Britt Urban, a nurse midwife and nurse practitioner student at UCSF, found herself feeling helpless at home after her school moved classes online.

“I was starting to feel the pressure and scared, and the anxiety of what was happening as a younger, healthy person,” Urban said. “And so I just couldn't imagine what my community members are feeling like, that there's a direct population that is being told that this virus could kill them. So I just felt like I had to do something.”

She downloaded Nextdoor and asked if any of her elderly or immunocompromised neighbors in Berkeley needed errands run — and the responses came pouring in.

Almost 300 people engaged with the post, so one of Urban’s neighbors created a spreadsheet to organize all of the needs requested and people volunteering.

As of March 16, 24 neighbors had needs met through the spreadsheet — including grocery runs, prescriptions filled, food money and hard-to-find supplies donated — and 152 volunteers remain on standby to help. “It has absolutely made me restore our faith and humanity ... it's really amazing to see people just coming together right now,” Urban said.

“You need to be virtually present in our communities and really show people, especially our vulnerable population, that we are still a community and we're here to support each other,” Urban said.

From the spreadsheet created by Urban and other volunteers, Berkeley Mutual Aid was born: a website where residents can request help, sign up to volunteer or donate. More community volunteer opportunities can be found here:

You can also check Nextdoor for ways you can help residents in your neighborhood.

So far, according to Urban, the number of volunteers in the Berkeley Mutual Aid spreadsheet has far outweighed the needs requested, and organizers hope to connect the list of volunteers with community organizations who need additional help.

Volunteer at, and Donate to, Your Local Food Bank

Food banks across the Bay Area say they’re seeing an increase in need for food and food delivery, and a decrease in volunteer staff.

“We really rely on volunteers. They are a critical element to the way we distribute food,” said Paul Ash, executive director of the San Francisco-Marin Food Bank. “And since the virus has become present in our community, we’ve seen drops in the number of people volunteering.”

Here are a few food banks looking for volunteers and donations.

