Refrigerated
truck leaves Kingston Campus each weekday morning for senior centers around
state
As
University of Rhode Island Dining Services workers loaded 500 individually
wrapped meals into a refrigerated truck last Wednesday morning, others were
already hard at work preparing Thursday’s meal–shepherd’s pie with spinach,
carrots and rolls.
Wednesday’s
meal of fried chicken, beans and macaroni and cheese, went to Cumberland’s
Senior Center, and Thursday morning, dining services workers were off to East
Providence with the shepherd’s pie meal.
Each individual meal was fully cooked and prepared and only needed to be reheated.
Each individual meal was fully cooked and prepared and only needed to be reheated.
It’s
all part of an effort involving the University, Rhode Island’s Office of
Healthy Aging and the state’s senior centers.
Older Rhode Islanders staying home need help with nutrition; senior centers, which are no longer providing communal meals to their patrons at their centers, needed a way to get meals to them; and URI Dining Services has plenty of food to prepare the meals, since most of its nearly 6,000 resident students did not return to campus after spring break when the University ceased in-person instruction and most in-person services.
Older Rhode Islanders staying home need help with nutrition; senior centers, which are no longer providing communal meals to their patrons at their centers, needed a way to get meals to them; and URI Dining Services has plenty of food to prepare the meals, since most of its nearly 6,000 resident students did not return to campus after spring break when the University ceased in-person instruction and most in-person services.
ROLLING OUT THE MEALS: Keith Mancini, left, principal cook for URI Dining Services and Gwendolyn “Wendy” Pugh, food service supervisor, roll out carts of food bound for the Cumberland Senior Center. URI photos by Nora Lewis |
“It’s
great that we are reaching out to the community and that we can help out,”
Fuscaldo said.
Gwendolyn
“Wendy” Pugh, food service supervisor, helped load the truck, too, and
would ride to Cumberland with Fuscaldo.
“In
this crazy time, I am glad we can do something like this. It feels good because
people are struggling.” Pugh said. “We are all trying to contribute.”
Keith
Mancini, a principal cook, was constantly on the move as he directed his team.
“We
have great resources and great people here at URI. Everybody is so into this
and I am very proud of what we are doing.”
Before
the meals started rolling out the door this week, the state connected with
Kathy Collins, URI vice president for Student Affairs and Anne Marie Coleman,
assistant vice president for Human Resource Administration, to find out if URI
could help. Collins and Coleman then looked to Pierre St-Germain, URI’s
director of Dining Services.
“I
am thankful for the team in URI Dining and their desire to make a difference
across campus and across Rhode Island,” Collins said. “Our Dining staff is
excited to help those in need during this difficult time.
“Our
agency continues to be laser focused on supporting older adults, caregivers and
adults with disabilities,” said Office of Healthy Aging Director Rosamaria
Amoros Jones.
“Across the state, senior centers are serving as hubs for their community, providing valuable services to people in need and delivering thousands of meals daily. Through this partnership with URI, we’ve increased the number of nutritious meals distributed by these centers, helping to ensure older adults, who are at higher risk for severe illness, have the supports they need to stay healthy and safe at home during this time of physical distancing. We are grateful to URI for their partnership.”
“Across the state, senior centers are serving as hubs for their community, providing valuable services to people in need and delivering thousands of meals daily. Through this partnership with URI, we’ve increased the number of nutritious meals distributed by these centers, helping to ensure older adults, who are at higher risk for severe illness, have the supports they need to stay healthy and safe at home during this time of physical distancing. We are grateful to URI for their partnership.”
“There
has been a big spike in the need for meals that are normally provided by senior
centers,” St-Germain said. “The state asked how many meals we could produce and
I replied that we could definitely package 500, so that’s what we’re doing
Monday through Friday, delivering to senior centers from Cumberland to
Westerly.”
St-Germain
said this is another way the University is serving the state during the
pandemic. He said that the University orders most of its food at the beginning
of each semester, so when the students did not return at the end of March, it
made sense to draw on this remaining supply and the expertise of the Dining
Services team, which knows how to create nutritious and tasty meals for
thousands of students each day.
“Many
staff work through the end of the academic year in May, and others remain
throughout the summer, and so this is a way to sustain our workforce
while at the same time doing something altruistic for some of the most
vulnerable people in Rhode Island, the elderly and immuno-compromised.”
St-Germain
said the University is scheduled to provide assistance until June 1.
Because
of state purchasing practices, URI Dining Services buys its food in bulk and a
significant portion is frozen. All of it would have been consumed by students
here until the end of the semester, incoming first-year students during
orientation in June, and students normally here for summer session. Without
those large groups, URI was interested in making sure it did not go to waste
and was used in a timely manner.
“We
work hard to ensure that our students enjoy the highest quality product, and
now that food is going to the elderly food pantries around the state,”
St-Germain said.
Mask
makers, too
In
another area of the Mainfare dining facility, a group of cooks helpers made
masks for University employees in their own department and beyond. The crew
that day included Diana Bibeault, Debbie Castovillari, Erin Hagopian and
Jennifer Souza. Some sewed while others ironed to make the fabric easier to
hem.
Bibeault,
who is normally assigned to Butterfield Dining Hall, sat at a sewing machine
making double-sided, colorful masks. In her spare time, she is a quilter.
“I
have donated all the fabric I normally use in my quilts to this effort,”
Bibeault said.
“This is for the greater good. The first batch of material was donated by dining managers, but now we are using my supply. We want to keep our co-workers safe and those in other departments at URI. Each employee gets two so they can launder one while they wear the other.”
“This is for the greater good. The first batch of material was donated by dining managers, but now we are using my supply. We want to keep our co-workers safe and those in other departments at URI. Each employee gets two so they can launder one while they wear the other.”
Souza
said the project is fun and rewarding, “But we do miss seeing the kids every
day. Interacting with them is the best. We look forward to having them back.”