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© COPYRIGHT 2016 SCHOOL NUTRITION ASSOCIATION – #ANC16 – SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS Making Farm to School Work: Resources to Grow your Program

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Page 1: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

© COPYRIGHT 2016 SCHOOL NUTRITION ASSOCIATION – #ANC16 – SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS

Making Farm to School Work: Resources to Grow 

your Program

Page 2: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Page 3: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

National Farm to School Network is a hub for:

Resources People Policy

Information Networking Advocacy

Connecting people to:

Page 4: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Page 5: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Why farm to school?Enriches the connection communities have with fresh, healthy food and local food producers by changing food purchasing

and education practices at schools and preschools

Kids WIN Farmers WIN Communities WIN

Page 6: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Kids Benefit

At school● Increased fruit and veggie consumption● Increased physical activity● Increased school meal participation

At home● Parents increase ability and interest in

incorporating healthier foods into family diets.

● Increased knowledge among early care parents of local farmers’ markets.

● Children asking for healthier purchases (early care).

Page 7: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Farmers Benefit

• Expand market opportunity, income potential• Sell ‘surplus’ product and ugly duckling produce • Diversify market, help manage risk• Increase demand and awareness for local foods

Page 8: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Community Benefits

• Circulates money within the community to support the local and state economy

• Creates more jobs • Connects school nutrition

staff directly with food producers to offer increased selection of products for school meals

Page 9: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Growing Stronger Together

Thank You!

Stay in Touch:[email protected]

@farmtoschool

Page 10: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

USDA’s Office of Community Food Systems

Christina ConellSNA ANC | July 2016

Page 11: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

HHFKA 2010Section 243: Access to Local Foods

The Secretary shall create a Farm to School Program to1. Distribute grant funding to improve access to local foods in schools. 2. Provide training and technical assistance to improve access to local foods in 

schools.3. Disseminate research and data on existing programs and opportunities for 

expansion.

Page 12: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Local Food

Food Education

Page 13: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Grants

Page 14: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Farm to School Grant Awards To Date

FY 2013 ‐ FY 2016• 300 projects• 49 states, DC, Virgin Islands• Over $20M• Requests from 1,000+ 

projects seeking ~$75 M

Page 15: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Summary of Grant AwardsA few things we learned: 

• Grantees planned many strategies for achieving the goal of increasing  access to local foods in schools. 

• Projects served a high proportion of children who are eligible for free or reduced‐price meals. 

• Strong partnership data suggest the potential for widespread collaboration between eligible schools, nongovernmental and community‐based organizations, agricultural producer groups, and other community partners. 

Page 16: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Technical Assistance

Page 17: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community
Page 18: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Assess state programs

Page 19: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Research

Page 20: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

www.farmtoschoolcensus.fns.usda.gov 

Page 21: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

• reduced food waste (18%)• lower school meal program costs (21%)• greater acceptance of the new meal pattern (28%)• increased participation (17%)• greater community support  (39%)

76% of respondents (3,002 out of 3,954 districts) experienced at least one of the following benefits:

2015 Farm to School Census tell us…

Page 22: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community
Page 23: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community
Page 24: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community
Page 25: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community
Page 26: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Our E‐letter, The Dirt!

Delivered every other Tuesday,  chock full of updates, webinar info, relevant news, and field notes! More than 20,000 subscribers.

Subscribe at www.usda.gov/farmtoschool 

Page 27: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community
Page 28: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

© COPYRIGHT 2016 SCHOOL NUTRITION ASSOCIATION – #ANC16 – SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS

Farm to School in ActionBetti Wiggins, Executive DirectorDetroit Public Schools Office of School Nutrition

Page 29: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Build Support using the 3 P’s – Public, Private and Philanthropic Partners

Russell Street Deli

Page 30: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

DPS Office of School Nutrition

Detroit Public Schools Office 

of School Nutrition

Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner

Fresh Fruits & Vegetable Program

Detroit School Garden 

Collaborative

Local Procurement

87 schools

Drew Farms 

(3 acres)

School Gardens

(78 schools)

30%

100,000 meals per day

141 schools

Page 31: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Opportunities in the Cafeteria

• Fresher food• Increased variety• Greater ability to specify needs• Increased access to fresh fruits and vegetables• Hands‐on teaching tools• Good PR• Support local community and economy

7/15/2016 Enterprise Services

Page 32: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Opportunities for Farmers

• Expanding market opportunity• Market for “seconds”

• Long‐term benefits• Stable, steady markets• Market diversity and risk management• Cultivation of the next generation of eaters and buyers• “Free” promotion to whole school community

7/15/2016 Enterprise Services

Page 33: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Thirty percent of seasonal produce is purchased from the State of Michigan.

Detroit Public Schools’ Office of School Nutrition is the School Food Authority for the following:

• 91 Detroit Public Schools• 15 Education Achievement Authority Schools• 26 Public School Academies including those in Southfield, Pontiac and Ypsilanti• 1 Catholic School

Potatoesfrom Kalkaska County

Acorn Squash from Grand Traverse County

Corn, Butternut Squash and Salad Greensfrom Wayne County (DPS Drew Farms)

Apples from Kent County

Blueberriesfrom Berrien County

Office of School Nutrition’s (OSN)LOCAL FOOD FACTS

Peachesfrom Van Buren County

Asparagusfrom Muskegon County

Page 34: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

Know your school Know their food

USDA sponsored program

However, you should 

7/15/2016 Enterprise Services

Page 35: Farm to School to Grow Program - School Nutrition · FY 2013 ‐FY 2016 • 300 projects ... • Strong partnership data suggest the ... •“Free” promotion to whole school community

© COPYRIGHT 2016 SCHOOL NUTRITION ASSOCIATION – #ANC16 – SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS

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