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Auckland City Mission decline healthy food donation

Author
Brittany Keogh of the NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 11 Oct 2016, 12:26pm
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Auckland City Mission decline healthy food donation

Author
Brittany Keogh of the NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Tue, 11 Oct 2016, 12:26pm

An Auckland vegetarian cafe were shocked when the Auckland City Mission declined their offer for free, healthy food.

But Auckland City Mission says declining the deliveries was a mistake which happened because of a miscommunication and the charity would like to start up the partnership again.

Lisa Burne, operations manager at Revive, said the cafe had been providing the Mission with leftover food every Thursday and Friday for six to eight weeks when a City Mission staff member called to tell her the donations were no longer needed because the Mission's homeless clients wouldn't eat them.

She said the conversation left her "completely dumbfounded". "I would have thought it would be in their best interest to provide wholesome food."

Staff at the Mission had initially been "very, very keen and excited" to receive the food, Burne said, but less than two months later they asked for the deliveries to stop because clients preferred the cakes and pies provided by other supporters.

Revive founder and owner Jeremy Dixon said the charity did "amazing" work, often under difficult circumstances, however, he had been surprised by its response.

"We were absolutely flabbergasted."

He told the Herald he could "see why they made this call" because "pies and cakes and things like that do taste better if you aren't used to eating healthy food".

However, he added: "I feel these people in need should be given the best food options, not the ones they just want".

The menu at Revive featured salads, curries, soups, and hot meals - such as frittatas.

"It's all healthy food. Vegetarian. We don't use white flour or processed sugars. If you eat healthy food your brain works better, you can make better decisions."

It was the first time in five years the offer of free meals had been rejected, Dixon said.

Auckland City Mission's Chris Farrelly said he had been surprised to find out a staff member had asked Revive to stop donating.

"There's a complete shock and horror here about this. We are incredibly accepting and grateful of vegetarian food."

The Mission was investigating who had called Revive because none of the team leaders who usually communicated with suppliers had been involved, Farrelly told the Herald.

He said when the call was placed in August the Mission's chiller was broken, so donated food that needed to be kept cool could not be stored on the premises overnight.

Farelly suspected the call had been made following a miscommunication between staff members about food storage. "That's all we can put it down to."

Farrelly said he was saddened by what had happened and the Auckland City Mission would "absolutely" want to reinstate its partnership with Revive if possible.

"The homeless should have the best of everything, including healthy food options," he said.

- NZ Herald

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