Food Bank Touts Benefits of
Technology
The Harry Chapin Food Bank of Southwest
Florida has posted a report on line detailing its efforts to increase its efficiency
through technology.
The Fort Myers charity has received about $40,000 worth of
computers, printers, and software, as well as technical assistance, from Hewlett-Packard
Company, a Palo Alto, Cal., computer giant.
Both organizations are hoping that the Harry
Chapin Food Bank will become a model for how charities, as well as small businesses, can
use computers to do their jobs better.
The technology has enabled the organization,
which provides food to 150 charities in five counties, to calculate exactly how much is
going to groups in each jurisdiction. The food bank is also using the equipment to
institute system that will allow soup kitchens and other charities it serves to order food
on line. And they are implementing a barcode system whereby all food will be tracked
electronically.
Hawley Botchford, executive director of the
food bank, says that before the group's partnership with Hewlett-Packard, the charity had
just two outdated computers that were not equipped to use the Internet. "We were not
technologically competent," he says.
Hewlett-Packard is now working on similar
projects with three other affiliates of Second Harvest, the nation's largest chain of food
banks, as well as with the group's national office.
You can download the guide by clicking here. (Requires an Acrobat Reader from Adobe)
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