Education Impact
Farm to School

Our Thanks to Senator Leahy for his Decades-Long Support for Farm to School

Posted by Sarah Webb
Communications Manager

 

Farm to school champions gathered to celebrate Senator Patrick Leahy on October 4 at Crossett Brook Middle School. From left to right: Vermont FEED Project Director Betsy Rosenbluth, Senator Patrick Leahy, Shelburne Farms Executive Vice President Megan Camp, Marcelle Leahy, Shelburne Farms President Alec Webb.
Farm to school champions gathered to celebrate Senator Patrick Leahy on October 4 at Crossett Brook Middle School. From left to right: Vermont FEED Project Director Betsy Rosenbluth, Senator Patrick Leahy, Shelburne Farms Executive Vice President Megan Camp, Marcelle Leahy, Shelburne Farms President Alec Webb.

Connecting kids to how food is grown and raised, how it gets from the field to the dinner plate, and to the farmers that make it all possible has always been part of the Shelburne Farms story. Understanding how we're all connected to the earth is fundamental to educating for sustainability.  Now, the Farm to School movement is gaining momentum nationwide, and Vermont has been at the forefront for over twenty years. From the very beginning, Senator Patrick Leahy has had the vision to see the win-win-win of farm to school: supporting kids, communities, and farmers. 

Since 2000, Vermont FEED, our partnership project with NOFA-VT, has been instrumental in advancing farm to school in the region, most notably through the Northeast Farm to School Institute, a year-long professional learning program for educators, school nutrition professionals, and school administrators. With federal support, that model is now expanding nationally, bringing these Vermont-born ideas to communities across the country.

The Senator was thanked at a recent celebration with the Vermont Farm to School & Early Childhood Network, which Vermont FEED facilitates. “Farm to school is now nationwide, and where did it start? Here in Vermont,” said Leahy, “We may be the second-smallest state, but we’re number one in good ideas.”

Our biggest thanks and appreciation to Senator Leahy for his decades-long support of our shared vision to connect classrooms, cafeterias, and communities.

Read the full press release from the Vermont Farm to School & Early Childhood Network below:

On Tuesday, October 4, students, school staff, and the Vermont Farm to School and Early Childhood Network gathered at Crossett Brook Middle School in Duxbury to thank United States Senator Patrick Leahy for his leadership and commitment to the farm to school movement that has expanded nationwide. The day included a presentation of student projects, a school garden tour, a visit to the school’s chicken coop, and a delicious school lunch featuring foods from Vermont producers! Some of the producers selling to the school—Green Mountain Harvest, Red Hen Bakery, Vermont Bean Crafters, and Roscioli Foods—joined the students in thanking Senator Leahy.

Farm to school is about engaging students with the food system and the impacts of their food choices. As one student shared during the event, “By eating at school every day, I was trying more new foods and eating a vegetable or fruit every day with lunch. I think that it is great that little kids and kids my age have access to different options and a whole salad bar where they can eat veggies that they might not have access to at home. They might not know it, but eating school lunches can change the way you eat in a positive way for the rest of your life.”

 

Senator Patrick Leahy and Marcelle Pomerleau Leahy celebrating Farm to School Month with students at Crossett Brook Elementary School, Duxbury, VT.
Senator Patrick Leahy and Marcelle Leahy celebrating Farm to School Month with students at Crossett Brook Elementary School, Duxbury, VT.

October is National Farm to School Month, and communities all over the country are celebrating. According to the USDA Farm to School Census, $1.26 billion was spent on local food purchases by schools during SY 2018-2019. USDA Farm to School Grants have reached over 25 million students.

“Farm to school is now nationwide, and where did it start? Here in Vermont,” said Senator Patrick Leahy. “We may be the second-smallest state, but we’re number one in good ideas.” Leahy, a longtime champion of farm to school, was the original author of the federal Farm To School program in the 2010 Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act and is a senior member of the Senate Agriculture Committee.

“Senator Leahy’s leadership was critical to establishing and expanding the Farm to School program, which has reached millions of students across the U.S.,” said Stacy Dean, USDA’s Deputy Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services. “Providing nutritious, local foods to children across the country while also expanding economic opportunities for local farmers will be one of his many lasting legacies. USDA appreciates the work the Senator has done to grow this valuable program.”

 

Senator Patrick Leahy and Marcelle Pomerleau Leahy talk with Crossett Brook Middle School students during the Farm to School Project Share. Here they speak with students from the sustainability club and meet Molly the hen, part of the school's flock of chickens.
Senator Patrick Leahy and Marcelle Pomerleau Leahy talk with Crossett Brook Middle School students during the Farm to School Project Share. Here they speak with students from the sustainability club and meet Molly the hen, part of the school's flock of chickens.

Thanks to Senator Leahy’s support and the work of hundreds of farm to school champions around the state—including educators, farmers, school administrators, students, and school nutrition professionals—Vermont has a Local Foods Incentive to help more schools purchase from Vermont farmers and feed students more local, nutritious foods. And this year, for the first time, the state legislature fully funded the Farm to School & Early Childhood Grant Program, bringing schools, early childhood programs, and farmers together so students can learn where their food comes from. 

In Vermont, 89% of schools purchase some local products, and 56% of early childhood providers are serving local food one or more times per week. “Vermonters should be proud of our work growing the farm to school movement,” says Betsy Rosenbluth, Project Director of Vermont FEED at Shelburne Farms . “By connecting classrooms, cafeterias, and communities we strengthen our food system and provide equitable access to hands-on food education. With Senator Leahy’s support we are creating a foundation for the health and success of Vermont’s children.”

Over 100 Vermont farms provide food to our schools and early childhood programs. The Vermont Farm to School and Early Childhood Network is celebrating the connections between farmers and learning communities with our #ThisFarmFeedsVTKids project. Learn more here.

 

Producer John Farr of Green Mountain Harvest Hydroponics and Harwood Union Unified School District (HUUSD) Schools Food & Nutrition Co-Director Erika Dolan celebrate with a Crossett Brook Middle School student. HUUSD purchases produce from Green Mountain Harvest Hydroponics for their school meal programs, offering students nutritious, local foods.
Producer John Farr of Green Mountain Harvest Hydroponics and Harwood Union Unified School District (HUUSD) Schools Food & Nutrition Co-Director Erika Dolan celebrate with a Crossett Brook Middle School student. HUUSD purchases produce from Green Mountain Harvest Hydroponics for their school meal programs, offering students nutritious, local foods.

View the original post and additional media coverage on the Vermont Farm to School & Early Childhood Network website.

Photos by Sarah Webb, video by Andrea Estey.

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