Fresh Harvest went from fulfilling about 1,700 deliveries a week to 4,000, and recently began serving residents in Athens. Director of Sales David Melton noted that numerous new clients are older adults, a group at higher risk of contracting COVID-19. Fresh Harvest’s online ordering and delivery service has enabled these people to shop from the safety of their homes.
To keep up with demand, the company scrambled to expand its supply network, building partnerships with an additional two dozen artisan food producers, and more farms, many of which had been heavily dependent upon restaurants for their business.
Credit: Ligaya Figueras
Besides tapping Fresh Harvest for certified organic produce with a click of a button, customers can order meat, dairy, bread and other grocery products, as well as prepared foods from 85 food artisans, including tamales by Chamblee-based 100% Artisan Foods, savory pies by Norcross-based Pouch Pies and healthy vegan bowls by local startup Stop Think Chew. “Everything but the toilet paper and dog food,” Melton summed up.
Staff has quadrupled, with hiring focused on refugees who’ve resettled in Clarkston. Refugees now comprise more than 60% of the 80-person payroll, including a newly created four-person crew that works an overnight shift to prep trucks for the next day’s deliveries.
Credit: handout
Ramping up delivery capabilities has meant doubling the number of drivers and trucks. But, there have been bumps along the road — from breakdowns to flat tires to the recent theft of catalytic converters from eight of its 15 trucks. “That was a real bummer, but we made it work,” Melton said. For the week and a half that those big rigs were getting repaired, the fleet team jumped into rental trucks. “We didn’t miss a single delivery day,” he said.
Melton not only has been amazed by the explosive growth of the company, the dedication of its staff and the partnerships it has developed with growers and producers, but also by the generosity of customers. Fresh Harvest pays employees competitive wages, but, at the behest of customers, this year it added an option that enables them to tip delivery drivers on a one-time or recurring basis. “It has been very popular,” Melton said. Tips are not shared; they go directly to the individual driver.
Credit: Ligaya Figueras
Customers do not incur charges for weeks that they need to skip delivery, but they can opt to donate the value of the produce basket to Share the Harvest Market, a subsidized market that Fresh Harvest operates in Clarkston.
The weekly market has been on pause, due to the pandemic, but it has continued to serve the community, thanks to local nonprofit partners Concrete Jungle and Envision Atlanta, whose volunteers deliver organic produce directly to homes of Clarkston-area families in need. During the week of Thanksgiving, Fresh Harvest customers donated more than $10,000. “As we have more donations come in, we’re having conversations about that becoming a nonprofit arm of what we do,” Melton said.
If you’re struggling to find a silver lining to the pandemic, think of Fresh Harvest.
FRESH HARVEST
Menu: weekly customizable basket of locally grown, certified organic produce; prepared foods and beverages from rotating selection of 85 small businesses
What I ordered: Georgia Grown medium basket, individual and family-sized savory pies, vegetarian tamales, tomato basil pesto quiche
Service options: online ordering; contactless delivery; contactless pickup (10% discount for on-site pickup); delivery day based on customer location
Mask policy: all employees wear masks
Address, phone: 735 Park North Blvd., Clarkston; 404-721-4402
Hours: 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mondays-Fridays
Website: freshharvestga.com
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About the Author
December 03, 2020 at 09:03PM
https://www.ajc.com/things-to-do/atlanta-restaurant-blog/atlanta-orders-in-fresh-harvest-builds-robust-local-food-supply-chain/TDASCICKVZB4ZFXIXDQEGTRXJQ/
Atlanta Orders In: Fresh Harvest builds robust local food supply chain - Atlanta Journal Constitution
https://news.google.com/search?q=fresh&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en
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