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HAWAI‘I FARM-TO-SCHOOL growing a movement Updated March 2009

Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

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Update on farm to school movement in Hawai'i as presented at 4th National Farm to Cafeteria Conference in March 2009. Send updates to [email protected].

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Page 1: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

HAWAI‘I FARM-TO-SCHOOLgrowing a movement

Updated March 2009

Page 2: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

HAWAI‘I BASICSIsolated island chain

Population = 1.2 M

10,930 square miles; 7 populated islands

High reliance on food imports & fossil fuels

7 days worth of food on island

Ethnically & culturally diverse

Page 3: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

HAWAI‘I AGRICULTURE

• Fertile land, year-round growing season

• Crop diversity increasing• GMO experimentation• High land values, shortage of

farm labor• Lack of processing,

distribution infrastructure• Farmers interested in

supplying schools, want to know what to grow!

Page 4: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

‘AINA In Schools:Actively Integrating Nutrition &

Agriculture in Schools

• Six Integrated Components:School Gardens, Agricultural literacy, Waste reduction & management, Nutrition education, Local & Fresh school lunch, Family & community outreach

• 10 participating schools on O‘ahu

• Workshops, mini-grants for other schools

www.kokuahawaiifoundation.org/aina

Page 5: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

Mala‘ai, The Culinary Gardens of Waimea Middle School

• Modeled after the Edible Schoolyard

• Collaborates with teachers to develop customized lessons

• Breakfast snacks during testing

• Community presentations & workshops

• www.malaai.org

Page 6: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

Hawai‘i Island School Garden Network

• Goal: increase consumption of locally produced food on island

• Networking with educators at 50+ schools on Hawai‘i Island

• Workshops, networking, technical assistance

http://www.kohalacenter.org/HISGN/about.html

Page 7: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

OTHER FARM TO SCHOOL & FOOD PROGRAMS

• Hoa ‘Aina O Makaha (Makaha, O‘ahu: www.hoa-aina.org)

• MA‘O Youth Organic Farms and ‘Ai Pono (Wai‘anae, O‘ahu: www.maoorganicfarms.org)

Page 8: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

OUR STRENGTHS• Growing interest in food

self-sufficiency

• One state-wide school district--opportunity for BIG change

• DOE Wellness Policy utilized by schools to support, implement F2S

• Great growing conditions!

• Tight communities with strong traditions

Page 9: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

OUR CHALLENGES

School Lunch:• One school district!• Fixed menu statewide• School budgets• DOE can’t quantify produce

needs • Inconsistency of local

produce; small farmsOther Components:• Not enough hours in school

day• Few staff positions

dedicated to F2S issues

Page 10: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

2009 LEGISLATION

• SCR121: Feasibility study for statewide F2S program (alive as of 3/30/09)

• Others, deferred or waiting to be heard:– Establishes a F2S nutrition program– Local produce at lunch 1x/week– Hawai‘i products preferences– Vegetarian lunch option– Establishes the F2S program in DOE

Page 11: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

A BRIGHT HORIZON

Increasing interest in food & fuel independence

High interest in F2S across Hawai‘i

Trainings, funding networking opportunities

Legislative interest, support

Growing number of organizations, partnerships

Page 12: Hawaii Farm to School Update, Mar09

MAHALO!

Please send inquiries or updates about your Hawai‘i program to [email protected]