translate

Friday, December 22, 2023

Project Angel Fouls Part 5

 Before I continue listing what is wrong at Project Angel Food, I want to acknowledge what they are doing right:

  • Increasing their clientele (currently 2,500 pr day*)

  • Expanding their meal plans to include other critical illnesses (currently 13 tailored meals*) 

  • Continuing to reach large audiences & have large connections

  • Implementing safety precautions like enforcing food handler training for all staff

  • Continuing to have thousands of volunteers per year and retaining those same volunteers

  • Creating an employee committee to address employee concerns

  • Increasing technology to better handle routes and clients 

*Stats from Projects Angel Food


With any progress comes transitions, bumps, and curveballs. These issues are nothing new. The problem lies in how they are being addressed-which is either not at all or a little too late. With increasing numbers comes increased work. As mentioned in previous posts, PAF has practically tripled their employee count since before COVID hit. This has helped with the influx of clients that happened during the same time. I recently spoke with a Client Services worker who noted that there used to be only four staff members in their department compared to the current seven. We estimated that each client services worker has about one hundred+ clients. I asked, “Is this doable?” They responded, “We’re doing it.” 


As someone on the frontlines (so to speak), there is a major difference between “doable” and “doing it.” In a classroom setting it’s a good practice to have ten kids per teacher. In case management, the max is about fifty but more reasonable thirty. Having over a hundred clients per staff member means things fall through the cracks. On numerous occasions, I and other drivers have experienced unresponsiveness from CS when needing to reach a client due to an issue. Notes from drivers regarding gate codes, parking, or cancellations that CS is in charge of get delayed sometimes for weeks or worse never added. There have even unfortunately been clients who have moved or deceased and are still on our routes. CS does what it can, but what we need is more staff to meet the mark we’re missing. Doable means logical. Doing it means pushing past our limits.


The increase in meal plans has packed our freezers to the brim so much so that we’ve had to permanently install a trailer freezer in the parking lot which limits the already small number of parking spots. Our expansion/building project has already had its “groundbreaking ceremony” but we probably won’t see actual groundbreaking until summer 2024 or so. This will mean taking over the buildings/businesses next door (the same place that just redid their parking lot a month ago). I had suggested we look into the vacant building a few blocks up Vine which already had the building and parking space we needed, but I’m not sure as to why that was declined or if it was even researched. 


Increased meals also have meant more products that we now depend on-like cottage cheese, almond milk, and greek yogurt. Just like the problems we already had with the fruit, sometimes the items shipped aren’t up to our standards and have to be returned or simply arrive late. I understand this is a supplier issue, not ours. However, just like the problems we have with our vans-we CAN NOT depend on one source. We need multiple sources for when the first is unavailable. In the long list of funders we have and the powerful members supporting us, I would suggest partnering with grocery stores and mechanics. Continuous changes and substitutions in our food supply more often than not cause confusion among coworkers. Never has there been an all-staff meeting in Dispatch to show how to pack our special breakfast bags. Instead, we rely on sheets of paper with multiple and continuous edits. Soon only one or two staff members only know how these things are supposed to go while the rest of us are in the dark and then they get angry when others aren’t helping. Managers expect coworkers to teach others along with the volunteers, but the issue is that not everyone is a good teacher and even if they are, arguments arise on who is right-her way or his way? In addition to these directed meetings from managers, I suggest a large whiteboard with the lists and labels on shelves.  


Working with vulnerable clientele means we must have work conditions that are higher than most businesses/organizations. Our new Dispatch manager has incorporated that in addition to the face masks we continue to wear in the kitchen, Dispatch should also mimic their dress code of hair nets and gloves. This seems like a wise choice; safety is better than sorry, correct? Food Safety requires these items when working with open or ready-to-eat food. The difference between the kitchen and Dispatch is just that-we work with frozen meals and packaged items, placing them into bags to go back into the freezers for the next day’s delivery. Does it really make sense for someone working in a freezer all day to have to wear a hair/beard net and gloves? It seems more like a waste of our resources than being cautious. There are even talks of a uniform which shouldn’t surprise anyone in the workforce. Personally, I take the stand I did when my high school had the same debate. Uniforms take away individuality and are not economical. If the reason for a uniform is to easily identify who is a staff member versus a volunteer, I have suggested that we have name tags with our pronouns. Earlier this year name tags with our pictures were given, but only to a few people and then it stopped. Again, not sure why?


Technology has significantly gotten better since I began but is still behind. It’s been a year now since we’ve implemented driver cellphones (yes, before we used our personal cell phones) with a client delivery app. This (in addition to the phone holders we finally received with them) has helped in many ways. Our hope is to keep lessening our paper usage, which is wonderful. The complaints from many drivers have been that the app is too clouded with information we don’t need, in a format that doesn’t make sense, and has problems with GPS-leading to an approximate location as opposed to a direct one. I and several drivers have transitioned from Amazon and admit that their delivery app is the one thing they do excellently-it’s sleek, simple, and to the point with the information needed for drivers. Our app has cost a lot of money according to higher-ups. My question is must we stay with it? What was the research that went into what apps are out there? Why couldn’t we again partner with a tech company? PAF doesn’t even have a tech department. It wasn’t until a Dispatch meeting that one coworker spoke up saying they loved working with technology and were willing to help with this app/routing. This was of course after two staff members had quit from the frustrations. 


I was invited to join the Committee Staff from HR. They said, “You have great ideas. We need people like you who will bring these things to our attention and bring changes. Now it’s not to make your job easier but to benefit everybody.” 


This is why I write. To benefit the body that is called PAF.


Sunday, December 17, 2023

Project Angel Fouls Part 4

 An organization is organization. It’s supposed to make sense. 


Organizing a nonprofit (NP) and for-profit (FP) can be very similar. They both have a Board as their governance. They create mission statements (although this began in the nonprofit sector) and draft visions. Each one has an Executive Director/CEO, a financial advisor, and lawyers. The list can go on.


The difference between them is that the Board in a NP volunteer their time and resources. Nonprofits are not a pyramid. They do not make money to serve the head-although they can serve themselves just as much as a corporation. A NP mainly receives (sometimes internally makes) money to serve the needs of the community (uschamber). 


It is important to note though that a NP can have Board members who are also employees, although this is not highly favored due to the possible conflict of interest(s). Similar to it not being the best idea to post religious symbols in a public space at your business (which PAF hasn’t shied away from). If a NP does have employees on the Board, they are legally not allowed to vote on specific decisions-especially financial ones that impact themselves. This should be laid out clearly in the NP’s bylaws (governing procedures) that were constructed along with their specific tax filing.


Simple enough right? 


According to Project Angel Food’s website, it has twenty-one Board of Directors with three CEOs, nine executive staff (counting Richard Ayoub again), fifteen Board of Trustees, nine Ambassador Councils and according to Human Resources (HR), around ninety employees. Mr. Ayoub sits on the Board and is a CEO. Our supposedly “sister companies” (according to PAF’s  Dispatch Supervisor), Project Open Hand, Open Hand Atlanta , and Mama's Kitchen do not even do this. However, PAF’s Bylaws (available upon PAF request) allow this to happen with the stipulation one can not vote for being paid as a Board Member and that the pay is “just and reasonable.” Unfortunately, hearings from voters are not made public to see how this technically pays out, I mean plays out, for Ayoub.


A NP is made by the people, for the people; thus, should be the faces of those people. PAF does well in photographing its events and ambiance, but perhaps too well or... too Hollywood-the same accusation workers had with their first CEO. Ayoub and celebrities become our “new face” with the occasional picture of staff posted on social media. (Note: It wasn’t until a couple of months ago did we sign a release of our photos/names due to me addressing the issue.) We understand the image that “has to be presented” to make it in such a city, but when “saving face” becomes more important than those working their butts off the NP has lost its vision. Ayoub is not someone who takes criticism well, will hide what's going on, does not know his employees, and lacks general respectful people skills. PAF, according to one Dispatch manager, “is not what it used to be.” It may seem like it’s for the people but the money speaks differently.  


“Currently those with gross receipts exceeding $1,028,500 for any year” (Guide For Charities, pg. 39) are considered a big NP by the Attorney General Rob Bonita of California. Which is four million less than what it seemed to be in 2005 according to the Center of Nonprofit Management’s Southern California Nonprofit Sector Report (pg. 20) Some of the largest revenues seen in ‘2020 by nonprofits were Feeding America ($4.21 B), Salvation Army (5.79 B), and Goodwill (7.41 B)’ (Forbes). In CA. specifically, the top dollar NPs are Kaiser, Schwab, and Dignity Health; with the biggest hubs of nonprofit revenue coming in from Los Angeles & San Francisco (CauseIQ). 


PAF sits right in the epicenter. In 2020, PAF brought in $11M. In 2021, $13M. And in 2022, $12M. (PAF Financials). According to Nonprofit Explorer, in 2020 Ayoub made $205,000 with an “other” of $12,570. In 2021, $225,606 with an “other” of $13,117. And in 2022, $234,859 with an “other” of $39,001. Executive compensation has only been around 4% of the cost while other salaries and wages have been near 40%. Interesting how a NP leader can still get a significant raise even if revenues have declined, but those “below” get less of a raise because there was “no inflation” this year. (Truth is there was just less inflation (consumer price)). PAF proudly displays that “our driver starting wage went up from $17.50 in 2021 to $23 in Oct. 23…a 32% increase in two years, with the new starting wage being $21.25.” It is true that this is higher than LA’s minimum wage and for a single-person household, this is considered “livable” (LivingWageCalculator). 


What they don’t reveal are the workers working outside of their scope or “wearing too many hats” and not being compensated for it. It’s nice to just say everyone gets paid decently and easier to make people do more when it's for a great cause, but this is what causes burnout, tensions, and high turnovers. I know one coworker who was doing management duties for months alongside their original position and not being compensated. Countless times they told HR and Ayoub, “This is it, either I get a higher wage or find somebody else.” The leadership delegated over and over again; they even brought in a new manager to help fix things. This manager still allowed this coworker to do management duties without being compensated and depended on them to come in earlier than themselves. Then, surprisingly during the time we were under investigation (future blog post), this coworker finally got their raise. However, there is still another coworker I know who has gotten two titles due to new responsibilities and still hasn’t been compensated.


When an organization gets messy and in my opinion Project Angel Food has, it's time to re-evaluate and re-adjust. A nonprofit needs to make sense to the community because it operates differently internally (or at least it should). A nonprofit can not evaluate itself, it takes the community. How would you judge Project Angel Food? What has been your experience?