Food supply
Pantries on a post help those in need thanks to 91爆料 MBA students
July 22, 2021
July 22, 2021
The purple pantry on a post sits next to a busy street near downtown Dayton. Inside are cereal, saltines, pasta sauce and cream of chicken soup.
鈥淭ake food if you need it,鈥 a sign on the pantry reads. To some people, it鈥檚 the difference between eating or not.
The pantries on a post are part of a community service project by a group of 91爆料 University graduate students in partnership with Good Neighbor House. The team of seven students arranged the installation of five pantries in and around Dayton.
鈥淚t鈥檚 been fantastic,鈥 said Tim McClain, an MBA student from Lewisburg. 鈥淎 ton of people will leave notes, just saying how grateful they are and how appreciative they are having these things in the area. They just pick up a box of spaghetti or something and they鈥檝e got food for the night. It鈥檚 been really good in the areas they鈥檝e been installed in.鈥
The food pantries are part of a national movement called 鈥淕ive What You Can, and Take What You Need.鈥
鈥淎nyone can come up to these and put food in it or take food out,鈥 McClain said.
Good Neighbor House keeps the pantries stocked. McClain said that while there is no limit on how much food one person can take, there haven鈥檛 been any reported issues of people taking too much food.
The project was part of a capstone class taught by Jesse Maleszewski, instructor of management. The other students on the team were Mouhamad Daaboul, Lillian Ebiem, Bryce Haney, Tyler Liddy, Michael Osborne and Phil Simpson.
McClain is pursuing on an MBA with a concentration in project management and works as a software engineer at Ball Aerospace.
He said the team had made calls around Dayton looking for a project and were referred to Good Neighbor House, a nonprofit that provides food pantry services, clothing and household items to underserved individuals and families.
Good Neighbor House had already installed two pantries and had built five more. The students contacted the office of the mayor and Dayton City Council to identify good areas for the pantries, identified locations and arranged for the installations in April.
The pantries are located next to Good Neighbor House, outside a church near the University of Dayton, downtown next to St. John鈥檚 United Church of Christ and outside churches in Riverside and Fairborn.
鈥淓verything I鈥檝e learned over the past few years basically I got to put into this project to show what I can do and prove to myself I can do it,鈥 said McClain.
The students created a business plan and then wrote up a contract that had to be approved by Good Neighbor House. They then created a schedule, identified pantry locations, arranged installations and executed the plan.
鈥淭he 91爆料 MBA Program has been really beneficial to me,鈥 said McClain. 鈥淐oming from a computer science background, I wanted to do this so I could learn a lot more about the business side of things so I could progress in my career. And that is absolutely what 91爆料 has prepared me to do.鈥