New food bank for animals provides supplies for pet owners in need - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 02:18 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
CalgaryVideo

New food bank for animals provides supplies for pet owners in need

A volunteer-operated B.C. initiative has come to Calgary with hopesto alleviate some stress for financially strapped pet-owners.

Volunteer-run, B.C.-based initiative expands into Calgary with contact-free pet food delivery

Animal Food Bank comes to Calgary. (Monty Kruger/CBC)

4 years ago
Duration 2:03
Animal Food Bank comes to Calgary. (Monty Kruger/CBC)

COVID-19 has presentedchallenges forCalgarians that are both wide-ranging and acute including a fiscalwallop in a period of pre-existing economic uncertainty.

But a volunteer-operated B.C. initiative has come to the city with hopesto alleviate some of that stress for financially strapped pet-owners.

The Animal Food Bank was founded byA.J. Frey and Nicole Wilks, an Okanagan-based couple who teamed up to provide pet food for people in need around Christmas in 2019.

  • WATCH the video above to see the volunteers in action and hear from A.J. Frey.

Itbegan after Wilks met a homeless man in downtown Kelowna. He hada dog named Odin, Frey told CBCNews, and his wife couldn't sleep wondering how he would be able to provide for his pet.

The following day, they brought the man some dog food and it was the catalyst for the project that distributes free pet food and supplies toanyone who requests it.

"Animals are everybody's family, and everybody'scompanions and friends," Frey said.

"In life, there are challenges. And ... there's going to be times where you have to choose between feeding yourself and feeding your pet. We wanted to eliminate that choice for people, so that they can make sure they're looking after themselves as well as know that their pets are taken care of."

No qualifiers necessary for aid, co-founder says

The Animal Food Bank saw a busy Christmas season in B.C., a slight slowdown after the holidays, and then ballooning business during the pandemic, Frey said.

It grew rapidly because they adapted to quarantine with a no-contact drop-off model that allows food to be delivered without face-to-face interactions, andexpanded into Winnipeg before coming to Alberta.

Pet owners can order food on the organization'swebsite by filling out a request form.The volunteers who run the food bankwill then attempt to match what the pet is currently eating from its inventory, before it is deliveredto the owner.

Orders can be madeas many times as they are needed, and Frey said that there is no financial thresholdto qualify for the service.

"Animals are everybody's family, and everybody'scompanions and friends in life," Animal Food Bank co-founder A.J. Frey said. (Monty Kruger/CBC )

"There's no qualifiers, we're not here to judge anybody," Frey said.

"If you tell us you need help, you're going to get help. I don't care if you're the richest guy in the city or if you're struggling to make ends meet this monthit doesn't matter to us. If you need help, reach out."

Calgarian John Rogers, who owns three dogs, said the service has made an immeasurable difference for him after his work as a landscaper came to an end.

"I'm on unemployment, and that ran out. Paying rent, bills, it's really high," Rogers said. "They've helped us a lot. You don't realize how much."

'We really just want to make sure Calgary knows we're here'

So far, Frey said Calgary's Animal Food Bank hashad an onslaught of donations.

In fact, it received over 20,000 poundsof pet food thanks to a coordinated effort fromSmucker's Canada, the SPCA out of Ontario, andContainer King.

With a "great influx of volunteers" at the helm, Frey said all the Calgary branch needs now is to coordinate with local businesses to organize distribution.

Calgarian John Rogers, who owns three dogs, said the service has made an immeasurable difference for him after his work as a landscaper came to an end. (Monty Kruger/CBC)

"What we're looking for from the pet stores around Calgary, right now, is just a place to have Animal Food Bank bins so that people can drop off food," Frey said.

"We're not asking for the pet stores to give us any kind of discount, just a place to collect so we can distribute."

Frey said they will try to coordinate with outreach organizations, community initiatives andIndigenous groups to spread the word of the food bank's arrival.

"We really just want to make sure Calgary knows we're here," Frey said.

"The reason it's so important forus to make sure we're looking after the animals is because that helps us make sure we're looking after the people who love those animals indirectly. So, we're taking care of their well-being, and we're helping them take care of the thing they love most in the world."

With files from Monty Kruger