The Metro: Food rescue will partner with NFL Draft to serve 30,000 meals

Metro Food Rescue Founder and CEO Chad Techner joined the show Wednesday to discuss how excess food will be collected and distributed during the event. 

Volunteers packing up food at Metro Food Rescue.

Volunteers packing up food at Metro Food Rescue. The nonprofit has been selected as the official food rescue partner for Detroit's NFL Draft event.

Metro Food Rescue has been selected as the official food rescue partner for the NFL Draft, taking place April 25-27 in downtown Detroit. 

Chad Techner, founder and CEO of Metro Food Rescue, joined The Metro on Wednesday to let us know how excess food will be collected and distributed during the event. 

“We don’t really have a food problem in this country,” Techner said. “There’s plenty of food, we just don’t get it to the people who need it at the right time.”

MFR’s goal is to bridge the gap between excess food and the people that need it, Techner says. There are many people to feed at the event and caterers make extra food just in case. During the Draft they’ll pick up the unserved food and distribute it to local partners. They expect to pick up enough food to serve 30,000 meals to people in Detroit. 

“The food that we pick up in the morning is at someone’s house and on a plate by that evening,” Techner said. 

MFR is looking for volunteer food delivery drivers during the NFL Draft. They’re always looking to partner with organizations doing large catering, making sure food doesn’t go to waste. For more information, visit metrofoodrescue.com/nfldraft.

Use the media player above to hear the full interview with Metro Food Rescue Founder and CEO Chad Techner.

More headlines from The Metro on April 10, 2024: 

  • In a recent NPR series called “The Science of Siblings,” reporter Maria Godoy explored how families can facilitate healthy relationships between step siblings.  
  • WDET’S Stephen Henderson and Cary Junior spoke with music historian and journalist Dan Charnas on Created Equal this week about Beyonce’s new album, Cowboy Carter, and Black representation in country music. 
  • I.G.N.I.T.E., a program at Genessee County Jail, is lowering the number of people re-entering the system. Peter Hull, professor of economics at Brown University and the author of a study on the jail’s program, joined the show to discuss I.G.N.I.T.E.’s mission.
  • Jennifer and James Crumbley were both sentenced this week to 10-15 years in prison for involuntary manslaughter after their son killed four students in 2021 at Oxford High School.  WDET’s Quinn Kleinfelter has been following the trial and gave us the most recent developments.

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 11 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on-demand.

Trusted, accurate, up-to-date.

WDET strives to make our journalism accessible to everyone. As a public media institution, we maintain our journalistic integrity through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

Donate today »

Author