Since 1968, Meals on Wheels has grown to a volunteer corps of more than 2,000 individual, group and corporate volunteers serving 1,500 meals daily throughout Greenville County including Fountain Inn, Fork Shoals, Simpsonville, Mauldin, Travelers Rest and Piedmont. Volunteers provide the human touch that means so much to the homebound person.
2010 Facts & Figures
Number of meals delivered 379,595
Number of new clients served 746
Average number of clients served each day 1,310
Number of Client Care home visits made 892
Number of new volunteers 420
Number of corporate teams 106
All of our clients are referred by a physician and there never has been a waiting list. Meals are provided free of charge and there is no financial qualification.
Our clients are homebound and physically or mentally challenged to a point where meal preparation is nearly impossible. Most clients live alone or with another incapacitated person.
Volunteers monitor the welfare of the clients on their routes and serve as a link to other community-based services such as transportation, home health services, financial services and even home repair and handicap accessible modifications.
Language:
English
Price per service:
$0.00
Free Consultation:
N\A
Same Day Service:
N\A
Payment Method:
Cash
Status:
Active
Policies:
None
None
Requirements:
Meeting Place:
Client's Office
Company Name:
Meals On Wheels Greenville
Greenville, SC 29605
Company Description:
Since 1968, Meals on Wheels has grown to a volunteer corps of more than 2,000 individual, group and corporate volunteers serving 1,500 meals daily throughout Greenville County including Fountain Inn, Fork Shoals, Simpsonville, Mauldin, Travelers Rest and Piedmont. Volunteers provide the human touch that means so much to the homebound person.
2010 Facts & Figures
Number of meals delivered 379,595
Number of new clients served 746
Average number of clients served each day 1,310
Number of Client Care home visits made 892
Number of new volunteers 420
Number of corporate teams 106
All of our clients are referred by a physician and there never has been a waiting list. Meals are provided free of charge and there is no financial qualification.
Our clients are homebound and physically or mentally challenged to a point where meal preparation is nearly impossible. Most clients live alone or with another incapacitated person.
Volunteers monitor the welfare of the clients on their routes and serve as a link to other community-based services such as transportation, home health services, financial services and even home repair and handicap accessible modifications.