As the COVID-19 pandemic sweeps through Wisconsin, closing schools and businesses and testing the state’s health care workforce, many people are wondering how they can help — beyond staying at home to help “flatten the curve” of new infections.
“What can those who are financially able to do to help other people or organizations who are severely impacted by this virus?” one person asked WHYsconsin, a project of Wisconsin Public Radio.
“Is there anything that a regular person can do to help health care workers?” another asked. “I’ve signed up to give blood, I have not bought any PPE, and I am respecting the social distancing guidelines. How else can we help the folks at the front lines of the pandemic?”
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Wisconsinites in need of assistance may consult this list, compiled by WPR, of Wisconsin organizations offering services. You can also use 211 Wisconsin to connect with nonprofit and government services in your area. Call 211 or 877-947-2211.
Here are some ideas for doing good.
Feed The Hungry
The Food Pantry of Waukesha County typically serves about 50 families per day, according to executive director Karen Tredwell. That number now ranges from 63 to 148 families daily during the coronavirus pandemic. The fewest people visited on March 25, the first day of the state Department of Health Services’ safer-at-home order. Tredwell worries people did not realize pantries remained open.
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The pantry accepts cash donations, and many grocery stores have bins to accept donated food. Cereal and canned food — such as beef stew, pasta, fruits and vegetables — are particularly useful. So are volunteers, especially people who are less likely to develop severe COVID-19 symptoms. Higher-risk populations include people older than 65, people with compromised immune systems and pregnant women.
Help The Elderly And Disabled
Feeding people who are isolated has never been easy, particularly in rural areas. The pandemic only exacerbates that challenge, said Joel Gottsacker, department head of the Aging & Disability Resource Center of Oneida County.
Congress’ response to COVID-19 will allow more people to sign up for Meals on Wheels, the popular home delivery program for the elderly and disabled that the Oneida County center runs locally, Gottsacker said. The center is “always interested” in cash donations, he added, and donors may earmark funds for the meals program.
In Oneida County and elsewhere, Meals on Wheels relies on volunteers. Gottsacker said about 100 people volunteer in his county, with 25 to 30 delivering meals each day. The program will need additional volunteers — particularly younger ones — as eligibility expands.
“Most of our volunteers are older adults,” Gottsacker said. “So we’re anticipating that they’re going to start needing to socially isolate as well.”
The center is accepting names and contact information for people interested in volunteering.
House The Homeless
Groups that serve people who lack stable housing could also use help. Patrick Vanderburgh, president of Milwaukee Rescue Mission, said the nonprofit’s shelters for men, women and families are serving 40 percent more people compared to last year.
“We’ve definitely seen an influx,” Vanderburgh said.
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Most shelters need similar items. For guidance, donors might consider what items their own family needs; shelters could probably use those things, too.
Support Child Care
Child care needs loom large since schools are now shuttered across the state. Health care workers, first responders and others with jobs deemed essential face particular challenges. Many YMCAs around the state have pivoted to providing emergency child care. That includes the YMCA in La Crosse, where Jennie Melde is director of culture and youth development.
While the center remains open for emergency child care, its overall enrollment has plummeted, and “We’re looking at huge numbers of layoffs and furloughs of our staff.”
Melde said financial donations would be the most useful. The center is also offering financial assistance to families in need who were not expecting to pay for child care.
“Anybody who’s looking to help support our essential workers could give to any YMCA or any child care center who’s trying to operate emergency child care right now,” Melde said.
The center could also use arts and crafts supplies.
“There’s only so many paper plate projects you can do and then you run out of paper plates,” Melde said.
Help Health Care Workers
Many people asked WPR’s WHYsconsin how to support frontline health care workers. Teri Wilczek, chief philanthropy officer for Marshfield Clinic Health Systems, said hospitals around the country have similar needs during the pandemic. The biggest: personal protective equipment.
Marshfield has partnered with local businesses who have stockpiles of items like face shields, gloves, protective eyewear and N95 masks, Wilczek said.
“Literally every mask matters,” she said.
The health system’s foundation recently called for hand-sewn masks — to protect patients who enter the clinic. The foundation has since received more than 3,000. But it needs “probably 10 times that many,” said Wilczek. Other health systems have said they do not plan to use cloth masks, which offer less protection than those health care workers use.
Marshfield, like health systems across the state, is also seeking financial donations for meals, comfort items and other support to their health care workforce.
Support Local Businesses
Many leaders are asking residents to support local businesses. One Madison effort helps local businesses — and hungry neighbors.
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Said Alyssa Hartman, executive director of the Artisan Grain Collaborative, “It’s a way that people who may have a little extra cash to spend can take a very simple concrete action from the convenience of their home, which is where we all should be right now.”
Editor’s note: This story comes from a partnership of Wisconsin Watch and Wisconsin Public Radio. Bram Sable-Smith is WPR’s Mike Simonson Memorial Investigative Fellow embedded in the newsroom of Wisconsin Watch (wisconsinwatch.org), which collaborates with WPR, PBS Wisconsin, other news media and the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication. All works created, published, posted or disseminated by Wisconsin Watch do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of UW-Madison or any of its affiliates.