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Mercy Chefs ‘Feed 757' campaign fighting food insecurity

Mercy Chefs ‘Feed 757' campaign fighting food insecurity

Yahoo31-07-2025
CHESAPEAKE, Va. (WAVY) — Mercy Chefs is nearing the end of its Feed 757 summer campaign, a regional effort to fight food insecurity among children across Hampton Roads.
'This really helps': Mercy Chefs' Feed 757 initiative kicks off to help feed kids throughout Hampton Roads
As part of its national summer feeding program, the nonprofit has hosted weekly food distribution events at public schools since late June.
Each Wednesday, 300 backpacks filled with ready-to-eat meals, water bottles, and recipe cards are handed out to families.
The campaign will conclude Wednesday, Aug. 6, with a special community block party on Washington St, in Portsmouth.
In addition to backpack giveaways, the event will feature free haircuts to help kids get ready for the new school year.
According to Mercy Chefs, by the end of the summer, more than 3,300 backpacks will have been distributed through the program.
Wednesday's event at Portlock Primary in Chesapeake was one of the final stops before next week's finale.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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On one of America's most diverse streets, documenting life for decades
On one of America's most diverse streets, documenting life for decades

Washington Post

time2 days ago

  • Washington Post

On one of America's most diverse streets, documenting life for decades

Lloyd Wolf has photographed Mexican dancers at a Bangladeshi festival and taken portraits of a Baptist preacher and an Ethiopian Coptic priest. He's shared chicory coffee with a former Freedom Rider and hours of conversation with a dishwasher turned immigrant activist. On this sticky summer morning, Wolf, the son of a refugee from Nazi Germany, has come to see the supermarket pizza guy. Mohamed Alassane ag Almoctar immigrated from Mali, and moments after he opened his red townhouse door, Wolf began chatting about Malian musicians to put his host at ease. Then he gently began asking questions to understand his journey from the Sahara to suburban Virginia. Wolf has photographed the people and neighborhoods along this same three-mile stretch of Arlington County for almost two decades. It's part of an ambitious effort to capture life in a community demographers once designated a 'world in a Zip code,' with people hailing from more than 125 countries. Working in one of the most diverse places in the country, Wolf and the rotating crew behind the Columbia Pike Documentary Project have been building the case, year after year, that their modest swath of storefronts and rising apartment buildings just outside Washington can be a model of American progress. They have witnessed the community drawing in new families, opening and shuttering businesses, hosting cultural celebrations, and, more recently, bracing as federal authorities under the Trump administration have pursued a mass-deportation campaign and barred most refugees from entering the country. As Wolf settled in, Ag Almoctar changed into the type of soft blue, flowing gown he sometimes wore to keep cool in Mali. He then served up sweet mint tea and stories from Timbuktu — and his new neighborhood. His father hauled salt across the desert in camel caravans, before drought wiped them out. Ag Almoctar's grocery store co-workers are from Morocco, Sudan, Gambia, Senegal, Malaysia and beyond. He had never touched pizza dough before he was enlisted to make $5 pepperoni specials, plus chicken and subs, at his branch of Harris Teeter, he told Wolf, and he learned everything he needed on the job. 'That is America,' he said. Wolf positioned him in front of a painting of camels lined up in the blazing sun, but wasn't sure whether that pose might be too cliché. He captured him lifting his hand toward his turban, expertly pouring tea from high above a small glass cup, then got him with and without an indigo veil covering his nose and mouth. As Ag Almoctar stepped toward a busy street in front of his brick home for a few photos, donning the brilliant blue garb of his nomadic North African Tuareg culture, his graciousness and willingness to play along was tinged with a wave of unease. If police see me like this, will they stop me? he asked Wolf. 'No, you'll be okay,' Wolf told him. The Columbia Pike Documentary Project was co-founded by Wolf and longtime Arlington resident Paula Endo, with help from her husband Todd. As children, the two of them had been forced, with 125,000 other Japanese Americans, into internment camps during World War II. 'What they learned as family and community is that you can't take liberties for granted,' said Erik Endo, one of their sons. The trauma of that experience shaped the way they wanted to live, he said. 'It was a larger picture of looking out for, and giving voice to, people in communities that didn't necessarily have that power.' For Todd, that meant fighting for a living wage and a lifetime of civic activism, including marching for civil rights in Selma, Alabama. Paula found power in 'giving voice to people through their art,' Erik Endo said. 'It's one thing to tell someone else's story, but it's another to help them learn how to tell their own story.' Paula started a photo project for neighborhood teens in the Columbia Pike area, giving them cameras and guidance, and inspiring them to explore their own community. They published a book of their photos and stories in 2003, which became a precursor to the broader documentary project. The two are now in a nursing home, in rooms near each other, struggling with the effects of dementia, their son said. Todd Endo is in hospice care. But their work continues. Dewey Tron was one of Paula Endo's students, and he is a key participant in the broader Columbia Pike documentary project. Tron has chronicled the humanity and churn of change in the neighborhoods along Columbia Pike. He has tried to find the delicate balance between a desire to capture compelling images and his sense of responsibility to the people in the pictures, he said. Tron said he was conflicted when the increasingly run-down Oriental Supermarket he had visited since he was a boy was due to close. The Cambodian immigrant owner had shared his struggles trying to keep it alive. 'I took a picture of him. It just felt sad for me, because I am never going to see it again and this was the only evidence of it,' Tron said. 'It's just like mourning, constantly, these places that are disappearing. And it seems like that's the only time it catches our attention is if it's about to disappear.' Tron also photographed the bustling Megamart Express that took over the space and caters to the large local Latino population. The place of his memories was gone, but there was also rebirth. 'They really have made that business boom,' he said. Tron's parents, who immigrated from Vietnam, spelled his name Duy Tran. He decided to use the name Dewey Tron professionally, because he considers it more distinctive and less likely to be mispronounced. Sushmita Mazumdar, an artist who grew up in Mumbai, has interviewed immigrants from Afghanistan, South Africa, Bolivia, Bangladesh and Ethiopia as part of the project. She joined Wolf, Tron and other participants seven years ago. Wrestling with change is a constant in the work. At Mazumdar's Studio PAUSE on Columbia Pike, which she describes as a community space for art and stories, there's an exhibition of photographs from the documentary project hanging on a wall that used to be behind an old international money-transfer counter. One series shows another old grocery store, a Food Star; a frustrated college student in a jeans jacket, standing before a crane and apartment complex, lamenting the community 'losing its culture'; and a vast hole in the ground where the store once stood, illuminated by stars of light, giving the scene a stark beauty. Mazumdar likes using photographs as a jumping-off point, and is also involved in related video and oral history work. 'When we get to know each other's stories, it becomes a community,' she said. The photos have been published in a blog and three books. More than 10,000 of them have been archived in the Library of Virginia, where they will be preserved in perpetuity and eventually made available to the public. 'A neighborhood that isn't changing, there's no real reason to continue to document it. But this one just had so much going on,' said Dale Neighbors, the library's visual studies collection coordinator, who acquired the collection. He points to the energy and color of Wolf's photo capturing a Bolivian dance parade more than a decade ago. 'Every time you look at it, the eye lands sort on something slightly different,' Neighbors said. There's the bigger picture too, he said: 'Individually, they're beautiful. But the value of that collection really is sort of seeing more than one, to really get a sense of the community and the diversity.' For Wolf, the work has left a deep imprint. Photographing the Prio Bangla, the long-running cultural festival, time after time, and the Bolivian celebrations, with so many people 'dancing, singing, proudly expressing themselves in my own community was a revelation. A revelation of joy,' he said. Finding people, asking them about their lives, listening to them and taking their photographs, that entire process is, in many ways, a process of building a community, not just documenting one. Wolf often stays in touch with the people he photographs, seeing where they go, what they do and how their lives change, and thinks about how those connections echo with his own past. He met and interviewed a Guatemalan volunteer at Arlington Public Schools, where students speak 90 languages, among them indigenous languages such as Quechua and Aymara. Claudia Cuellar told him how she cleaned bathrooms here, despite being a secretary back home. There was no embarrassment, she said, 'because my father and my mom always taught me that if the job is decent, you have to do it. … We have to do everything with the power of our hands to help our kids advance.' He said the moment reminded him of one of his mother's uncles, a poor Jewish immigrant who cleaned toilets on the New York State Thruway after arriving in the U.S. from what is now Poland. 'My grandfather and especially my mother often told us that this man was a mensch … a solid, upstanding, righteous and honest man, irrespective of social station,' he said. That work, he said, lifted the family from poverty. 'I kind of cried a bit at the time, a complex silent cry, for her, for all of us who have been able to take the opportunities provided to contribute to America, despite real hardship, real struggle,' Wolf said. In the project's 2015 book, 'Living Diversity,' Takis Karantonis, then leading a Columbia Pike revitalization group, wrote as part of the introduction that the photographs, like all great art and images, raise challenging questions. 'Is 'The Pike' beautiful or ugly? Does it have a character or is it a soulless suburban thoroughfare? Is there a past worth preserving? Is there a future worth pursuing? And who gets to decide? Who owns this place anyway?' he wrote. A decade later, Karantonis said the answer to that last question is clear: 'We do.' The tens of thousands of people who live in the area, even with earnest and impassioned debates over gentrification and housing affordability, live richer lives for being part of such a diverse community, he said. Karantonis, an economist who immigrated from Greece, now serves as Arlington's county board chair. He keeps the documentary project's three books, and the earlier one from Paula Endo and her teenage students, on his desk as a reminder of how special that place is. The long-running and largely upbeat photo project has, in recent months, been unfolding as the Trump administration has assailed diversity initiatives and pursued a nationwide immigration crackdown, including operations by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in the Columbia Pike area. Mazumdar has taken to carrying a photo of her U.S. passport in her phone, so she can produce it easily if challenged by federal authorities. 'I'm a citizen, but I have an accent,' Mazumdar said. She also wanted to provide comfort to her Midwestern in-laws who are worried about her. Tron said capturing candid street scenes along the Pike, which he liked doing for years, now seems like an unwelcome intrusion at times, so he's pulled back a bit. 'People live in fear today,' said Karantonis, who has followed community reports of federal immigration authorities detaining people in Arlington. National polling has shown a sharp partisan divide over Trump's efforts to deport undocumented immigrants. A Wall Street Journal poll in July, for example, found 91 percent of Democrats polled think those efforts have gone too far. Republicans were evenly split, at 44 percent, on whether Trump's efforts were 'about right' or had gone 'not far enough.' In deep Blue Arlington, there has been loud criticism of the administration, with local Democrats and an immigrant advocacy organization assailing Homeland Security Secretary Kristi L. Noem for appearing in the county to underscore the administration's aggressive posture. There has also been quieter community support for some undocumented parents and others, including an asylum-seeker called in unexpectedly by immigration authorities in July. The woman was released with an ankle monitor and is terrified of being taken away from her young children, said a woman who was photographed for the project. She spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss her own efforts to provide assistance. The U.S. has been through perilous times before, Wolf said, from the Civil War and Jim Crow to the McCarthy era. But he believes its deep-seated values, its trust in the motto e pluribus unum, will eventually prevail, he said. 'I hope the ship rights itself,' Wolf said. From the beginning, the idea of exploring The Pike so deeply, and for so long, was to show what it's really like to live in such a community. 'The community was very, very diverse and it seemed to be working — and that was something we thought was worth examining,' Wolf said. Last month, he and Tron each visited Paula Endo, who shared that vision, at her bedside in the nursing home. Wolf considers her a big sister, and remains in awe of her work. Endo documented her own mother's process of dying in haunting and beautiful photographs, which are marked by a kind of glowing, spiritual light. Wolf has a self-portrait Paula took as part of that series on display in his home. Tron told her how much it meant that she helped set him on a path to being an artist. When Ag Almoctar moved with his wife, a U.S. citizen, to a brick townhouse a few blocks from Columbia Pike two years ago, he began building a life he believes might be possible only in America. He attends the Bangladeshi mosque, sometimes grabs food from an Afghan restaurant up the street, and communes with a colleague from Mongolia. They are both former desert people, and 'we have the same culture,' he said. Ag Almoctar used to run a guesthouse and guide service in Timbuktu, but attacks by extremists shut foreign tourism down, ending his livelihood — which had allowed him to build two schools, a clinic and 15 community wells — and forced him to leave. When he first told people he was moving to the U.S., they warned him he would be shot. Now, at work, his colleagues ask whether he's on drugs because he looks so cheery. 'I didn't take any pill. I'm just happy,' he told Wolf as they shared tea in his dining room. 'I think this is the one thing that makes America famous in the world. Because if you come here, you're white, you are green, you're blue, you're whatever, you're American,' he said.

Chicago Food Rescue non-profit connects people and companies with extra food to those who need it
Chicago Food Rescue non-profit connects people and companies with extra food to those who need it

CBS News

time3 days ago

  • CBS News

Chicago Food Rescue non-profit connects people and companies with extra food to those who need it

A Chicago man is taking a high-tech approach to his fight against food insecurity, with some great results. Jake Tepperman said he's living his dream of being part of something that is benevolent and tangible. "Everyone needs to do what they can," he said. "If everyone is literally just looking after their own neighbor, it would go a long way." Tepperman doesn't just look after his neighbors. His mission is to get surplus food to people he'll never even meet. He's the executive director and founder of Chicago Food Rescue, a non-profit that connects people and companies who have extra food with people and organizations who need it the most. Tepperman offered a simple explanation of how it works: "I get in touch with food donors. They get in touch with me about when there is excess surplus food," he said. "We send a volunteer to pick up that food in their own vehicle and take it directly to one of our non-profit or community partners." There's a lot more to it. This operation is tech-driven. It starts with the Chicago Food Rescue app, which Tepperman said volunteers can download to see where food is available to be picked up from donors and delivered to non-profits at any time. Tepperman walked CBS News Chicago through a food rescue beginning with a donation from the Pilsen Food Pantry to the non-profit Healthy Hood. "When it's time for you to start the rescue, you just click the start button," he said. "You use mapping software to give you directions of where you are needing to go to pick up the food." The app gives step-by-step instructions on where to go, who volunteers can call when they arrive, and where to park. Volunteers can input the amount of food being donated, an then it's onto delivery. "More special instructions just making sure our volunteers know exactly what to do," Tepperman said. "Closing out rescue, making it really easy for anybody to get involved by picking up food and delivering it to exactly where it needs to go." The food includes a lot of produce and prepared food, like grab-and-go sandwiches, and grocery stores often have meat or dairy to donate. "We can find a place that can use whatever food it is that the donor has to donate. Oh, you've got a box of 40 sandwiches? Great, we can find a place for that. You've got 20 trays of prepared food? Okay, that's great. Ten boxes of produce," Tepperman said. "Anything that is viable and edible food that would be thrown away, we'll rescue and find a place for it. "Viable and edible" brings us to food safety. "Our volunteers are generally taking food and transporting it to a non-profit partner that is in the same neighborhood," Tepperman said. "So it's not out of refrigeration nearly long enough to become a safety concern." Tepperman said fighting food insecurity runs in his family. "When I was a kid, my family before a holiday was handing out boxes of food before Passover," he said. "As more of a young adult, seeing people on the street who were either homeless or dealing with food insecurity bothered me. … In a city, a country with of much excess, I thought, 'That doesn't make sense.'" Not one to let things go, Tepperman got to work understanding the problem. "To me, it's not a supply and demand issue, it's a supply chain issue, it's a logistics problem," he said. "So I took my background, which is supply chain logistics, and kind of figuring out how things work, and I just wanted to start connecting the dots." Those dots have led him to great success with Chicago Food Rescue. "Things are growing pretty rapidly and are continuing to pick up," he said. "We just hit 100,000 pounds of food rescued last week, which is a significant milestone, but I think we're just scratching the surface of what the need is." Chicago Food Rescue is totally free to donors and recipients. It runs on grant money and donations. Rescues can be recurring or on a one-time basis. So can volunteering. Do you know someone a person or place that brings you joy? We want to share your story. Send us your "Eye on Chicago" ideas using the form below (or clicking here):

Mega Millions winning numbers for Aug. 15: $198 million jackpot
Mega Millions winning numbers for Aug. 15: $198 million jackpot

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Mega Millions winning numbers for Aug. 15: $198 million jackpot

The Mega Millions jackpot rose to $198 million for the drawing on Friday, Aug. 15, after no one matched all the winning numbers in the drawing on Tuesday, Aug. 12. There have been four Mega Millions winners this year, with the most recent being the June 27 win in Virginia of a jackpot of $348 million. Before then, on April 18, an Ohio player took home a $112 million jackpot, a lucky lottery ticket holder in Illinois took home a $344 million jackpot on March 25 and another lucky person hit the Mega Millions jackpot on Jan. 17 for $113 million. Here are the winning numbers from the Mega Millions drawing on Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. Mega Millions winning numbers for 8/15/25 The winning numbers for Friday, Aug. 15, will be posted here once drawn. Winning lottery numbers are sponsored by Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network. Did anyone win the Mega Millions? Any Mega Millions winners will be posted here once announced by lottery officials. To view the list of past winners, visit the Mega Millions website. How to play the Mega Millions To play the Mega Millions, you have to buy a ticket. You can do this at various locations, including your local convenience store, gas station, or even grocery store. In some states, Mega Millions tickets can be bought online. Once you have your ticket, you need to pick six numbers. Five of them will be white balls with numbers from 1 to 70. The gold Mega Ball ranges from 1 to 24. If you're feeling especially unlucky or don't want to go through the hassle of picking, you can ask for a 'Quick Pick' or an 'Easy Pick.' These options let the computer randomly generate numbers for you. Mega Millions tickets now include a built-in multiplier, which increases non-jackpot prizes by two, three, four, five, or 10 times. Before, players had to pay an extra dollar to add the 'Megaplier.' Where can you buy lottery tickets? Tickets can be purchased in person at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets. You can also order tickets online through Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network, in these U.S. states and territories: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington, D.C., and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app allows you to select your lottery game and numbers, place your order, view your ticket, and collect your winnings — all using your phone or home computer. Jackpocket is the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network. Gannett may earn revenue for audience referrals to Jackpocket services. Must be 18+, 21+ in AZ and 19+ in NE. Not affiliated with any State Lottery. Gambling Problem? Call 1-877-8-HOPE-NY or text HOPENY (467369) (NY); 1-800-327-5050 (MA); 1-877-MYLIMIT (OR); 1-800-981-0023 (PR); 1-800-GAMBLER (all others). Visit for full terms. Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at and follow him on X @fern_cerv_. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Mega Millions winning numbers for 8/15/25: Jackpot at $198 million

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