Inspiration for Projects
Here you’ll find examples of projects that improve the local school food system to better serve our students, schools and local economies. We hope they inspire your own community-driven collaborations to reimagine school meals.
For additional help:
- View projects that have been funded.
- Discover ideas that could be included as part of the project you’re designing.
FEATURED PROJECT IDEAS
Imperfect Produce
School Food Authorities (SFAs) purchase imperfect produce from suppliers at a reduced cost, increasing fruit and vegetable consumption and increasing suppliers’ profitability.
Example
- Portland Public Schools (PDF) Page 52
Resources
SFAs and Non-Traditional Partners Collaborate for [Local] Food Procurement
Schools form new partnerships with other schools, local grocers or non-traditional partners (such as long-term care facilities, food banks, faith-based institutions and others) to leverage joint purchasing power.
Examples
Resource
Showcase local foods through culturally relevant school meals
A community organization sourced produce from a few local Hmong growers and made egg rolls.
Examples
Food Empowerment Education & Sustainability Team (FEEST)
Resource
Traditional Foods in Wisconsin
Urban farmers partner to provide produce to schools
Farmers in an urban environment work together to provide local food to schools, each focusing on different aspects of the process: growing, processing, logistics.
Leveraging Food Hubs
A Food Hub could provide receiving, aggregating, processing, storing, and distribution of local produce. The Food Hub would need the capability to wash, chop, shred, julienne and package, with the goal to have food as prepared as possible for schools to cook and serve. The Hub could process extra or unsold produce and freeze or preserve and sell to schools.
Food Hub could also support the develop-ment of transportation routes that allow cost sharing across multiple SFAs, provide forecast-ing for farmers, and facil-itate forward contracting.
Examples
Resource
Develop Searchable Directory
A shared directory enables schools to locate suppliers of specific food items in their area.
Example
Resource
Onsite training for food service staff
Food Hub, co-op, or other experts could provide SFAs with training on how to process foods. After training is completed, experts could provide the SFA with a coupon for a discount on their first purchase of local food.
Matchmaking
Matchmaking events bring producers and buyers together to build relationships and increase local food purchases.
Examples
ACORN Food Hub p. 10
Wisconsin Marketplace Meetings
Resource
Using Food Hubs to Create Sustainable FTS Programs p. 10
New Farm/School Partnerships
Farmers, food service professionals, educators, community partners, extension programs and food hubs partner to ensure culturally relevant foods are available in school.
Create an integrated partnership between local, public schools and community partner organizations to promote school food purchasing from small food producers and local food businesses. Work with community organizations to empower public schools and their capacity to sustainably outsource, store, and prepare locally grown produce. Uplift students, families, and school administrators to ensure locally grown produce is prepared in nutritious and culturally relevant ways.
Examples
- Hmong American Farmers Association
- Lettuce Work Together
- Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians F2S program purchased produce from Choctaw Fresh Produce (PDF) Page 44
- The Michigan Farm to School Potato Processing Partnership (“Potato Project”)
Resources
Indigenous Food Sovereignty
Partnerships of tribes, Native-led organizations, and school districts support food sovereignty for Native populations.
Examples
- Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians – Building Partnerships for Food Sovereignty (PDF) Page 33
- Oneida Nation School District
Resources
- Native Farm to School Guide: Connecting Traditional Foods, Stories, Language, and Community (PDF)
- Native Farm to School Guide (PDF) (A Project of First Nations Development Institute)
Local Food Showcase
Suppliers showcase local/regional foods within a school nutrition trade show.
Example
Oregon School Nutrition Association Farm to School Showcase p. 32