
LA WEEKLY: You started your company DOLAN in 2004. How did it come about and evolve???
JODIE DOLAN: I started in my garage right out of college, interested in being an entrepreneur and secretly looking for a way to express my creativity. By 2018, our team had grown into a super smart, creative, agile and dedicated team with a huge heart. We founded our non-profit The Laundry Truck LA, a mobile laundry service for people experiencing homelessness, to address a crisis we saw building up around us. This is when we found out we could take care of our community in such a meaningful and fundamental way through clean clothing. This has helped reshape how we would approach everything we do.
How did the pandemic inspire you to pivot production and create masks, and what has been the result of doing so???
Early on in 2020, the city of Los Angeles reached out and asked us to make/donate masks for our local family groceries & bodegas that didn't have protection. We jumped right in, with our design team to figure out how to make comfortable, functional masks. We initially used all our dead stock fabric inventory and ended up making hundreds of thousands of masks here in L.A. and eventually donating over 100,000. It was right in our wheelhouse of using design to solve everyday real-world problems and injecting our vision of joy and optimism in the process. This went viral and we were lucky enough to be connected to healthcare professionals from all over the country asking us to make create all sorts of custom things for them.
What is your approach to designing PPE for medical workers and caregivers??
We take the same approach to making PPE as we do to scrubs. In addition to masks we produced hundreds of thousands of L1 and L2 hospital gowns here in Los Angeles, while we as a country were struggling with our supply chain and the enormous challenges of bringing PPE into the country. We understand the complexity and necessity of the high level of production standards as real world health concerns are at stake and we're humbled to able to do this.
What has been your donation record and why was it important to you to give back? Tell us about the one-for-one programs??
At the beginning, it was very important to us that we 'sold' these as a donation item & didn't look to profit off of them. In addition to our one for one, we asked everyone to donate the amount they could afford. Many donated over and above allowing us to be able to ship to those who didn't have the means. We looked at this as a contribution to the safety and health of our community and our country. What we experienced was one of the most heartfelt things I have ever seen. Many of our customers jumped right in and donated directly to get these masks in the hands of people that needed it most. We found ourselves in the middle of a community that wanted to support each other, and we were lucky enough to facilitate this massive effort. ?In the end, we ended up donating over 100,000 masks to senior centers, schools, hospitals, front line workers, mental health institutions, shelters, grocery stores.
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