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The Le Sueur Food Shelf spent 25 years in cramped quarters before relocating to a more spacious site in June.
John Corss / The Free Press


The Le Sueur Food Shelf uses 121 volunteers to distribute 5,000 pounds of food a month in a county with the highest unemployment rate in the area.
John Cross / The Free Press


Bags of donated food await stocking on shelves at Le Sueur Food Shelf. A communitywide effort enabled the organization to relocate to a space quadruple that of its former site.
John Cross /


Le Sueur-Henderson High students Alecia Selders (left) and Sarah Bruihler volunteered their time to gather food items for a Le Sueur Food Shelf client.
John Cross / The Free Press


Published October 16, 2009 11:51 pm - The new food shelf in Le Sueur was a community effort.

Le Sueur fills food shelf need
Bigger, more accessible facility humming

By Brian Ojanpa
Free Press Staff Writer

LE SUEUR

Just as it takes a village to raise a child, a whole-community effort has given the Le Sueur Food Shelf some needed breathing room.

And with Le Sueur County’s high unemployment rate, it couldn’t have come at a better time.

“I’ve lived here since 1977. I’ve been involved in a lot of organizations and fundraising projects, and I’m just never surprised at how this community can come together,” said Food Shelf board vice president LaRayne Jensen.

The shelf’s new quarters in the city’s former fire hall is quadruple the size of its former site in the city’s hospital.

“That location was less than desirable, to say the least,” said board president, the Rev. Carl Bruihler.

A multiple-entity community effort launched months ago made the Food Shelf expansion possible, and the organization will tip its hat to townspeople with a 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. open house Sunday.

“It was just overwhelming,” Jensen said of the relocation effort that snowballed to involve the city of Le Sueur, the town’s supermarket, service clubs, and volunteers of all ages.

“People just kept coming and coming to help us move,” Jensen said. “It only took us 45 minutes to move out and 45 minutes to move in.”

She said even the mayor and superintendent of schools pitched in.

It was city officials who came up with the idea of leasing the fire hall to the Food Shelf for the token sum of $1 a month.

The 1,200-square-foot Food Shelf occupies two garage bays of the building, and the move was aided by more than $7,000 in donations from the Lions, Rotary Club and other sources.

Commercial freezer and refrigeration units were acquired, and Rademacher’s supermarket customers bought specially assembled food packages for the facility, with the supermarket matching those dollars spent and donating the money to the Food Shelf.

For the past 25 years, the operation was located in a lower level 300-square-foot space in the hospital, reachable only by stairs.

Jensen said there was no room for storage, and when patronage doubled last year, space and accessibility issues magnified. Moreover, the hospital wanted to reclaim that space for its own needs.

Bruihler said that brought an urgency to the situation.



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