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Ontario’s Local Food Champions Report Recognizes Innovative Leaders

(Toronto, Ontario) – The growth of Ontario food in our public institutions is inspiring. Today we celebrate those who change the food on plates in hospitals, long-term care facilities, and educational institutions. The Ontario’s Local Food Champions report recognizes five organizations from across the food value chains that exemplify leadership and provide solutions to incorporate more Ontario food on their menus.

“In just under a year we have seen outstanding growth in sales and volumes of Ontario food served in public institutions,“ said Burkhard Mausberg, CEO, Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation. “This report recognizes a few of the many champions working to make local food the standard at our hospitals, schools and daycares.”

This year’s Ontario’s Local Food Champions represent the dynamic changes happening across foodservice. Here are the highlights:

 

School Food Action Coalition: Peel District School Board, Compass Group Canada (Chartwells), Peel Public Health and EcoSource

  • Achieved designation as the first school board in Canada to implement a local food buying policy for secondary school
  • Educated students about benefits of Ontario food by inviting farmers’ to visit schools
  • Hosted a culinary competition for students with the winning recipe used by Peel District School Board
  • Created material with Compass Group Canada to identify locally sourced menu items at 200 schools

Nutrition Group at St. Joseph’s Health System, Group Purchasing Organization and My Sustainable Canada

  • Sourced Ontario food for St. Joseph’s Health System, Group Purchasing Organization’s 28 health care facilities by including local food language in their Requests for Proposals
  • Led to a 15 per cent increase in local food purchased, representing $670,000 in sales
  • Created a guide to conducting origin of food audits with other health care facilities

Gordon Food Service Ontario

  • Recognized as one of the largest broad line distributors in Canada, GFS assigned a team to implement a local food strategy
  • Produced over 800 local products, all suitable for large institutions
  • Expanded the availability of local products resulting in a 10 per cent sales boost in one year
  • Established relationships with local farmers to help them adopt food safety practices and meet the packaging expectations of public institutions

Don’s Produce

  • Provided local produce to eight hospitals, 22 long-term care facilities, 17 universities and schools and five child care centres across southwestern Ontario
  • Developed a program to help chefs and foodservice buyers increase their purchase of local produce and monitor quarterly progress
  • Provided a seasonal availability chart to help chefs and foodservice managers efficiently plan their menus to incorporate local produce

University of Guelph, Hospitality Services

  • Created a department-wide Sustainability Plan to support local farmers and educate consumers on and off campus about the benefits of buying local
  • Supported the local economy and the 75 farmers who sell at the Elmira Auction Co-operative by purchasing products for the University of Guelph
  • Succeeded in elevating local produce purchases to 45 per cent
  • Identified processing and preserving methods to ensure local stays on the menu beyond harvest

 

These five champions were among 20 nominations received to help select the 2012 Champions. An advisory committee reviewed the nominations and assisted in the selection process. The nominations represent the impressive amount of work and dedication going into bringing more local Ontario food into public institutions. To read the stories of other nominees visit www.Ontariofresh.ca.

“The McGuinty government is committed to working with farmers, food processors and distributors  to bring more Ontario food to our tables at home, in the school cafeteria, and in other public institutions,” says Ted McMeekin, Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. “Supporting Ontario food contributes to healthy meals and a healthy economy.”

Ontario’s Local Food Champions is available for download below and upon request by emailing info@greenbelt.ca.

 

Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation:

Ontario’s Greenbelt is over 1.8 million acres of green space, farmland, vibrant communities, forests, wetlands, and watersheds – all permanently protected by world-leading legislation. In return, the Greenbelt gives back much to Ontario, providing $5.4 billion to Ontario’s economy through farming and food production, and $2.6 billion in ecosystem services annually. 

The Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation is working to help farmers in the Greenbelt be more successful; to protect and enhance natural features; and to strengthen local economies.

With a commitment to building awareness and demand for Ontario food, the Friends of the Greenbelt Foundation and its sister organization the Greenbelt Fund have received $6 million in funding from the Ontario government to help promote the good things that grow in Ontario and report on Ontario’s Local Food Champions.

The additional projects include:

  • Ontariofresh.ca: A free website and online marketplace that will expand the market for buyers and sellers of Ontario food. Individuals can register and create a profile in advance of the site launch in late summer. Visit www.ontariofresh.ca to register and build a profile.
  • Broader Public Sector Investment Fund (delivered through the Greenbelt Fund): Grants are being distributed to organizations to increase the amount of Ontario food served in daycares, schools, universities and colleges, hospitals and long-term care facilities.


 

Downloads

The Greenbelt Foundation is

  • Contributing $2.65 million to Greenbelt farmers to improve their operations (leveraging millions of dollars from federal sources), and to employ the opportunities of the Green Energy Act

  • Funding research and analysis on greenbelts around the globe which concluded that Ontario’s Greenbelt is the most robust in the world, with a strong legal and policy framework

  • Successfully merging social welfare initiatives with environmental concerns

  • Creating a network of Farmer’s Markets to help improve our local food economy

  • Supporting food policy council in Durham to create food charter

  • Supporting the creation of an award-winning Greenbelt granola bar

  • Supporting interested Greenbelt Farmers to Go Organic

  • Bringing thousands of Ontarians out into the Greenbelt each year through grantee activities and the Annual Tour de Greenbelt cycling event

  • Supporting the creation of new multi-cultural crops and development of ethnic local food guides in Toronto and York Region

  • Funding policy changes to encourage more local food to be sold in Durham

  • Hosting the successful Tour de Greenbelt to promote Ontario’s Greenbelt as a tourism destination

  • Convincing Peel school boards to buy Greenbelt food for students

  • Securing local food procurement commitments for Peel schools, City of Toronto, City of Markham and others

  • Providing grants and support to significantly increase sales at farmers’ markets

  • Building a local food economy from developing new markets to enhancing distribution channels

  • Supporting the Credit Valley Conservation Authority to protect and restore wetlands

  • Enhancing Farmers’ Markets, increasing sales for farmers in the Greenbelt and beyond

  • Supporting changing the City of Toronto policy to adopt a local food purchasing bylaw for city facilities

  • Bridging farming and hiking interests to acknowledge environmental progress by farmers

  • Partnering with Harbourfront Centre to tell the story of Ontario’s Greenbelt to 12 million people via a year-long, outdoor photography exhibit

  • Securing local food procurement commitments for Peel, U of T. City of Toronto Facilities and Markham

  • Creating Greenbeltfresh.ca, the leading electronic marketplace to source local, Greenbelt foods from over 600 producers

  • Reaching over 75 million by placing 220 permanent highway and regional road signs to ensure Ontarians and visitors know about this valuable protected area

  • Supporting tourism initiatives including in the Niagara and Caledon areas

  • Funding the Holland Marsh Growers’ transition from an export, commodity focus to one that serves the local market with value- added products

  • Identifying barriers to opening markets for Greenbelt farmers and proposing solutions

  • Engaged Hamilton schools to switch to Greenbelt food for their students

  • Engaging with over 170 million Ontarians directly through our marketing, events and communications activities

  • Supporting development of action plans for a variety of agricultural areas and commodities

  • Developing a successful culinary tourism platform for Niagara

  • Funding visionary planning processes such as the new Cootes to Escarpment Park Management Plan, and a massive reforestation plan in Rouge Park

  • Contributing to greater sales of Greenbelt wines at the LCBO

  • Supporting the Ontario Greenbelt Alliance to foster strong Greenbelt Plan implementation at the municipal level

  • Increasing amount of Greenbelt food in food share program 140%

  • Participating strategically in growing the Greenbelt by working with Toronto, Peel, Halton, and Guelph

  • Hosted the first ever Global Greenbelts Conference in Toronto in March 2011 with speakers and delegates from over nine countries

  • Supporting the development of multi-cultural crops and training new Canadian Farmers

  • Assisting in designing new policies to protect Lake Simcoe through timely research

 
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