farm to school 101

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Farm to School: the ABC’s and 123’s of How to Get Started National Farm to School Network

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What is farm to school? Why should you do farm to school? How can you start a farm to school program? Where can you turn for more farm to school resources?

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Page 1: Farm to School 101

Farm to School: the ABC’s and 123’s of

How to Get Started

National Farm to School Network

Page 2: Farm to School 101

Farm to School

Local, Farm fresh produce in schools

School Gardens, Composting, Recycling

Nutrition Education / Experiential Learning

Farm tours / Visits by farmers

Page 3: Farm to School 101

Outline

HowHow you do Farm to School

WhyWhy we need Farm to School

WhatWhat is Farm to School

WhoWho can implement Farm to School

Page 4: Farm to School 101

WhatWhat is Farm to School

Farm to school is a school-based program that connects schools (K-12) and local farms with the objectives of:

serving healthy meals in school cafeterias

improving student nutrition

providing agriculture, health and nutrition education opportunities

supporting small and medium-sized local and regional farmers

Page 5: Farm to School 101

Connecting local farmers to schools

buy and feature farm fresh foods

incorporate nutrition-based curriculum

provide students experiential learning opportunities through farm visits, gardening, and recycling programs

access to new markets

Page 6: Farm to School 101

Benefits of Farm to School

Davis School District

Salad Bar Lunch (2004)

Winters School District

Salad Bar Lunch (2004)

3/4th cup/child/day

100%100% of USDA requirements

1.2 cup/child/day

162%162% of USDA requirements

The minimum USDA requirement for Vegetables and Fruits in a school meal for Grades K-6 is 2 or more servings of vegetables and/or fruits, equal to 3/4

cup per child per day, plus an additional 1/2 cup over the course of a week.

Page 7: Farm to School 101

www.FarmToSchool.org

Page 8: Farm to School 101

www.FarmToSchool.org

Page 9: Farm to School 101

WhyWhy we need Farm to School

Page 10: Farm to School 101

Why we need farm to school

For our Children

By some estimates 25 to 30% of American children have excess body weight, and there has been a 2.3- to 3.3-fold increase in childhood obesity over the last 25 years.

Our children will be the first generation to have a life expectancy shorter than their parents.

% of school-age children 6-11 years that are overweight late 1970’s = 6.5%2000 = 15.3%2007 = 25%

1 in 3 children born in 2000 will be diabetic in their lifetime (CDC).

Page 11: Farm to School 101

Why we need farm to school

For our Farmers

330 farm operators leave their land every week.

– USDA Economic Research Service (ERS) predicted that 98 percent of total farm operator income will come from off farm sources and at last count only 7 percent of all farm families reported 100 percent "on-farm" income.

The farmer’s share of every dollar spent on food has dropped to 19 cents from 41 cents in 1950.

Buying direct from local farmers generates 44% more revenue for the local economy than purchasing food at supermarkets. In direct marketing initiatives, farmers take home 80-90% of each dollar the consumer spends.

In the 1930s, there were close to seven million farms in the United States. Today, just over two million farms remain—less than 1 percent of the country's population.

Page 12: Farm to School 101

Why we need farm to school

For our Environment

Crop Varieties lost between 1903-1983Tomatoes: 80.6 percentLettuce: 92.8 percentCorn: 90.8 percentApples: 86.2 percent

In the U.S., the typical food item now travels from 1,500 to 2,400 miles from farm to plate, i.e. A head of CA lettuce shipped to Washington DC requires 36x more fuel energy to transport than the food energy it provides.

Page 13: Farm to School 101

Why we need farm to school

Dollars and Sense

Price of feeding one child school lunch during their tenure in k-12 = $6,000

Price of treating one adult for illness related to poor nutrition over the course

of their life= $175,000

Farm to School = Priceless

Page 14: Farm to School 101

HowHow you do Farm to School

Page 15: Farm to School 101

Implementing Farm to School

Local Product used in:– salad bars – hot entrees / other meal items– snack in classroom– taste tests– fundraisers

Educational Activities: – chef/farmer in class, cooking demos– greenhouses, waste management, recycling, and

composting– farm tours– harvest of the month– CSA in the classroom– School gardens

Page 16: Farm to School 101

Let’s get started

Start small—taste testing, farm tour, apples

Organize various stakeholders/hold a meeting

Research area farmers

Contact food service director and school administration

Identify funding sources

Market the program

Volunteer

Page 17: Farm to School 101

Headlines Help

Study: Kids Will Eat Healthy School Meals

Upstat

e farm

ers to

suppl

y

school

veggi

es

Page 18: Farm to School 101

WhoWho can implement Farm to School

YOUstudents farmers

chefsnon-profit food groups

administrators

farmer organizations

board members

principals

community membersschool food service staff

PTA

teachers

parents

YOU

YOU

YOU

Page 19: Farm to School 101

Relationships

Q. What’s the key to sustainability?

This whole thing is about relationships.

Local farmers have two distinct advantages: Procedure - We can get fresh, high quality and safe product to the

institutions in 24 hours after harvest including all the post handling procedures. Relationship- The buyer and the grower have a real, face-to-face

knowledge of one another. We must distinguish our product and ourselves and be unique.

“We are cultivating more than just food here; this is about community, this is

about relationships.”

Page 20: Farm to School 101

National Farm to School Network

Networking

Training and Technical Assistance

PolicyInformation Services

Media and Marketing

Page 21: Farm to School 101
Page 22: Farm to School 101

www.farmtoschool.org

Debra Eschmeyer

[email protected]

419-753-3412

Page 23: Farm to School 101