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Joshua Tree ends Ryan White food program, suspends weekly lunches

Joshua Tree ends Ryan White food program, suspends weekly lunches

By Glenn Gullickson

Joshua Tree is ending its practice of providing food boxes to clients twice a month after the feeding program's board decided to stop participating in the Ryan White Food Services Program.

Joshua Tree's food pantry will continue to be open on Tuesdays, but the weekly congregate meal program will be suspended at the end of November, according to Robert Bartlett Sr., Joshua Tree's board chair.

Bartlett said his board is seeking new sources of funding to reinstate the lunch program, which has recently attracted up to 125 people a week. The lunches are held at Asbury United Methodist Church, also known as the "cupcake" church, in central Phoenix.

After informing Maricopa County program administrators of the decision to leave the Ryan White program, Bartlett said he told Joshua Tree's clients and volunteers during an emotional lunch on Oct. 25.

The Ryan White program was named for the Indiana teenager who made news when he was expelled from school after it became known that he had been infected with HIV from contaminated blood. He died in 1990 and a federal program that provides funds for the care of people living with HIV/AIDS was named in his honor.

Joshua Tree has had Ryan White funding for about 16 years, but Bartlett said that it had become increasingly difficult to work with the federal program.

Bartlett said keeping up with the Ryan White program's regulations is a full time job. He called the paperwork required by the program "mind-blowing."

The program also comes along with requirements for administrative funds at a time that a bad economy has seen a decrease in donations from other sources.

"We can't afford to administer the program anymore," Bartlett said. "We're going back to our grassroots."

The last lunch will be served on Nov. 29. Starting Dec. 6, Joshua Tree's focus will be its Tuesday food box program, which provides food for documented HIV-positive individuals living in Maricopa and Pinal counties who meet income eligibility requirements.

Bartlett said food for Joshua Tree's pantry is supplied by a federal program that provides commodities without a lot of red tape and other sources.

Bartlett said Joshua Tree is working on a plan to transition its Ryan White clients to the Agape Network in Phoenix and Compassion In Action in Tempe.