July 2016 Newsletter![]() Food Rescue Friends, It is an honor and privilege to announce that Food Rescue has received a $75,000 grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust. The funds for the grant will go toward continuing to develop our K-12 Food Rescue program in Marion County. For more information on the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust, visit http://www.ninapulliamtrust.org , and view their Grantees link to view the incredible work they do in Indianapolis and beyond. We are thankful to be associated with the great work of the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust. In addition, Food Rescue was recognized in July by the global organization Food Tank as one the top global organizations working to put an end to food waste. The article can be seen here. We are also excited to announce the appointment of K-12 Food Rescue National Director of Student Leadership, Hanna Wondmagegn, a senior at East Mecklenburg HS in Charlotte, NC, who is now the student face of K-12 Food Rescue nationally. Her powerful story can be seen here, and we believe she will inspire many state student leadership directors in the coming years. Through speaking engagements, conference calls, national webinars, and website inquiry follow up,400 schools have implemented K-12 Food Rescue policies related to Share Tables and food donations. Through collaborations with Vermont and New York state agencies, great progress has been made spreading Indiana's historic state guidelines to impact our nation. On July 14th, Food Rescue will be leading a conference call in Connecticut with several school officials and government agency employees that will lay the groundwork for Connecticut to become the 4th state to move toward adopting student tray to trash guidelines for food donations of unopened, unpeeled, and unwanted food items from their trays. More are undoubtedly to follow. Stay tuned for more big announcements from Food Rescue. We are working with school districts in states all over the country, providing educational resources and mentoring to put an end to school food waste, and there will be more exciting news on the horizon. Finally, we would like to take this time to say thank you to one of our amazing Food Rescue board members, Steve Witta, who has spent countless hours designing our online tracking tool that allows schools to track their food items kept out of a landfill, even identifying meals kept out of a landfill, and CO2e (carbon dioxide equivalents) estimated to be kept from entering the environment. Tracking 2.0 was recently launched, so check out the new improvements. Best Regards, John Williamson Executive Director Food Rescue Great article by Foodtank's Danielle Nierenberg and Sarah Small
Thanks to Foodtank, Danielle Nierenberg, and Sarah Small for Food Rescue's inclusion on a list of organizations we admire! It’s no secret that food loss and food waste are big problems. At least 1.3 billion tons of food is lost or wasted every year—in fields, during transport, in storage, at restaurants, and in markets in industrialized and developed countries alike. In rich countries alone, some 222 million tons of food is wasted, which is almost as much as the entire net food production of sub-Saharan Africa. And according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), wasted food costs some US$680 billion in industrialized countries and US$310 billion in developing countries. While food waste presents obvious moral and economic dilemmas, it also creates environmental problems. As food decomposes in landfills it releases methane, a greenhouse gas that is 27 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Thankfully, businesses, policymakers, farmers, researchers, and the funding and donor communities are taking action to tackle food loss and food waste. ReFED, for example, is a collaboration of businesses, nonprofits, foundations, and government leaders that came together to analyze the problem of food waste and develop practical solutions.Their report highlights 27 of the most cost-effective ways to reduce food waste based on societal economic value, business profit potential, and other non-financial impacts. National and international agencies have also made commitments to end food waste. One of the recently released Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) focuses on responsible consumption and production of food. It challenges all of us to halve per capita global food waste at the retail and consumer levels by 2030. In addition, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) set the first-ever national food waste reduction goal, which aimed to reduce food waste by 50 percent by 2030. Here are 58 food recovery organizations that are working to meet these national and international goals and reduce food waste worldwide.
![]() -By Jennifer Brilliant-Lead Program Director Tuesday night, we at Food Rescue were humbled to be recognized as a CVA Trailblazer by NUVO magazine. For 18 years, NUVO has selected organizations making a difference in Indianapolis. We were honored to be in the company of two other organizations, local farms, Hawkins Family Farm and Brandywine Creek Farms. Both are doing amazing things to ensure people have healthy food to eat. I encourage you to take a look at this week's NUVO and read about the wonderful things happening in Indy in the name of improving the lives of others. I hope that you are inspired to take action and help to stop the one billion packaged, edible food items being tossed into landfills from schools each year. You can write a letter to your school leaders, talk to your kids, help start a Food Rescue club in your community. All the resources you need can be found on our website and we are always here to help. A little action can lead to big change! What have you done today to make a difference? WASTE NOTZero Waste Program spreads across townBy Gabriella Cruz
[email protected] May 12, 2016 What started out as one local mom’s fight against food waste has recently become a full fledged war involving not only Andover, but surrounding towns as well. Since launching the Zero Waste Program at Sanborn Elementary in December 2015, Carina Schusterman’s dream of eliminating waste in Andover has increasingly become a reality. Getting the program started, though, was not easy. Schusterman spent three years pleading with town and school officials to implement the Zero Waste Program at Sanborn. During those three years, she also fought to get permits, approvals and support from the town and Board of Health. Collective effort Schusterman and other parents began collecting uneaten fruits and unopened packaged foods during lunch at Sanborn Elementary last year and the initiative has since spread throughout town and garnered recognition from state officials as well. But recognition has never been Schusterman’s goal. “We want the kids to be recognized and we want them to realize that they can make a difference,” Schusterman said. “Our effort is really to educate the kids that food is not trash.” Schusterman and other parent volunteers collect the unopened and unused food each week and donate it to local families in need. Each day, they encourage students to take only the food they will eat and educate them about food waste. “You look around the cafeteria at Sanborn and see 400 little minds,” Selen Aktar, also a Sanborn parent, added. “They are the generation that can change the world. We just want to show them how.” State awards Earlier this month at the State House, Schusterman, Aktar and other parent-volunteers Claire Stocker and Brad Weeden received Energy & Environmental Secretary Matthew Beaton’s Award for Excellence in Energy and Environmental Education for their efforts in getting the program started. On Monday, Senator Barbara L’Italien, D-Andover, presented Schusterman, Aktar, Stocker and a group of Sanborn student volunteers with a citation from the senate acknowledging their involvement in the Zero Waste program. Later this month, Schusterman, Aktar and Stocker will again receive an award at the Statehouse. This time, the award is from the Outstanding School-led Project in Climate Action from Green Schools, a Massachusetts-based, national non-profit organization that provides educational environmental programs and resources to students and schools. Since April of this year, St. Augustine’s, West and Doherty middle schools, High Plain Elementary and a school in North Andover have all implemented the Zero Waste program. Schusterman said parents from schools in Boxford and Tewksbury have reached out to her to start the program in their towns as well. Spreading out Just after receiving the citation from Sen. L’Italien, another local parent sent Schusterman an email requesting help getting the program started at South Elementary School. By the beginning of next school year, Andover’s Department of Public Works Director Marc Fournier said all Andover schools will be participating in the Zero Waste Program. “We’ll be meeting with head custodians and food service workers and figuring out how we can institutionalize this program,” Fournier said. “We’ll get the infrastructure in place and begin to conserve these valuable resources. It will help the town reduce its carbon footprint.” Fournier added that the program will not only help educate students about the importance of minimizing waste, but will also help adults understand the impact of conserving waste. But for Aktar and the other parent volunteers, Andover is just one small part of a much bigger goal. “It’s really about changing lifestyles,” Aktar said. “These kids are going to save the planet and we want to help them. I always say that the planet is sick. Together, we’re going to heal it.” |
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