- Author: Susana C. Bruzzone-Miller
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 Pre-K to high school. Although Farm to school programs may vary in each community they include one or more of the following:
- Procurement—local foods are purchased, promoted and served in school cafeterias or as a snack or part of a taste-test activity.
- Education—students participate in agricultural, health or nutrition related activities
- School gardens—students engage in hands-on learning through gardening
The farm to school movement is alive and well in Ventura County. Sandy Curwood, Child Nutrition Services Director for Conejo Valley Unified School District and California Farm to School Regional Lead coordinated an event at HAREC. Over 30 farmers, garden educators and school nutrition and food service administrators gathered for a Local Foods Procurement Workshop hosted by the South Central Coast Regional California Farm to School Network. This region encompasses Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties. The purpose was to bring like-minds together to share and learn from each other. Curwood led a discussion for direct marketing and provided tools for developing contracts between local farms and schools. A panel of local farmers discussed the opportunities, obstacles and sense of pride associated with sourcing to school districts. Garden educators had the opportunity to network and share resources.
Additionally, Adam Kesselman from the Center for Ecoliteracy introduced California Thursdays. This program is a statewide collaboration between the Center for Ecoliteracy and a network of school districts and organizations that agree to serve healthy, freshly prepared school meals made from California-grown and processed fruits, vegetables, grains and proteins. Kesselman shared that “when fifty percent of youth in the U.S. get more than half their calories from school lunch programs, it makes a case for healthy fresh prepared meals”. Currently 43 districts participate in California Thursdays. Sandy Curwood has embraced the program in her district and is working with a procurement consortium that may help other Ventura County districts participate.
- Author: Susana C. Bruzzone-Miller
In the spirit of eating and sourcing local—Food Corps seeks to recruit a homegrown service member to work with Ventura Unified School District (VUSD) for the 2015-2016 school year.
Food Corps is a nationwide team of AmeriCorps leaders who connect kids to real food and help them grow up healthy.
Food Corps recruits, train and are placed into limited-resource schools for a year of service implementing a three-ingredient recipe for healthy kids.
Food Corps Service members provide:
- Knowledge: food and nutrition education that gives kids the information they need to make smart choices
- Engagement: hands-on activities like gardening and cooking that foster skills and pride around healthy food
- Access: connecting nutritious meals from local farms
Currently, VUSD and Food Corps collaborate in the HAREC 4-H Student Farm, an afterschool program that teaches middle school youth to grow food that is then used in the cafeteria. To learn more about the opportunities with Food Corps at VUSD contact Alise Echele, Healthy Schools Project Coordinator at alise.echele@venturausd.org or apply for a Food Corps position at www.foodcorps.org.
Food Corps Informational flyer