New limits on food and water at Georgia’s polls could hinder Black and low-income voters, advocates say Tim Carman Liliana Chen, left, and Yonathan Rodriguez served meals from their Los Chamos truck to voters in Miami. (World Central Kitchen) Last fall, Nate Mook was in Atlanta’s suburbs during early voting for the general election. The chief executive for World Central Kitchen was spearheading the group’s Chefs for the Polls initiative, which passed out free food and water to voters standing in line. In Marietta, Mook said, he chatted with Georgia residents who had been waiting six hours, and sometimes longer, to cast their ballots.