Bikes, as it turns out, can provide an important link between good, surplus food that would otherwise get wasted and the people who need it.
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZcwrkR4o8vE
To solve this problem, Franklin Jones, the owner of a bicycle delivery service called B-Line, started B-Shares, a program that lets him use his fleet of bicycles and trailers to fill this niche. Through B-Line, you can buy a "B-share" for $20. B-Line then uses that money to pick up 40 meals worth of surplus food from local sources such as New Seasons Market, Dave's Killer Bread, and R & K Foods, and deliver it to a local food assistance provider.
The idea was tested in a pilot program over the summer, and it worked. B-Line delivered more than 3,500 pounds of food. Bikes, as it turns out, can provide an important link between good, surplus food that would otherwise get wasted and the people who need it.