It did not meet the lofty goal set by the Central Okanagan Food Bank but last weekend’s’ B.C. Thanksgiving Food Drive in 鶹AV and West 鶹AV did collect more than double the amount of food normally donated during the annual event.
Organizers say 94,000 pounds of food were collected from residents of the two cities Saturday, nearly double the 45,000 pounds normally collected. But the total fell short of the 150,000 pounds sought by the food bank.
Still, organizers said they were very pleased with the total.
“I’ve been a B.C. Thanksgiving Food Drive volunteer for seven years, but as I watched the amount of food donations arrive at the food bank, I knew that I was experiencing something special,” said volunteer and lead organizer Debbie Morris.
This year, as a result of the flooding in late spring and early summer and the wildfire that followed, food bank executive director Lenetta Parry said donations were . So the food bank was relying on the B.C. Thanksgiving Food Drive—one of the biggest food drives of the year—to help re-stock its shelves.
On Saturday, an army of 500 volunteers spread out across the two cities and went door to door, collecting bags with food donations inside. Earlier in the week, the bags had been distributed to as many homes in 鶹AV and West 鶹AV as possible.
This year, there were also drop-off sites for the food drive set at Save-On-Foods and Costco so that people living in condominiums and apartment buildings, as well as gated communities, could participate.
And it appears to have paid off.
“Although I’m dead tired, my feet hurt and I could use a warm bath, my heart is just swelling with good feelings”, said 鶹AV volunteer organizer Paige Knauf after the food was delivered and sorted at the food bank’s new Enterprise Way depot in 鶹AV.
The B.C. Thanksgiving Food Drive is a province-wide drive that collects food donations for local food banks each September.
All donations stay in the communities where they are made.