After a major wildfire, people need food — not for a day, but for weeks. Extended disaster feeding is one of the most difficult phases of disaster response: it starts after the immediate crisis, requires sustained logistics, and can't be easily managed by organizations that specialize in short-term deployments.
Red Cross and World Central Kitchen have both scaled back from extended deployments. California and Oregon had an uncovered window — a gap between what communities need in the weeks after a major wildfire and what existing providers were positioned to deliver. Off the Grid Services LLC had the operational capacity to fill that window. Mobile food service, existing supply chains, a deployable fleet. What they didn't have was a strategy: which counties to prioritize, how to qualify for federal reimbursement, or how to position as a legitimate emergency response provider rather than a vendor looking for business.
TLR applied Foresight-style demand mapping to pinpoint where the gap was largest and where Off the Grid's model was best positioned to fill it. We analyzed wildfire risk data, population density, existing provider coverage, and historical deployment patterns across California and Oregon — identifying 15+ high-risk Wildland-Urban Interface counties where extended feeding needs were documented and provider coverage was insufficient or absent.
We then developed two federal pre-qualification pathways: FEMA Public Assistance (PA) eligibility, which is the primary reimbursement mechanism for mass care operations in Presidentially-declared disasters, and Blanket Purchase Agreement (BPA) structures, which allow pre-approved vendors to be activated quickly without a full procurement cycle during an emergency. Both pathways required mapping Off the Grid's existing operational capacity against FEMA's requirements — and identifying the gaps that would need to be addressed before qualification.
The entire strategy was aligned with ESF #6 — the Emergency Support Function covering Mass Care, Emergency Assistance, Temporary Housing, and Human Services. ESF #6 is where extended feeding operations live in the federal emergency framework. Operating inside it, rather than outside it, is the difference between a legitimate disaster response provider and a well-meaning vendor that can't get reimbursed.
Off the Grid evolved from a catering company with disaster deployment interest to a company with a documented strategy, a prioritized target market, and two federal qualification pathways. The demand mapping gave them the business case — not based on optimism, but on documented gaps in existing provider coverage. The pre-qualification pathways gave them the regulatory roadmap.
The ESF #6 alignment positioned Off the Grid as a legitimate emergency response provider — with the vocabulary, the federal framework awareness, and the reimbursement pathway that emergency management professionals need to see before they can bring in a private-sector partner during a disaster. That's what Foresight does: it turns a gap you can see into a position you can defend.