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Tuesday, July 30, 2024

Growing Hope is Hiring: Incubator Kitchen Manager & Development Manager

Good afternoon,

We are excited to share that we are hiring two positions. Descriptions can be found online or attached to this email. Please share with your networks and anyone interested in investing in our local food system!

Best,

Julius


--
Julius Buzzard
Executive Director
(Pronouns: he/him/his)

734.786.8401 Office
734.389.5045 Cell

Schedule a Meeting | Donate | Follow us on Facebook & Instagram 


Growing Hope fosters an equitable and sustainable local food system where all people are empowered to grow, sell, buy, prepare and eat nourishing food. 



MIFARMTOSCHOOL is a listserv that links farm-to-school stakeholders and practitioners in Michigan, from school food service directors and school administrators to growers and distributors. Content posted to MIFARMTOSCHOOL does not necessarily reflect the views of Michigan State University or the Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems.

Monday, July 29, 2024

Register Now! What you need to know: Grants 101 webinar on Thursday, August 22, 2024 from the Great Lakes Midwest Regional Food Business Center

Join us for Chefs in the Garden

Good Morning!

Growing Hope is thrilled to announce the return of the beloved Chefs in the Garden fundraiser, set to take place on Sept. 15, 2024, and Sept. 22, 2024, at the Growing Hope Farm in Ypsilanti. Beginning at 5 pm each evening, the two-part dinner series featuring celebrated chefs Kiki Louya and Ji Hye Kim will offer an experience of local farm-to-table food and encourage support for strengthening our local food system. In addition to the memorable dining experience, attendees will enjoy auctions, raffles, and live entertainment.

Please share this with your communities. We hope to see you there! 

Best,

Julius

--
Julius Buzzard
Executive Director
(Pronouns: he/him/his)

734.786.8401 Office
734.389.5045 Cell

Schedule a Meeting | Donate | Follow us on Facebook & Instagram 


Growing Hope fosters an equitable and sustainable local food system where all people are empowered to grow, sell, buy, prepare and eat nourishing food. 



MIFARMTOSCHOOL is a listserv that links farm-to-school stakeholders and practitioners in Michigan, from school food service directors and school administrators to growers and distributors. Content posted to MIFARMTOSCHOOL does not necessarily reflect the views of Michigan State University or the Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems.

Thursday, July 25, 2024

Fw: 10 Cents a Meal Budget Passed for FY ’25

Greetings All!

A HUGE win for Michigan school food was made official with the signing of the budget yesterday.

In addition to local fruit, veg, and dry beans, 10 Cents dollars can now be used for local transport and food service labor costs! We are excited about this increased incentive for scratch cooking and purchasing for local producers!

For more information about 10 Cents a Meal the website: https://www.tencentsmichigan.org/

Application for this years grants will be coming out in August! 


May Tsupros  (they/them)

Director, Farm to Institution Programs 

Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems 

College of Agriculture and Natural Resources

Natural Resources Building, Room 312A

480 Wilson Rd., East Lansing MI


Michigan State University occupies the ancestral, traditional, and contemporary Lands of the Anishinaabeg–Three Fires Confederacy of Ojibwe, Odawa, and Potawatomi peoples. The University resides on Land ceded in the 1819 Treaty of Saginaw.



From: Ten Cents A Meal <tencents@tencentsmichigan.org>
Sent: Thursday, July 25, 2024 9:00 AM
To: Tsupros, May <tsupros1@msu.edu>
Subject: 10 Cents a Meal Budget Passed for FY '25
 
10 Cents A Meal for Michigan's Kids & Farms

May --

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

July 25th, 2024

10 Cents a Meal Budget Passed for FY '25 with New Program Options

The 10 Cents a Meal for Michigan's Kids & Farms program has been funded within this year's school aid budget and will receive $4.5 million for the program in FY '25. This program year will bring some great new options. Starting in October, grantees will be able to use a portion of their funding to support labor and local food transportation costs. The purpose of these funds is to enable grantees to expand their ability to process local food, increase scratch cooking, and access new suppliers, new food products, and/or new partnerships with other Child Nutrition Program sponsors to strengthen the local food supply chain. More information will be available during the annual application process.

"Here at Gull Lake Community Schools, we have been running a very successful program. More labor comes into play when we use fresh options. Funding for this would be a straight benefit to current work being done, and will continue to make serving the best produce Michigan has to offer easier," said Director of Dining Services for Gull Lake Community Schools, Joshua Reames.

10 Cents a Meal provides schools, early care and education sites, and other organizations participating in USDA Child Nutrition programs with match incentive funding up to 10 cents per meal to purchase and serve Michigan-grown fruits, vegetables, and dry beans. The program supports Michigan's economy by incentivizing participating grantees to spend more money on food from Michigan farms and food businesses and promotes relationship building across the local food supply chain. 

"I believe all kids need fresh, healthy food to be able to learn, and that's why we fought to secure $4.5 million for the 10 Cents a Meal program. This investment will expand students' access to local and nutritious food while bringing communities together, and I'm proud to support it," said state Senator Darrin Camilleri (D-District 4).

In the 2023-2024 program year there are 270 10 Cents a Meal grantees reaching approximately 593,882 children, spanning all 10 regions of the Michigan Association of Superintendents & Administrators and 66 of Michigan's 83 counties. 

The continued funding for the program is just one way the legislature has committed to support for the health and wellbeing of Michigan's children and the local food economy. This year's $82.5 billion budget includes $19 billion for school aid, and allocates $200 million to continue providing universally-free breakfast and lunch to Michigan's public school students. The FY '25 budget also reserves $3 million to establish the Farm to Family Program, focusing on building agricultural diversity, fueling economic growth in agriculture and increasing food security. 

"We have a responsibility to ensure every student has what they need to be their best self, and we know that part of that formula for success is access to healthy, nutritious food. This year's budget builds on the progress we have made by continuing to fund free breakfast and lunch for all Michigan students while making smart investments in our state's agriculture and local food economy." said State Senator Sarah Anthony (D-District 21).

The program is administered in collaboration between the Michigan Department of Education, Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development, Groundwork Center for Resilient Communities, and MSU Center for Regional Food Systems.


Find more information about 10 Cents a Meal at tencentsmichigan.org.

###

Program Contact:

MDE Farm to Program team at MDE FarmtoProgram@michigan.gov 

Wendy Crowley, Michigan Department of Education, CrowleyW@michigan.gov 

Cheyenne Liberti, Michigan Department of Education, LibertiC@michigan.gov

Megan Maddox,Michigan Department of Education, MaddoxM2@michigan.gov

Melanie Wong, Groundwork Center for Resilient Communities, melanie.wong@groundworkcenter.org 

Amanda Brezzell, Groundwork Center for Resilient Communities, amanda.brezzell@groundworkcenter.org

Lori Yelton, Michigan Department of Rural Agriculture and Development, YeltonL@michigan.gov 

May Tsupros, MSU Center for Regional Food Systems,  Tsupros1@msu.edu

Megan McManus, MSU Center for Regional Food Systems, Mcmanu60@msu.edu 

Ten Cents A Meal
https://www.tencentsmichigan.org/

10 Cents A Meal for Michigan's Kids & Farms · MI, United States
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Monday, July 22, 2024

Get Schools Cooking Application Opens 8/1

FYI, in case you haven't seen this yet. Please share with your networks!

Seema

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Get Schools Cooking

A program of Chef Ann Foundation, Get Schools Cooking (GSC) is an intensive 3-year assessment and strategic planning program that provides school districts with comprehensive support to transition from a heat and serve to scratch cook operational model.

GSC is open to school districts across the country thanks to generous support from the program's partners, including Whole Kids Foundation, the Rachael Ray Foundation, and an Anonymous Funder.

Program Targeted Outcomes

  1. Increase knowledge surrounding scratch cooking
  2. Assist with implementing operational changes to support scratch cooking
  3. Support districts working towards a scratch-cook meal program centered around fresh, whole foods

Eligibility

To apply, school districts must meet the following criteria:

  • Be firmly committed to working towards a scratch-cook meal program centered around fresh, whole foods
  • Demonstrate support for improvement from district leadership
  • Participate in the National School Lunch Program and run a self-operated food service program

The application opens August 1, 2024.

Learn more at thelunchbox.org/gsc.

--

Seema Jolly | she/her/hers

FoodCorps | Impact & Partnerships Lead, Michigan


(269) 352-6224 (cell)

foodcorps.org | @foodcorps


MIFARMTOSCHOOL is a listserv that links farm-to-school stakeholders and practitioners in Michigan, from school food service directors and school administrators to growers and distributors. Content posted to MIFARMTOSCHOOL does not necessarily reflect the views of Michigan State University or the Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems.

Friday, July 19, 2024

FoodCorps RFP for Curriculum Writer, Please Share!

Hello!

FoodCorps has an RFP out to help revamp our curriculum. Please share widely with those you know who have experience with curriculum development at the elementary level. 

About FoodCorps
FoodCorps partners with schools and communities to nourish kids' health, education, and sense of belonging so that every child, in every school, experiences the joy and power of food. FoodCorps' AmeriCorps members serve alongside educators and school nutrition leaders to provide kids with nourishing meals, food education, and culturally affirming experiences with food that celebrate and nurture the whole child. Building on this direct service, FoodCorps advocates for policy change, grows networks, and develops leaders in service of every kid's health and wellbeing. FoodCorps' goal is that by 2030, every child will have access to food education and nourishing free meals in school! To learn more about FoodCorps, visit https://foodcorps.org/

The Opportunity
We seek to create a curriculum that is both rigorous and joyful. Through this curriculum, students will be able to increase their sense of agency, belonging, and mastery fostering their ability to make informed decisions about nutrition and well-being. Moreover, our revised curriculum will utilize food as a tool for literacy – recognizing the importance of literacy skills as foundational and necessary for students to exercise agency- not only in their choices about food
and nutrition, but throughout all aspects of their lives.

The redesigned curriculum takes inspiration from Project Based Learning - encouraging students to constantly ask "why am I learning this" and "how will I take action." It applies an anti-racism lens to both its content and teaching using the Universal Design for Learning framework.

The redesigned curriculum will be piloted by FoodCorps' Americorps members, whose experiences range from emerging to seasoned educators, throughout the 2024-2025 school year. Organizational and community stakeholders, including these Americorps members and alumni, will be providing feedback on the lessons to inform its design, content, and usability. A full scale launch of the new curriculum will take place in the following year.

We are seeking a partner who will utilize a curricular framework and lesson structure developed by FoodCorps' Training & Content Team to create approximately 16 lesson plans per grade band unit (K-1, 2-3, and 4-5). You will leverage FoodCorps' existing materials and/or develop new materials to meet student outcomes. You will work directly with our Training & Content team
to understand the vision and direction of FoodCorps' program and will collaborate with the team to refine lessons using feedback provided from key stakeholders.

More info here and instructions to apply. Deadline to apply is August 2nd. For questions, please reach out to: morna.ha@foodcorps.org

Thanks for spreading the word!

Seema

--

Seema Jolly | she/her/hers

FoodCorps | Impact & Partnerships Lead, Michigan


(269) 352-6224 (cell)

foodcorps.org | @foodcorps


MIFARMTOSCHOOL is a listserv that links farm-to-school stakeholders and practitioners in Michigan, from school food service directors and school administrators to growers and distributors. Content posted to MIFARMTOSCHOOL does not necessarily reflect the views of Michigan State University or the Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems.

Monday, July 15, 2024

Michigan Awarded Two Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub Grants

Michigan Awarded Two Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub Grants 

Building More Local, More Nourishing, More Loving School Food Systems in Michigan


Contact: Megan McManus, mcmanu60@msu.edu 

Release Date: July 15, 2024 

East Lansing, MI – Michigan organizations received funding from the Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub to create more local, nourishing, and loved school meals across the Lake Michigan region, which includes Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin. Michigan provides over 190 million school meals to students across the state during the year, and each and every meal is powered by a dynamic system of farmers, food producers, processors, distributors, and more.  


The Innovation Hub, convened by the Illinois Public Health Institute, provides two different types of grant awards to spark and support innovative ideas to strengthen school food systems and products. The Spark Awards and Innovation Collaborative Awards are funded through the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Healthy Meals Incentives Initiative to stimulate the creation of a resilient, equitable, and nutritious school food system. Awardees are slated to begin their projects in August 2024. 


“We are thrilled to fund partners that are driving change at every part of the school food system,” said May Tsupros, Director of Farm to Institution Programs at MSU Center for Regional Food Systems. “In addition to providing local and nourishing school meals to children in Michigan, the projects supported by the Innovation Hub will boost the local economy by supporting farmers and food producers that have been affected by inequitable systems.”  


Michigan State University’s Center for Regional Food Systems is working alongside the Illinois Public Health Institute, and other national and regional partners in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin to create the Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub, especially prioritizing communities that do not have equitable access to resources. The Innovation Hub will fuel change for Michigan’s school food system, creating abundance—including funding, support, and nourishing food choices—for our farms, local businesses, schools, and communities.  


"We look forward to funding organizations who have trusted relationships with their communities to tailor these innovative programs to meet their community needs,” said Dr. Crystal Pirtle Tyler, CEO of the Illinois Public Health Institute. “We understand the pivotal role school nutrition plays in the lives of students across the Lake Michigan region and we look forward to the opportunity to support and grow these innovative programs with our awardees.” 


The organizations that are receiving funding in Michigan include: 


  • Innovation Collaborative Award: Partridge Creek Farm, Ishpeming, Michigan 


  • Spark Award: Kalamazoo Valley Community College, Kalamazoo, Michigan 


“Through these awards, the Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub is helping communities address historic harms by supporting immediate and systems-level change that will spur local economies, strengthen our food systems and create more nourishing school meals,” said Kathryn Bernstein, Food Systems and Nutrition Policy Program Director at the Illinois Public Health Institute. Future iterations of these awards will be available in 2025. Learn more about the Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub, see a full list of funded partners across the Lake Michigan region and connect with a State Lead today at InnovateSchoolFood.org. 


For the full list of awardees released by the USDA Food and Nutrition Service, please refer to the School Food System Transformation Challenge Sub-Grants website or their Press Release 

About Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub


Lake Michigan School Food System Innovation Hub nurtures community-driven collaborations that reimagine students’ meals. By working together, we’re building pathways for local, nutritious and culturally relevant food to reach more schools across Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin and Indiana — especially in areas that don’t have equitable access to resources. We offer funding, training and other help to collectives of schools, school districts, organizations, farmers, producers, suppliers and distributors who are transforming our school food system to better serve our communities. We are funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and convened by the Illinois Public Health Institute. Organizations leading the initiative include Seven Generations Ahead (Illinois), Michigan State University’s Center for Regional Food Systems (Michigan), NWI Food Council (Indiana), Kids Forward (Wisconsin), healthTIDE (Wisconsin), National Farm to School Network, Chicago Food Policy Action Council and Action for Healthy Kids. InnovateSchoolFood.org  


About Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems  

 

The Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems advances regionally-rooted food systems through applied research, education, and outreach by uniting the knowledge and experience of diverse stakeholders with that of MSU faculty and staff. Our work fosters a thriving economy, equity, and sustainability for Michigan, the nation, and the planet by advancing systems that produce food that is healthy, green, fair, and affordable.  

 

Learn more at foodsystems.msu.edu 


MSU Center for Regional Food System's Michigan Farm to School and institutional food procurement work is conducted in collaboration with MSU Extension and is also funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Michigan Department of Education. 

About Michigan Farm to School

Farm to School centers around efforts to serve local foods in school and early care and education settings. We share ideas, tools and resources to support a range of efforts, from school garden programming to farmer visits and field trips.

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