{"id":38831,"date":"2018-11-20T16:30:00","date_gmt":"2018-11-21T01:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/school-food-drives-exceed-expectations\/"},"modified":"2018-11-22T08:42:38","modified_gmt":"2018-11-22T17:42:38","slug":"school-food-drives-exceed-expectations","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home2\/school-food-drives-exceed-expectations\/","title":{"rendered":"School food drives exceed expectations"},"content":{"rendered":"
The middle school students balanced high towers of ramen noodle boxes and canned foods, trying not to let them fall.<\/p>\n
The Floyd Dryden Middle School student council’s biennial food drive collected about 4,000 cans and boxes of food this year for the Southeast Alaska Food Bank, and on Tuesday the student council members wheeled the donations out to a large van. They piled the food on computer carts that teachers throughout the school let them borrow.<\/p>\n
Darren Adams, the manager of the Southeast Alaska Food Bank, waited next to the van and watched as the students brought the food out.<\/p>\n
“This is insane,” Adams said, “in a very good way. It couldn’t come at a better time. The shelves of the food bank were running low, and then in the last couple weeks we’ve been picking up donations. This will help us get through the next several months.”<\/p>\n
Rebecca Farrell, the student council advisor at FDMS, said she thought this year’s food drive was the biggest they’ve ever had. Over the past week and a half, there were daily reminders on the morning announcements where student council members would read statistics about hunger to try and spur students to take action.<\/p>\n
Learning more about how many people go hungry and how much food goes to waste helped inspire people to think outside of themselves and their classrooms, Student Council President Grant Pierson said.<\/p>\n
“We really wanted to contribute to the community,” Pierson said. “We didn’t want to just help out our school.”<\/p>\n
There were competitions between classes and some students went above and beyond. One student, Pierson and Farrell said, brought in 300 cans all on his own. Students were bringing in cans and boxes right up until Adams came by with his van Tuesday.<\/p>\n
Earlier that day at Juneau-Douglas High School, a similar scene played out.<\/p>\n