Pay-it-forward meal donations catch on in Ottawa Valley restaurants - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 12:41 AM | Calgary | -11.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Pay-it-forward meal donations catch on in Ottawa Valley restaurants

A new pay-it-forward initiative is catching on at restaurants across the Ottawa Valley, with patrons buying meals for those who otherwise couldn't afford them.

Pembroke's Nelson Street Pub started meal donations to fight food insecurity

Signs on a wall.
Signs calling for people to donate meals for those in need hang on the wall of the Nelson Street Pub in Pembroke, Ont. (Nelson Street Pub/Facebook)

Diners at the Nelson Street Pub in Pembroke, Ont., aregreeted bya new sight lately: a wall ofreceipts for meals that arealreadypaid for.

Part of a new pay-it-forward initiative catching on across the Ottawa Valley, the receipts go towardprepaid meals for those who otherwise couldn't afford them.

Pub owner Cory Brumm told CBC Radio's Ottawa Morning that, since the initiative kicked off, plenty of patrons have spotted meals for others in need.

"They just want to help out," Brumm said. "If they can come out and enjoy a meal and some people can't it's just nice to put it up there and have people involved in the social aspect of going out for a meal."

An estimated one in six households in Renfrew County is experiencing food insecurity, according to a 2022 health unit report.

Brumm said he hopes the initiative, now replicated in several restaurants across the valley, will help address food insecurity in the region.

The owner of the Nelson Street Pub has started a meal donation program to help community members struggling with food insecurity.

'Away we went'

Brumm said he came up with the idea after he saw an American restaurant post about a similar initiative on social media.

"Why don't we do that?" he asked. "So I printed it off and put it up and away we went."

Now the signs arestapled to the wood panelling just inside the pub's front entrance.

The signs read: "If you're hungry and have no money, these meals have been paid for in advance. Give a server the ticket and they will have the kitchen prepare your meal."

Images on social media show receipts taped to the pages, waiting for someone to claim the food.

Catching on elsewhere

Locations of The Rocky Mountain House restaurant in nearby Renfrewand Arnpriorhave since joined the initiative, as have other franchised restaurants in Petawawa.

Kim Limlaw, owner of The Rocky Mountain House, said a staff member brought theinitiative to her attention after hearing about it on social media.

On Monday, they put up a board of their own.

A pay-it-forward board.
The Rocky Mountain House put up a board of its own on Monday. By Tuesday, nine prepaid meals had already been posted. (Submitted)

Limlaw said she wasn't sure how much support the program would get, because right now money is tight for everyone.

The next morning, nine prepaid meals had already beenposted.

"The generosity and outpouring at bothof our locations for people purchasing meals for others has been unbelievable," she said.

Josh Curley, who co-owns Ottawa Valley Coffee with his wifeLisa Lanthier, has been doing something similar for years.

The coffee shop with locations in Renfrew, Arnprior and Almonte has a community board where people can post an item purchased for someone else,whether it's for someone who is struggling financially, grieving oreven a single parent.

"It's got a wide range of use," Curley said. "But primarily, the goal is to help somebody in a time of need."

'Feeding families'

Brumm saida father of three recentlyused the free meal receiptsto feed his children. In Ontario, one in five children under the age of 18 lives in a food-insecure household.

As a father of three himself, Brumm said he was "struck" by the man's situation. If theirpositionswere reversed, he said he would appreciate thegesture.

"That right there shows me what we're doing is amazing, because we're feeding families, not just individual people," he said.

Although some of hisstaff initially expressed a concern about the potential for abuse of the service, Brumm said it's impossible to know by appearance alonewho needs help.

"We don't want to judge anybody," Brumm said. "We don't know their back-story."