I truly hope this catches on. There is no reason for restaurants (fast food or otherwise) to discard unused food when we have such a huge homeless/underprivileged population. This isn't a St. Louis problem, or even a US problem; it's an issue the entire world faces.
My childhood dreams involved one day operating a restaurant, and doing just this. Those dreams never became reality, but I'm glad to see I'm not the only one that thinks businesses *CAN* give back. I speak highly of businesses that I think are doing the "right" thing, and poorly of those with unfriendly business practices. While I'm not "Mr. Popular", I know for a fact that my influence has brought a few businesses additional revenue, and deterred people from using certain service providers and businesses. I look forward to Little Caesars' response, and hope that it's positive; I would be sad to see one of my preferred pizza providers go onto the "unfriendly" list.
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I truly hope this catches on. There is no reason for restaurants (fast food or otherwise) to discard unused food when we have such a huge homeless/underprivileged population. This isn't a St. Louis problem, or even a US problem; it's an issue the entire world faces.
My childhood dreams involved one day operating a restaurant, and doing just this. Those dreams never became reality, but I'm glad to see I'm not the only one that thinks businesses *CAN* give back. I speak highly of businesses that I think are doing the "right" thing, and poorly of those with unfriendly business practices. While I'm not "Mr. Popular", I know for a fact that my influence has brought a few businesses additional revenue, and deterred people from using certain service providers and businesses. I look forward to Little Caesars' response, and hope that it's positive; I would be sad to see one of my preferred pizza providers go onto the "unfriendly" list.