Ministry News

Church Succeeds With 'Pay What You Can' Restaurant

A church-sponsored restaurant is attempting to change its community by using an unusual pay system many are calling a "Robin Hood model." At A Better World Café, housed in the Reformed Church of Highland Park, N.J., visitors can eat as much as they want and pay whatever they can. So far, the unique business model isn't just successfully impacting the church's neighborhood, it's furthering an innovative movement among restaurants.

The café's premise is to allow those who can afford more to subsidize those who can't, while also remaining environmentally friendly. The nonprofit, which attracts between 50 to 125 customers each day, uses mostly locally grown produce, composts leftover food and stays away from plastics or Styrofoam.

"It's about how we're going to need to change our systems if we're going to survive as a planet," said Tina Weishaus, a board member of the Who is My Neighbor? group at the Reformed Church, which co-owns the café with Elijah's Promise, a New Brunswick soup kitchen and culinary school.

According to Denise Cerreta, who founded a similar eating establishment in downtown Salt Lake City in 2003, the idea behind A Better World Café is catching on around the country. Besides the five existing "Robin Hood" restaurants, she says more than 50 groups on the East Coast have approached her about launching similar ventures, and she currently travels full-time teaching people how to start their own socially conscious eateries.

At the Highland Park location, customers find a new menu each day with a dozen items and only suggested prices. In addition, one "complimentary community entrée" is always offered for free. Those who want to eat more than the free offering but are unable to pay can volunteer at the café for an hour to receive a bigger meal.

"It's an idea whose time has come," said one director. [nj.com, 11/18/09]

Comments   

 
-1 #2 SF 2009-12-29 14:49
Why is it called the "Robin Hood" model? I believe that is a misnomer. Didn't Robin Hood steal from the rich and give to the poor? How is that concept a part of this restaurant model?
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0 #1 Dave Rowe 2009-12-29 12:25
I'm glad to see some conscientious Christians joining this trend! Here in Salt Lake City we have a restaurant using the same model but run by, it appears, basic granola-types who are more likely to be New Agers. It's called the One World Cafe, has delicious and creative cuisine (I can testify), and has drawn national attention, including the ire of Rush Limbaugh who beefed that this is a bad way to do business in America. The owner cheerily responded with an invite for Rush to come on over and she'd give him a free lunch!http://www.ministrytoday mag.com/components/com_jcommen ts/images/smiles/tongue.gif
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