙e working with 30-35 restaurants in the area that cook a combined 1,000 meals, three times per day.
The program is supported by relief funds from the Red Cross and the food aid organization World Central Kitchen. Individual donations through United Way of Jackson County help cover funding gaps. Meals have been delivered to evacuation sites like the Jackson County Expo, resource centers at Talent Maker City and Shoppes at Exit 24 in Phoenix, hotels hosting evacuees, and even individuals鈥 homes.
鈥淲hat we pay to restaurants is what restaurants need to be paid in order to pay their staff, pay their rent, cover their costs, and stay open,鈥 Danforth says.
Ashland鈥檚 Larks Home Kitchen Cuisine and Luna Caf茅 saw their business shrink this summer after the Oregon Shakespeare Festival cancelled their season and other tourism attractions shuttered. Both restaurants are cooking meals with Rogue Food Unites for fire victims.
鈥淚t still helps keep the flow of food going in and out of restaurants, us purchasing, which is a trickle down to local farms or purveyors, and also helps keep people employed because we have work for them,鈥 says Dana Keller, director of food and beverage at Neuman Hotel Group, which owns the two restaurants.
Keller says while the program generates less profit than they would make per meal during normal times, the business helps, especially since some of their own employees lost homes in the Almeda Fire.
The time before fire victims are able to return to stable housing is expected to last months or years. Danforth says the goal is for Rogue Food Unites to evolve with the food needs of the community.
鈥淲e鈥檙e continuing to grow as the impacted families from this fire begin to settle more permanently,鈥 he says.
For now, he adds, there鈥檚 plenty of demand, and they need more restaurants to get involved.