Tag Archives: Food Hub

Today and every Saturday!!! 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. …at the mighty St. John’s church! The beginnings of a FOOD HUB???

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FREE!

EVERY SATURDAY MORNING

at ST. JOHN’S CHURCH

TEMPLE STREET

FREE FRUIT AND VEGETABLES!

For you – and your children!!!

THANK YOU STOP AND SHOP!!!!

Free fresh fruits and vegetables will now be available from 9:30 to 11:30 Saturday mornings at the St. Francis Xavier Center soup kitchen.

St. John’s Church

20 Temple St.

The St. Francis Xavier Center also has a food pantry and serves hot breakfasts, Mon. – Fri.

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Also, today! 9:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. REC’s Farmers Market at Crystal Park, Main Street!

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Go, REC, go!!!!

– R.T.

Thursday Congressman McGovern visits a food hub!

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Rosalie – and lots of her neighbors – would buy their produce at a Food Hub. (Rosalie’s shack!) pic:R.T.

Congressman McGovern will praise the work Daily Table is doing to help local families and highlight it as a model for other communities!

This Thursday!

DORCHESTER

2:15 PM – 3:15 PM

Visit of Daily Table Grocery

Congressman McGovern visits Daily Table Grocery, a not-for-profit retail store that offers our community a variety of affordable and healthy food for low-income families and works with a large network of growers, supermarkets, manufacturers, and other suppliers who donate their excess, healthy food in an attempt to help reduce food waste. Congressman McGovern will praise the work Daily Table is doing to help local families and highlight it as a model for other communities.

WHO: Congressman Jim McGovern (MA-02), Daily Table Founder and President Doug Rauch, Community Leaders and Anti-Hunger Advocates

WHERE: Daily Table Grocery, 450 Washington Street, Dorchester

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Reposting Congressman McGovern’s speech: America Spends $218 Billion Every Year on Food That Is Never Eaten

Reducing Food Waste Is Key to Helping 50 million Americans Struggling with Hunger

Congressman Jim McGovern recently spoke on the House Floor to raise awareness about food waste in the U.S. and to praise efforts in Massachusetts and across the country to reduce food waste and help the 50 million Americans – including 16 million children – who struggle with hunger every year.

“American consumers, businesses, and farms spend an estimated $218 billion per year growing, processing, transporting, and disposing of food that is never eaten. Up to 40 percent of all food grown is never eaten,” Congressman McGovern said. “Forty to fifty million tons of food is sent to landfills each year, plus another 10 million tons is left unharvested on farms. This food waste translates into approximately 387 billion calories of food that went unconsumed.

“With 50 million Americans – including 16 million children –struggling with hunger every year, these are startling figures,” McGovern added. “We know food waste occurs throughout the supply chain – from harvesting to manufacturing to retail operations and consumer habits. We must do more to reduce food waste at every stage, recover food that would have otherwise been wasted, and recycle unavoidable waste as animal feed, compost, or energy.

“Thankfully, there’s already a lot of great work being done to raise awareness about the problem of food waste,” McGovern concluded. “I’m pleased to see so many partners at every level of the food supply chain taking action to reduce food waste, but still, more needs to be done. Let’s solve the problem of food waste and let’s end hunger now.”

In his speech, Congressman McGovern recognized Massachusetts leaders and organizations like the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts for helping to reduce food waste as part of the larger push to tackle hunger. McGovern also thanked Becker College, College of the Holy Cross, Smith College, the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute for their work with the Campus Kitchen Project and the Food Recovery Network to provide hunger relief in their local communities through campus food recovery initiatives.

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Full Text of Congressman McGovern’s Speech:

“Thousands of people will gather in Washington, D.C. this week for “Feeding the 5000” – an event designed to bring awareness to the issue of food waste.

“Participants will be served a communal meal made entirely out of food that would otherwise have been discarded – in other words, wasted.

“Since 2009, Feedback, a global environmental organization working to end food waste, has hosted dozens of “Feeding the 5000” events in cities across the globe.

“I’m pleased to see so many local partners – including government agencies, charitable organizations, NGOs, industry, and chefs – joining together to call attention to food waste.

“Because the truth of the matter is, we’ll need all of these partners working together to solve the issue of food waste.

“Last year, the USDA announced their first-ever food waste reduction goal, calling for a 50 percent reduction in food waste by 2030. USDA is working with charitable organizations, faith-based groups, and the private sector and I believe this goal is 100 percent achievable.

“American consumers, businesses, and farms spend an estimated $218 billion per year growing, processing, transporting, and disposing of food that is never eaten.

“Up to 40 percent of all food grown is never eaten. Forty to fifty million tons of food is sent to landfills each year, plus another 10 million tons is left unharvested on farms.

“This food waste translates into approximately 387 billion calories of food that went unconsumed.

“With 50 million Americans – including 16 million children –struggling with hunger every year, these are startling figures.

“We know food waste occurs throughout the supply chain – from harvesting to manufacturing to retail operations and consumer habits. We must do more to reduce food waste at every stage, recover food that would have otherwise been wasted, and recycle unavoidable waste as animal feed, compost, or energy.

“Thankfully, there’s already a lot of great work being done to raise awareness about the problem of food waste.

“Just last week I attended a screening of the documentary film, Just Eat It at Amherst Cinema, organized by the Food Bank of Western Massachusetts. Just Eat It follows a couple, Jen and Grant, as they stop going to the grocery store and live solely off of foods that would have been thrown away. Jen and Grant were able to find an abundance of perfectly safe and healthy food available for consumption that would have been thrown away.

“It’s exciting to see new partnerships forming to study food waste and find ways to use this perfectly good food to reduce hunger in our communities.

“One such private-public collaboration, ReFED, has brought together over 30 business, government, and NGO leaders committed to wide-scale solutions to U.S. food waste.

“In March, 2016, ReFED released a Roadmap that charts the course for a 20 percent reduction of food waste within a decade.

“The Roadmap calls for farmers to reduce unharvested food and create secondary markets for imperfect produce. It calls on manufacturers to reduce inefficiencies, make packaging adjustments, and standardize date labeling. It calls on food service companies to further implement waste tracking and incorporate imperfect produce and smaller plates into restaurants. And it urges the federal government to strengthen tax incentives for food donation and consider standardized date labeling legislation.

“The good news is that many in the industry are already taking steps to dramatically cut down on wasted food by implementing robust donation programs.

“For example, Starbucks recently announced it will soon scale up its successful food donation pilot program nationwide. In partnership with the Food Donation Connection and Feeding America, Starbucks will donate unsold food from more than 7,000 company-operated stores –salads, sandwiches, and other refrigerated items – to the Feeding America food bank network. By 2021, that amounts to almost 50 million meals.

“Our college campuses are also stepping up. Both the Campus Kitchen Project and the Food Recovery Network work with college dining facilities and students to provide hunger relief in their local communities. In my congressional district, Becker College, College of the Holy Cross, Smith College, the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and Worcester Polytechnic Institute all have campus food recovery initiatives.

“Over the past 35 years, Feeding America has demonstrated an outstanding commitment to ensuring food that would have otherwise been wasted makes its way to food banks across the country and into the homes of families in need.

“There are dozens of other industry leaders also taking steps to reduce food waste by implementing manufacturing upgrades, maximizing harvests, and utilizing recycling initiatives.

“I appreciate the efforts of the Food Waste Reduction Alliance in bringing together industry partners to reduce food waste, shrink the environmental footprint, and alleviate hunger in our communities.

“Reducing food waste is one step we can take toward our goal of ending hunger in the United States and throughout the world.

“I’m pleased to see so many partners at every level of the food supply chain taking action to reduce food waste, but still, more needs to be done. Let’s solve the problem of food waste and let’s end hunger now.”

Worcester needs a REAL FOOD HUB!

By Rosalie Tirella

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I love my city, but we have to deal with our hunger problem …

What Worcester needs badly!!: a TRUE FOOD HUB! Just like they have in Greenfield! A store in the city open 7 days a week, 9 – 5, a building, a physical place to shop like Price Chopper or Shop Rite … only filled with locally sourced produce that typically wouldn’t be sold in supermarkets. A food hub is just like a supermarket, only it sells local farmers’ less-than-perfect produce – for way CHEAP! Way way less $$ than the supermarkets and our high-end farmers market, here, ironically, in our inner city – by Kelley Square!!! Kelley Square – home to so many poor people, refugees, immigrants – DIVERSITY! The Worcester of tomorrow! You don’t see our future at this boutique farmers market by Kelley Square. You see … gentrification. It’s an affront to the real neighborhood and its people!

Did you know…Farmers throw away veggies that aren’t ready for prime time! These “rejects” are still amazingly tasty and healthy – fresh from the good earth! FOOD HUBS answer the question: Why not give our working poor, our immigrants a chance – a place! – to buy these homeless, kitchen-less vegetables and fruits? The working poor and immigrants are not patronizing the high-end farmers market any ways, and they often live out of walking distance from produce-selling supermarkets … so no one loses customers. It’s an entirely different customer base – the people in my neighborhood! The folks in all of Worcester’s inner-city neighborhoods!

Let’s do the right thing!

We can’t let politics or a fake, self-obsessed pretend little girl/real-life bitch (I’ve asked around! no one in the city seems to really like her, despite her relentless p.r.) kill this project! Get in the way of A REAL PHYSICAL FOOD HUB FOR WORCESTER! Our kids – all kids! – need to grow up healthy and strong!

20160730_155547-2 photos: Rosalie Tirella

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…until the FOOD HUB IS A REALITY (staffed/run by REC???)…

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Today! At the Hanover Theatre: Building a Sustainable Worcester – the Fresh Food Movement in Central Massachusetts

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Building a Sustainable Worcester: The Fresh Food Movement in Central Massachusetts

TODAY! Wednesday, March 9

5:30 PM

2 Hours

The Local Farm Movement is alive and growing in Worcester County thanks to the perseverance of our farmers and the growing demand for locally produced food and other products.

The farmers of Worcester County sell more products directly to consumers than almost any other region in the country.

Central Mass Grown is now leading the effort to promote our region’s rich farming heritage and the 1500 farms that call this region home.

Join us for this Access Hanover Lyceum presentation, to learn more about the future of farming in the region and the potential it holds for building a greener, healthier and more sustainable community. 

In addition, understand the Agricultural economy’s viability in providing good jobs, business opportunities, changing food policy, land conservation, healthier food choices and making Worcester County a more desirable place to live, work and visit.    

Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Matthew Beaton will begin the program with opening remarks.

Al Rose, owner of Red Apple Farm in Phillipston, will be the evening’s keynote speaker. 

A panel discussion, moderated by Senator Anne Gobi will include panelists:

Ken Toong, Executive Director of UMass Auxiliary Enter-prises

Kate Stillman, owner of Stillman Quality Meats

Maria Moreira, Executive Director of World Farmers Inc.

John Lawrence, owner of Peppers Fine Catering

Steve Fischer, Executive Director of Regional Environmental Council of Central Massachusetts will give an update on the Worcester Regional Food Hub project.

The presentation will be followed by a networking reception and Sustainability Exhibit highlighting college and university food sustainability projects, area growers and farmers, local restaurants and businesses, and health and nutrition institutions.

The theatre encourages all sectors of the community to attend!

Whether you’re in business, academia, the public or non-profit sectors, building a more sustainable region benefits us all!

All Access Hanover Lyceum events are free to members of The Hanover Theatre and its partners. Tickets for the general public are just $10.

REC news and their mobile farmers market at Woo Senior Center! … Cool! Learn how to read architectural plans! RSVP tomorrow!!! … More Unique Finds … and more music

REC news for YOU!

You are cordially invited to attend the REC Annual Meeting and Earth Day Site Coordinator Dinner

Join us in a celebration of community
over a potluck dinner while you hear from REC community gardeners and growers!

Let us show our appreciation to our
Earth Day cleanup volunteers and all of
the REC supporting members!

Tuesday, March 29!

Worcester Senior Center!

6-8 pm

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Weekly on Thursdays, March 3 thru April 7

REC Winter Mobile Market

11am-1pm, Worcester Senior Center, 128 Providence St., Worcester

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Wed, March 9:

Building a Sustainable Worcester: The Fresh Food Movement in Central Massachusetts

5:30 pm -7:30 pm

Hanover Theater, 2 Southbridge St, Worcester

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Sat, March 12:

Urban Farming Conference
Convened by the Urban Farming Institute

8 am-5:30 pm, Northeastern University, Boston

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Tues, March 29:

REC Annual Meeting and Earth Day Site-Coordinators Dinner

6-8 pm, Worcester Senior Center, 128 Providence St., Worcester

All REC members are encouraged to attend!

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Sat, April 9:

27th Annual Earth Day Cleanup Event
8 am-Noon, City-wide, Worcester

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Training Opportunity:

Introductory Architectural Plan Reading Workshop

Tuesday, March 22

3 pm – 5 pm

Worcester City Hall, Levi Lincoln Chamber (3rd flr)

This workshop is free and open to the public.

Learn how to read architectural plans and why it is important to plan for accessibility.

Who should take this workshop?

Advocates

Individuals with disabilities and family members

Planners and business owners

Workshop presenter:

Architectural Designer Megan Defresne, LEED, AP
from the New England ADA Center

Kindly RSVP by March 7th

Hosted by the City of Worcester Commission on Disability
Disability Rights are Civil Rights

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Visit UNIQUE FINDS ANTIQUES AND VINTAGE GIFT SHOP at 1329 Main St., Worcester, TODAY!

Open 7 days a week until 7 p.m.

Thousands of vintage items for sale, starting at $2.

Here’s a sampling for you!

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I’ve been an unabashed Jackson 5 fan for decades! – R.T.

photos/listings compiled by R.T.

Hooray!!! Kudos to all involved!!!! … Supporting local farmers! Supporting the working class and poor! FRESH PRODUCE AND MORE VIA WORCESTER’S NEW FOOD HUB!!!

The Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce (Chamber) and the Regional Environmental Council of Central MA (REC) are pleased to announce continued funding for their food hub partnership.
 
In 2015, the Chamber and the REC embarked on a yearlong assessment to determine the feasibility of establishing a food hub in the Worcester region.

Food hubs are broadly defined as facilities that manage the aggregation, storage, processing, distribution, or marketing of locally and regionally produced food. A food hub provides better consumer access to fresh, locally grown food and a larger consumer market for the region’s farmers.
 
At the conclusion of the study, an application was submitted to The Health Foundation for funding of a pilot year. A slate of programs falling into three categories have been identified for the pilot grant year.

These initiatives will:

support healthy local food access

job creation

economic development

While the food hub currently has no official headquarters, much of the pilot year activities will be operated out of the Worcester County Food Bank in, Shrewsbury.
 
“Food is fundamental to our lives. We all eat, and we all want to eat fresh healthy food. So, ease of access to affordable healthy food is critically important to us, regardless of our station in life. Yet, it is estimated that 90 percent of the food we eat in New England comes from somewhere else,” stated Dr. Jan Yost, president of The Health Foundation of Central Massachusetts. “Thus, the Foundation is pleased to announce a grant of $423,235 to the Regional Environmental Council of Central Massachusetts to partner with the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce to pilot a regional food hub.”

Yost went on to explain that, “Today 80 percent of the land in New England is covered with forest, much of which used to be farmland. Researchers suggest that by 2060, New England could expand its farmland to 6 million acres, or 15 percent of the entire land mass, which would enable New England to grow half of its own food.”
 
“The Worcester County Food Bank is the region’s largest anti-hunger organization, annually distributing nearly 6 million pounds of donated fresh and non-perishable food to a network of 131 Partner Agencies that help feed hungry people”, said Jean McMurray, Worcester County Food Bank’s Executive Director. 

She continued: “We are proud to host the Food Hub’s pilot year because we believe that healthy food grown and processed by community members benefits the entire community, including those struggling with poverty and hunger.”
 
Responsibility for pilot year activities will be split among the partner organizations, with the REC leading efforts to create opportunities for healthy eating via marketing, aggregation, and distribution of local farm products to institutional food service providers at area schools, colleges, and hospitals.

An initial group of eight to ten small to mid-sized family farms will be involved in these activities during the pilot year and four to five institutional buyers will be purchasing local farm products via the food hub.

The food hub will also be working to enhance healthy, local food offerings through the REC’s existing Mobile Farmers Market and through the City of Worcester Division of Public Health’s Mass In Motion Healthy Corner Store initiative.
 
”The REC has been working with organizational partners and grassroots community members for decades to help make healthy, local food universally accessible in the Greater Worcester area,” said Steve Fischer, REC Executive Director. “We are thrilled at the prospect that a regional food hub could help create a regional food system that is increasingly based on principles of economic and social justice and environmental sustainability. Working together, we have an opportunity to make healthy food more accessible while supporting local farmers, growing the economy, creating jobs, and preserving the environment.”
 
The Chamber will oversee food hub activities operated through a Commercial Kitchen Incubator to be located at the Worcester County Food Bank. During the pilot year, the Chamber will spearhead the recruitment of potential tenants including farmers, budding food entrepreneurs, small culinary businesses looking to take the next step in their development, and even home cooks looking to scale up a long-held family recipe.
 
“Given the success of last year’s planning grant process, we are excited to move forward with this pilot year that will set the stage for long-term success,” stated Chamber president and CEO Timothy P. Murray. “Our efforts with the commercial kitchen fit into our working motto of recruit, retain and incubate. Incubating the next generation of food entrepreneurs will help them turn their passion into a career, add to the region’s growing food economy, and result in a healthier population in Worcester and Central Massachusetts.”
 
The final piece of the pilot year project is a culinary training program that will be overseen by Quinsigamond Community College (QCC).

QCC expects to train at least 2 cohorts of 8-10 students and to provide job placement at area restaurants, caterers and institutional food service providers.

This new certificate program will target students who are members of vulnerable populations in Worcester County and who have previously experienced barriers to employment.
 
Dale Allen, QCC’s vice president for community engagement stated “Quinsigamond Community College is excited about being selected as a key partner in this grant. We are committed to supporting program activities that will increase access to healthy, fresh foods for underserved neighborhoods in our city. This program will be modeled after QCC’s successful ‘Cooking Up a Culinary Career’ program which has been offered for the past several years through the Worcester Youth Center and Hector Reyes House. We look forward to working with the Regional Environmental Council and Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce to expand access to healthy food and economic self-sufficiency for vulnerable populations in Worcester County.”
 
All of the pilot activities will be carefully evaluated and measured by an evaluation team from John Snow Inc., a health consultant company. Working closely with the grant management team throughout the pilot year JSI will continually evaluate the activities to provide real time feedback. The success of the outcomes of the various aspects of the piloted activities will be key to determining how the food hub operates after the pilot year.
 
The Food Hub project will hire a full-time operations manager to oversee the day-to-day aspects of the project during the pilot year.

Other partners collaborating on the project include Central Mass Grown, World Farmers/Flats Mentor Farm, Worcester Public Schools, Pepper’s Fine Catering, UMass Amherst Stockbridge School of Agricultural Extension, Worcester Division of Public Health and the Community Harvest Project.

Go, REC, go!!!

A FOOD HUB FOR WORCESTER

Building A Sustainable Worcester: Taking Regional Food Hub from Vision to Reality

We are excited to announce that the Regional Environmental Council of Central Massachusetts [aka REC] has received a planning grant from the Health Foundation of Central Massachusetts to explore the feasibility of establishing a Worcester Regional Food Hub in partnership with the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce.

Food hubs are broadly defined as facilities that manage the aggregation, storage, processing, distribution or marketing of locally and regionally produced food.

We are thrilled to explore opportunities with diverse community stakeholders to dramatically increase access to healthy, affordable, local food in Worcester, while helping local farmers access new markets.

We invite you to attend a free presentation on Thursday, February 19, co-hosted by the Regional Environmental Council, the Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce and the Hanover Theater for the Performing Arts, to learn more about the role food hubs can play in promoting Food Justice while fostering economic development.

Tickets can be reserved by calling the theater box office at 877-571-7469 or register online.

We look forward to seeing you there!

Advisory Committee members include:

Central MA Regional Planning Commission

Central MA Workforce Investment Board

City of Worcester Division of Public Health

Clark University, Community Development & Planning Program

Harvard University Graduate School of Design, Smart Cities & Wellness Project

Lettuce Be Local

Northeast Organic Farming Association

Office of Congressman James P. McGovern

UMass Memorial Medical Center

UMass-Amherst Stockbridge School of Agricultural Extension

Worcester County Food Bank

Worcester Food & Active Living Policy Council

Worcester Polytechnic Institute

Sustainable Food Systems Project Center

Worcester Regional Chamber of Commerce

REC – Regional Environmental Council

P.O Box 255

Worcester, MA  01613

To learn more visit: http://www.recworcester.org/