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FoodChange is addressing the issue of long-term health
and obesity in this country by making nutrition a priority for all New
Yorkers. We use education, direct service and advocacy to change the way
people eat.
Educate people about whole foods and nutritious
eating
FoodChange educates a broad range of constituencies
- including school children, parents, community organizations and government
agencies - about the importance of whole foods and nutritious eating.
FoodChange raises awareness about the necessary scope of change, the possibilities
that exist to gain access to nutritious foods and how these possibilities
can become a reality for all New Yorkers through its CookShop and Vegetable
of the Month programs and the SchoolFood Plus initiative.
Alter the landscape of available and acceptable
food options
Unhealthy eating choices abound in our neighborhoods
and schools and there is a dearth of supermarkets with well-stocked produce
departments, particularly in low-income neighborhoods. FoodChange aims
to alter the food landscape in New York by advocating for alternatives
to fast food, generating a groundswell of demand for higher standards
of food and connecting local farms with underserved city communities through
our Harlem S.O.U.L. Food Project.
Change the way people eat
FoodChange works to fundamentally change the way that
people eat, by focusing them towards whole foods, local agriculture and
away from highly processed, high-fat foods that lead to obesity and related
diseases. FoodChange takes a multi-tiered approach: Educating children,
parents, schools and communities about healthy eating using a "learn by
doing" approach in our CookShop program; changing the buying practices
of institutions that serve food in various capacities as part of the SchoolFood
Plus initiative; supporting local and regional farmers to create a mutually
beneficial relationship as part of the Harlem S.O.U.L Food Project; and
contributing to the national dialogue on the health and obesity crisis
among our children and in low-income communities.
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