Sol Garcia | THE RIDER
Criminal justice graduate student Hannah Orendain has founded an organization called RGV Gives Back, which serves the community by providing food to essential, frontline workers and other community members.
โRGV Gives Backโs mission is to spread hope and positivity within the RGV,โ said Orendain, president and treasurer of the organization, which is in its sixth week. โWe aim to give back to the frontline workers, essential workers, neighbors, families, friends, strangers, all within the RGV.โ
The organization, which is run by Orendain and her mother, Lillian Orendain, accepts donations to purchase the food from noon every Saturday to 3 p.m. the following Thursday. On Fridays, RGV Gives Back picks up the food and delivers it to the people chosen for that week, Orendain said.
โItโs all up to the RGV residents,โ she said. โWe post photos every week โฆ asking them where they want to see us give back to because itโs not our money that weโre doing it with. Itโs their donations that are allowing us to do this.โ
The food for the week is purchased at the business place that can give RGV Gives Back the best deal, but the organization tries to support local businesses or take suggestions, Orendain said.
โWe do take suggestions or recommendations, but we also kind of just call a lot of places and whoever can give us the best deal sometimes, thatโs who we end up working with,โ she said.
The organization applied to be an official nonprofit organization on Aug. 26 and is waiting for certification.
โWe applied, filled out, paid for it, did everything but โฆ it takes about seven to 10 days to have the state process everything and to get back to us with our official [Employer Identification Number],โ she said. โWith that EIN number, weโre able to go to businesses and get tax deducted.โ
Orendain was raised to give back to her community.
โMy dad used to be the president of the RGV Food Bank Board,โ she said. โIโve had experience growing up and giving back to underprivileged families within the RGV.โ
Her experience and hearing about RGV Serial Tipper, a tipper who accepts donations to tip large amounts to serving staff, inspired Orendain to create RGV Gives Back after graduating from Baylor University with a bachelorโs degree in political science and a minor in poverty studies and social justice.
โI want to give back to a lot of people, and whoโs more deserving of it right now, especially during a pandemic, than our frontline workers, our essential workers, those that are risking their lives, their safety, their health, their familiesโ health and safety,โ she said.
This week, the organization chose seven applicants to serve as board members. If they accept the positions, their responsibilities will include contacting local businesses for food deals, get staff counts for the weekโs recipients and help RGV Gives Back reach more of an audience, Orendain said.
โWe need that middleman whoโs going to be able to reach out to the community and get ideas and tell us who they want to see us give back to,โ she said.
Once the organization gets more established, it plans on having more members and committees, Orendain said.
โOnce that happens, I would love to have any students that are โฆ interested to be part of our team,โ she said.
For now, students or any other community member can help the organization through donations via Venmo, Cash App, PayPal, check or Zelle, Orendain said.
โAnything works,โ she said. โDonations are always appreciated and always accepted.โ
The organization also sells merchandise including T-shirts and stickers.
โWe have those available, and all proceeds do go to RGV Gives Back,โ she said.
Through donations and merchandise sales, RGV Gives Back has given back to 1,294 people in its first four weeks, Orendain said.
โWhen the RGV comes together, weโre able to help a lot of other people that are struggling,โ she said. โThis is our way of just giving back to the community that gave me so much over the past 21 years.โ
During its first week, the organization delivered individually packed lunch bags from Wendyโs to 170 workers of the three COVID-19 units at Doctors Hospital at Renaissance in Edinburg, said Cristie Esparza Perez, director of patient experience at DHR.
โFor our staff, it gave them motivation, it gave them hope, knowing that the community was supporting them,โ Esparza Perez said. โHaving something like RGV Gives Back โฆ and having them do all of this for people that they donโt even really know, it just says a lot about the organization and what theyโll do for the community.โ
Last week, RGV Gives Back also delivered Italian food to about 160 traveling nurses staying at the DoubleTree Suites by Hilton McAllen, said Andrea Rodriguez, director of sales and marketing at DoubleTree Suites.
โWhat I’ve learned with nurses [is] the way to their heart is definitely with food,โ Rodriguez said. โThey were just very happy.โ
RGV Gives Back has also delivered food to workers at the Weslaco Police Department, RGV Food Bank, San Juan Nursing Home, and more places, according to its website.
For more information on RGV Gives Back, visit its website at https://www.rgvgivesback.org.