Community FEAST - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 28
About This Presentation
Title:

Community FEAST

Description:

Are Broncos Fans? ... Key Communicators Community Stakeholders Community Gatekeepers The Score Card Sounds good, but how do we get the Score Card Information? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:67
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 29
Provided by: Sharo248
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Community FEAST


1
Hunger Free Communities in Idaho ( Southeast
Oregon) A Continuum of Community Response
Presented by Peter Lawson Branch
Coordinator,Oregon Food Bank Ontario,
Oregon plawson_at_oregonfoodbank.org
2
Our Time TogetherToday
  • Session Oneintroductions, overview definitions
  • Session TwoA Place To Start
  • Session ThreeTaking Action
  • Session Fournext steps for Idaho

3
GOAL Community-Wide Response
  • Form A Core Group of dedicated community members
  • Identify what is going on in your community.
    Whats going well, whats not.
  • Plan (NASP)
  • Implement and Evaluate

4
Session One
  • Introductions
  • Hunger 101-Defining Food Insecurity
  • in our nation
  • in Idaho Eastern Oregon
  • Celebrating our successes
  • Communication, Collaboration Education
    Solutions to addressing Hunger Its Root Causes

5
Introductions
  • How Many of You.
  • Know where Ontario, Oregon Is?
  • Work for an agency that serves low income
    individuals?
  • Volunteer?
  • Are familiar with the term food insecurity?
  • Are Broncos Fans?

6
Hunger 101
  • Food Insecurity? Whats That?

7
Idaho Hunger
  • Food Stamp Participation
  • highest increase in caseload
  • 3rd lowest participation rate 50
  • no State Food Stamp Outreach Plan or efforts
  • 10 of 30 DHW offices closed in 2010
  • Child Poverty 19.7
  • Unemployment 8.4 (June 2010)
  • Seniors at risk of hunger 15th worst in nation

8
Hunger in Eastern Oregon Remember-Its a River,
Not a Wall
  • Food Stamp Participation
  • Child Poverty 25
  • Unemployment-11-20 (Malheur/Harney Counties)
  • 10,000 Emergency Food Boxes in 2009/2010
  • Regional Food Bank distributes 744,000 lbs of
    food per year

9
All the best intensionsbut its just not working
  • First-ever workshop
  • Were working harder than ever, but we still have
    many struggling
  • What is it going to take?

10
SESSION 2
  • We know there are challenges, but how do we even
    know where to start?

11
Session 2 Finding The Tools
  • Community Score Cards
  • Community Food Assessments

12
Session 2 Finding The ToolsBefore We Start
  • Acknowledging there is a problem is the first
    critical step. Everything else comes second.
    Thank You to our community leaders who are
    addressing the challenges in their areas.

13
Session 2 Finding the ToolsThe Score Card
  • 1. Identifying Challenges Obstacles
  • By the numbers (using available Data to start a
    conversation)
  • Poverty Statistics for your County
  • Free Reduced Lunch Qualification
    Participation Rates
  • Unemployment Rates
  • Food Stamp Participation Rates

14
Session 2 Finding the ToolsThe Score Card
  • 2. Identifying Existing Resources
  • Supplemental Emergency Food Programs aka Food
    Pantries/Meal Sites?
  • Federal/County Government Assistance Offices
    (SNAP, TANF, WIC)
  • Child/School Nutrition Services (Free Reduced
    School Breakfast/Lunch/Snack Programs, Extension
    Services?)
  • Senior Nutrition Services (Senior Meals, Meals on
    Wheels, Senior Brown Bag)
  • Grocery Stores
  • Area Producers (Farmers/Ranchers/Processors)
  • Farmers Markets
  • Community Gardens
  • Chambers of Commerce/Small Business Development
    Centers?
  • Transportation Resources (accessibility of car
    pool/ride share programs, public transit, buses
    to/from school/etc)

15
Session 2 Finding the ToolsThe Score Card
  • 3. Recognizing who is and is not
  • at the table
  • Who are these people in your community?
  • Key Communicators
  • Community Stakeholders
  • Community Gatekeepers

16
The Score Card
  • Sounds good, but how do we get the Score Card
    Information?
  • Contacts (in the room/at the summit)
  • Web Resources
  • Post-Summit Support

17
Session 2 Finding the ToolsWhats A CFA?
  • CFA Stands for Community Food Assessment-a
    collaborative and participatory process that
    systematically examines a broad range of
    community food issues and assets, so as to inform
    change actions to make the community more food
    secure.

18
Session 2 Finding the Tools
  • Score Card? CFA? They sound like the same thing
    to me!
  • Think of it this way A Score Card is the place
    to brainstorm and outline.
  • A CFA is a way to put it into an understandable
    format that can be shared with the broader
    community.

19
CFA Reports
  • Interfaith Food Farming Partnership,
    EMOhttp//www.emoregon.org/food_farms.php
  • Southeast Oregon Regional Food Bankhttp//www.ore
    gonfoodbank.org/ofb_services/food_programs/
  • Gorge Grown Food Networkhttp//www.gorgegrown.com
    /default.cfm

20
Session ThreeMake a plan for your Community
Feast
  • Soyou have a core group of community members
    invested and interested
  • You have looked at your community and have a
    sense of what is going well and what is not
  • Time to develop a community plan

21
Overview
  • - The Local Picture
  • - Intro to Community Food Systems Organizing
  • - Your Food systems vision
  • Creating a CFO Plan
  • Resources Tools
  • Next Steps Evaluation

22
Community FEAST
  • Food
  • Education
  • Agriculture
  • Solutions
  • Together

23
FEAST?
  • A FEAST event is an opportunity for participants
    to engage in an informed and facilitated
    discussion about Food, Education and Agriculture
    in their community and begin to work towards
    Solutions Together that will help build a
    healthier, more equitable and resilient local
    food system.

24
What is community foods organizing?
  • Community Foods Organizing is the process of
    bringing together a variety of stakeholders to
    reshape a local food system that is more
    responsive to the needs and assets of a
    community.
  • The goal is promoting a healthier community
    maintaining respect, promoting and celebrating
    culture, and ultimately improving its economic
    well being.

25
  • CREATING ORGANIZING PLANS
  • Step One Create a local vision
  • Step Two Who are your partners?
  • Step Three What information do you need?
  • Step Four Next Steps-
  • - Leadership - Date to reconvene
  • - Additional partners

26
Key Things to Remember
  • Community Food Organizing always highlights a
    communitys resources assets as well as its
    needs.
  • The act of doing an assessment is an organizing
    tool.
  • CFO must include the grassroots of a community.
  • CFO is done with communities, not to them.
  • Its about the conversation!!!!

27
Planning Tips
  • Feature LOCAL Food Farms
  • FEASTs should be planned with a local steering
    committee reflect local realities.
  • Plan for evaluation.
  • This is both short term long term work.
    Results may not be instant.
  • Remember this is a celebration!!!

28
Peter RC Lawson Southeast Oregon Regional Food
Bank (a program of Oregon Food Bank) PO Box
716 Ontario, Oregon 97914 (541) 889-9206
Office (541) 212-3098 Cell plawson_at_oregonfoodbank.
org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com