How Does LHI's Beyond Borders Program Deliver Aid to Refugees Around the World?

How Does LHI’s Beyond Borders Program Deliver Aid to Refugees Around the World?

If you missed part 1, click here to check it out.

In part 1, we learned how LHI obtains humanitarian aid supplies. In part two, we’ll explore how LHI gets those supplies from their warehouse in American Fork, Utah, into the hands of refugees around the world.

Part 2: Delivering the Goods

Volunteers sort through donated items in preparation for a shipment.

Volunteers sort through donated items in preparation for a shipment.

Once aid supplies are at our warehouse (having been gathered by volunteers at more than three dozen drop-off locations or delivered after being purchased by supporters from our Amazon Wishlist), volunteers begin sorting through it all, checking expiration dates on food and hygiene items. Everything is sorted and boxed by item or kit, clearly labeled, and moved to the appropriate location in the warehouse depending on where it will be shipped (we collect supplies for multiple shipments at the same time).

Oh, so where do we get all the boxes? Some boxes are provided by our partner org, Helping Hand for Relief and Development. Others come from a generous local donor who supplies us with clean boxes that were previously used to hold envelopes. It’s important for the boxes to be the same size so they will fill the space inside the shipping containers as efficiently as possible.

Items are logged into a spreadsheet to speed along the customs process.

Items are logged into a spreadsheet to speed along the customs process.

Every box is numbered and every donation is logged into a spreadsheet, which helps us track what we have sent and ensures that the container gets through customs in an efficient manner. Aid supply numbers from the spreadsheets also provide information to update our online Shipment Tracker, enabling our supporters to check the status of shipments and see photos of the aid being distributed to refugees around the world.

A full container, ready to ship!

A full container, ready to ship!

Once we have enough labeled boxes to fill a 40’ shipping container, we contact HHRD and make arrangements to have a container delivered to our warehouse for loading. On social media, we advertise the need for volunteers to help us load it. We can usually have the container filled with a team of volunteers in 2 hours or less. Once fully loaded, we put a seal on it and send it on its way!

We love seeing their smiles!

We love seeing their smiles!


When the container arrives at its destination port, it goes through the standard customs process. Once it clears customs, HHRD or their partner org on the ground delivers the supplies to their final destination for distribution. After the distribution is complete, we receive a distribution report with information about the beneficiaries and pictures of the aid being distributed. Seeing the smiles on their faces is our favorite part. It makes all the hard work worth it!

Click here to learn more about our Beyond Borders program!

LHI’s humanitarian aid warehouse is home to three different programs that provide aid to refugees. Through our Beyond Borders program, we deliver aid to international destinations, and each shipment gets distributed to tens of thousands of refugees. We also provide aid to asylum seekers at our southern border through our Border Aid program. Finally, through our Welcome program, we assist resettled refugees by providing them with basic household items, allowing them to use the small stipend they receive for other necessities like transportation to their jobs, rent payments, etc.

How Does LHI’s Beyond Borders Program Deliver Aid to Refugees Around the World?

In this two-part series, we’ll explore exactly what it takes to collect, sort, pack, ship, deliver, and distribute aid supplies to help refugees around the world.

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Every week at LHI’s Humanitarian Aid Warehouse in American Fork, Utah, volunteers help us sort, pack, and fill industrial-sized containers of aid supplies that will ship to refugees in locations around the world as part of our Beyond Borders program. Sounds simple, right? But what really goes into it? How do we get the supplies? How do we even determine what is needed, and where? And how has the COVID-19 pandemic changed daily operations? Read on to find out!

Part 1: Gathering Supplies

Under normal circumstances, preparing an aid shipment begins with research. We investigate places around the world that are currently experiencing a refugee crisis, then present these locations to our partner org, Helping Hand for Relief and Development (HHRD). HHRD then lets us know if they have teams on the ground in those locations, or if they have partner orgs on the ground that can receive and distribute our aid shipments.

LHI investigates places around the world that are currently experiencing a refugee crisis. Why do we often ship aid instead of acquiring it locally? Click here to learn why.

LHI investigates places around the world that are currently experiencing a refugee crisis. Why do we often ship aid instead of acquiring it locally? Click here to learn why.

Common aid supplies include personal hygiene items, clothing, and school supplies.

Common aid supplies include personal hygiene items, clothing, and school supplies.

Once we determine a location, we request a list of the most needed supplies for the refugees living there. The list is always different, and knowing what is not needed is just as important as knowing what is. Supplies that aren't really needed can be a hindrance, and they take up valuable container space that could have otherwise been filled with needed items. So from the initial needs list, we create our own list of items that will be feasible for us to collect, pack, and ship. Then we begin sharing our needs list with people just like you through social media and on our website.

Using our needs list as a guide, we also create a list of “kits.” Our kits lists are posted on social media, our website, and other service organization websites, so individuals and groups wanting to help us collect needed aid can do so in the form of service projects. This enables larger numbers of people to get involved, multiplying the impact of their efforts. Businesses, schools, family reunions, church groups, and individuals all come forward to help collect donations and make kits.

Volunteers prepare aid supply kits.

Volunteers prepare aid supply kits.

Donated items collected at our drop-off locations all throughout Utah are delivered to our warehouse.

Donated items collected at our drop-off locations all throughout Utah are delivered to our warehouse.

Once the community members have collected items for donation, they contact us to request a drop off location near them (we have more than three dozen drop-off locations throughout Utah). And when a drop-off location has accumulated a carload, truck full, or trailer full, they bring the donations to our warehouse in American Fork, Utah.

Interested in donating aid supplies?

Click here for information about our current needs for donated aid supplies.

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Donate Aid Supplies Online.

Individuals everywhere can use our Amazon Wishlist to purchase needed items, and those items will go to our warehouse (we frequently update our wishlists to reflect current needs).


Thanks for reading! Next week, we’ll continue with Part 2: Delivering the Goods. Check back to find out what happens once aid supplies arrive at our warehouse. Be well!

Click here to learn more about supporting our Beyond Borders program.