WHAT WEEKLY

Gather Baltimore’s next big step

22 October 2013

★ GiveCorps

Gather food market

Over the past several months, Gather Baltimore added a second truck to their fleet, implemented a regular Sunday farm stand that draws 200 community members in the Oliver neighborhood, hosted 22 volunteer gleaning days at local farms and delivered a total of over 200,000 pounds of healthy produce.

Gather Baltimore hit another milestone milestone this month –  not only meeting but exceeding their GiveCorps fundraising goal.

Everyone who donated directly to their GiveCorps campaign, came out to one of the events at Clementine or Maggie’s Farm or gave time gleaning or distributing food at the Sunday Oliver Farm Stand has been a part of eliminating food waste and getting food to those in Baltimore that need it most.

Gather Baltimore is greatly appreciative of the support and ready for the next big step.

In order to further eliminate waste and ensure more local organizations and communities have access to this food, Gather needs to purchase permanent and centralized refrigeration space. Having such resources will enable them to store up to 2-3 times as much food (produce, meat and even seafood) and keep it fresh longer than the trucks are able.

A centralized, refrigerated storage space will allow nonprofit organizations to access the amount of food they need when they need it rather than relying on what we have on the truck and can get them at any point in time. Having the trucks freed up from storage duties, and and having more food on hand will also allow Gather to expand the number of farm stands they can host bringing more food to our city’s food deserts.

So Gather is launching a new GiveCorps campaign to fund this refrigeration and take these next steps as an organization.  With your support, Gather Baltimore will build a new dual zoned 16×24′ refrigerated space at Mill Valley General on Sisson Street.

But mostly, your gift will prevent more food from going to waste and put more fresh food in the bellies of Baltimore families in need. Let’s make it happen!

http://vimeo.com/76745198



fashion

Fashion Photographer Sean Scheidt

Fashion Photography by Sean Scheidt, photos of Scheidt were taken by Christopher Rondo Painting a Fashionable Photograph, with Sean Scheidt…

The Littlest Fashion Truck Ever

Robyn’s Nest

Charm City Makeup

Fashion’s Night Out

Dyed For You

nightlife

Murder Ink at Single Carrot Theatre

On the fifth of January participants in Single Carrot Theatre’s recitation of Anna Ditkoff’s City Paper column, Murder Ink, entered…

SCREEN PASS

Emily Wells at Cyclops Books

Brian Baker

Sound and Fury Signifying… Oscar.

Boite: Show and Tell

social innovation

A Dream in Cherry Hill

“Who controls the media in Baltimore City?” reads the construction-paper sign, in a basement computer lab in Cherry Hill Public Homes.…

The Baltimore Algebra Project

Little Free Libraries

Ultimate Block Party

Baltimore is “The Most Generous City in America”

The Good Deed Project

artist profiles

Brady Starr

Brady Starr is a paradox in that the more you get to know him the more mysterious he becomes. As…

Navasha Daya: Rebirthed Above Ground

Artist Heather Joi

Ceda and Dume

Dr. Bob: Life on the Fringe

Fashion Photographer Sean Scheidt

sustainability

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Publishers’ Note: Green Street Academy is a client of What Weekly’s sister company, What Works Studio. We are proud to have…

Fixing The Future

Big Green Pirate Party

Small Time

Baltimore Free Farm

Welcome to the Free Farm