Fighting the Covid-19 Food War in Lincoln

red arrows

In Lincoln, the local food system under Covid-19 doesn’t feel very joined up. There are
lots of organisers. The local state (City and County) is marshalling community groups
and individual volunteers (but with no obvious pre-determined strategy for food, or
direct provision).

Organising a Covid-19 response in Lincoln

The Local Enterprise Partnership is trying to get folk onto the land to pick the stuff (we
grow a quarter of all UK fruit and veg in the County and 40% of all flowers). Sustainable
Food Places (organising some 59 urban groups nationally) wants city food partnerships
to assemble ‘grassroots’ groups. Even here at the Lincoln Food Partnership (LFP), we are
trying to put people in touch with each other. It is all about organising.

But who is actually doing local food delivery?

Obviously, food retail is doing well – for those who can afford it. But cafes, restaurants
and pubs may never recover.

This is of particular concern for the Lincoln Food Partnership as we have a network of social eating spaces (all now closed) for the vulnerable and those with special needs. In these places, it is the communion, as well as the food, that is important. Without the communion, those already vulnerable are doubly vulnerable.

Interestingly, our waste food social café – Mint Lane – would have struggled anyway: waste food availability in the City has plummeted.

But there is much heartening news in feeding (and communing with) those in need
under Covid-19, from the ground up.

Nextdoor

At the most disaggregated, the ‘Nextdoor’ App allows anyone (with a phone or a computer, granted) to put a dot on the Ward map if they need food support. And anyone who has any food offerings (including doing the shopping) can do the same – in a different colour. Pairing with someone in your own street in this way seems very satisfying.

Not everyone can access Nextdoor.

Working together in Lincoln

At the Lincoln Food Partnership, we have set up an Emergency Response Group of all of the food banks in the City – traditional, church-based and the Lincoln Mosque – so they are now working through a unified referral, point of contact and monitoring system.

Free emergency food parcels can be picked up at nine centres in the City, but 40% of provision is home delivery.

The Churches, YMCA, School Holiday Clubs – over ten of these groups – also have set up
food provisioning services in their locality, where many of the vulnerable are known
personally.

Food innovation under lockdown

St George's School gate, Gainsborough

Some schools have been particularly innovative, t turning their kitchens over to production not only for their children at home (with many a schoolteacher doing the daily food run (often literally), but also for anyone over 70 in the school community).

Lincoln catering companies have risen to the challenge, too. The Salted Orange Food Company is working with Age UK to feed the over 65s in their ‘Partnership with Purpose’ project. The Castle Hotel is providing free daily meals direct to front line workers at the Hospital.

Food in rural Lincolnshire

With sparser populations, rural areas can be neglected. But in Lincolnshire, schools in Washingborough and Gainsborough are leading with food distribution, the latter making use of that new citizen, the taxi-driver-dad.

Food Banks in Horncastle and Sleaford have opened their remit to the community (for those in need and those who want to volunteer alike). The Serendipity Project at Louth’s Priory Hotel is providing hearty meals twice a day to local people struggling to feed themselves and their families. The Wragby ChEF (Children Eat Free) is, likewise, feeding the whole community.

Falling below the radar

This is all most heartening. Much of the action is coming from the plain good citizen and
from the voluntary and community sector.

But here is the rub. These groups – many of them Lincoln Food Partnership Members – are falling below the radar of government help. Being neither businesses, employed or self-employed they do not qualify for formal support. And whilst the charity sector is awash with Covid-19 funds that might be bid for, many do not have the time in their hectic food provisioning (and some do not have the skills), to apply.

As I write this, Lincolnshire’s very own Red Arrows have flown over three times, practising to make perfect. They are majestic, awesome. And they cost the Nation about £10 million a year to run. I reflect on whether our national Defence Policy is tooled up to fight the right war.

You can read more detail of the Covid-19 Food Responses in and around Lincoln, and how you can lend your support on our blog.

Nigel Curry Co-chairs the Lincoln Food Partnership

More from our blog

The Future of Food in the Lincolnshire Fens

In this workshop, we will explore collectively the current and foreseeable challenges to producing, processing, and transporting food in the Fens. We will build on the experience of local farmers, processors, retailers, IDBs, local authorities, the Environment Agency, and others who live and work in the Fens. Through discussions, punctuated by snippets of information on…

Baking with Diverse Grain

Baking using flour from diverse population wheat, from Turner’s of Bytham and South Ormsby Estate in Lincolnshire Photos from Lincolnshire Breadbasket event at Heckington Windmill on 3rd May, and sent by the bakers in the following weeks

The Reality of Food Poverty in Lincoln

A new report shows a dramatic rise in the number of Lincoln residents needing emergency food parcels from the city’s food banks. The greatest increase is among households with children: children now account for 35% of all people fed by food banks in Lincoln.  The two largest food bank networks in Lincoln provided almost 47,000…


Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s

Blog at WordPress.com.

%d bloggers like this: