Lori Niehaus '18 (at right) delivers meals to Holy Cross Hospital.

For Lori Niehaus ā€™18, food and community are inextricably linked.

During a Fulbright teaching assistantship in Malaysia last year, the former biology and international studies major bonded with local families by sharing meals in their homes. Now, as co-founder of , sheā€™s helping restaurants in her home state stay afloat while delivering food to essential workers.Ģż

The transition from teaching in a remote village to running a nonprofit in the U.S. didnā€™t happen overnight, but it came close. After finishing her Fulbright grant in November, Niehaus spent three months traveling before returning to her parentsā€™ home in February to plot her next move. A month later, the coronavirus pandemic swept the midwest, leading the city of Chicago to shut down all non-essential businesses, including restaurants.Ģż

Feed the Front Line Chicago at work

Feed the Front Line Chicago in action.

Amid the chaos, Niehaus noticed an Instagram post by a Fulbright friend in Houston, Texas who was purchasing food from local restaurants and delivering it to healthcare workers. Inspiration struck.Ģż

ā€œI wasn't really doing anything because I hadn't started applying for jobs yet, and I realized I had the time and resources to put into a project,ā€ she said. ā€œSo I threw up an Instagram post and made a GoFundMe, and then 24 hours later, I got a text from some other Fulbright people in our program who are in the Chicago area as well, saying they wanted to get involved. Three of us just started building it up and figuring out where we wanted to go with it.ā€

The mission of Feed the Front Line Chicago is simple: support local restaurants by purchasing meals to go; support essential workers by delivering meals to them. Executing that mission, as Niehaus and her colleagues quickly discovered, was more difficult.ĢżĢż

ā€œThe first few weeks were crazy,ā€ Niehaus recalled. ā€œWe were making a hundred phone calls every day and then getting in our cars and driving all over the city. It was pretty chaotic and definitely not sustainable.ā€

After some initial growing pains, however, the team has hit their stride. Volunteers are now in charge of picking up and delivering food, freeing up Niehaus and a staff of 12 to handle logistics and fundraising. The organization has become adept at identifying ā€œpockets of needā€ā€”corners of the city where help has been slow to arrive.

The three founders of Feed the Front Lines Chicago, standing 6 feet apart holding paper bags

Niehaus (far right) with Feed the Front Line Chicago co-founders Rachel Jacoby and Amy Verrando.

ā€œWe noticed that there wasnā€™t a lot of support or resources going into certain communities, especially in areas like the south and west sides of Chicago,ā€ Niehaus said. ā€œWe've been looking online, calling hospitals and other recipient centers and seeing if they've been receiving support and donations, and if they haven't, adding them to our list.ā€

And while the ā€œfront lineā€ in the nonprofitā€™s name initially referred to healthcare workers, the team has begun delivering meals to pharmacy workers, nursing home employees, and staff at COVID-19 test sites. Recently, they brought bags of restaurant meals to employees at a local Walmart.ĢżĢż

ā€œIt varies week to week,ā€ said Niehaus. ā€œWeā€™re staying flexible with our mission and figuring out how we can really make an impact on the communities that need it the most.ā€

As its operations have evolved, Feed the Front Line Chicago has maintained a steady stream of support, raising more than $40,000 in two months. By mid-May, just over 3,700 meals had been delivered to frontline workers, supporting 96 restaurants in the process. A large boost in numbers came after the organization hosted a virtual benefit concert on itsĢżĢżfeaturing performances by Tim McGraw and Avril Lavigne.

Strength in numbers

$40,554

Dollars raised as of May 11, 2020

3,784

Meals delivered to frontline workers

96

Local restaurants supported

Ģż

Niehaus never anticipated starting and running a nonprofit after graduationā€”in September, she plans to pursue a graduate degree in epidemiologyā€”but her commitment to giving back was strengthened during her time at Boston College. She cites her coursework as well as her involvement in GlobeMed, a public health and social justice club on campus, with teaching the importance of conversation and partnership in building community.Ģż

Feed the Front Line has given her an opportunity to put those learnings into practice every day, while taking action at a time when many feel helpless.Ģż

ā€œOne of my 51²č¹Ż courses taught us that whatever context youā€™re living in, you can still do something,ā€ she said. ā€œI have a tendency toward fatalism or cynicism, but lifting myself out of that and focusing on the practical ways that I can do something, that I can support others, that's something Iā€™ve carried with me in this work.ā€

Alix Hackett | University Communications | May 2020