Image item

 
The Foodshed Forum is a program of The Foodshed Network, 
in partnership with Greenwich Conservation Commission.
 

Greenwich Land Trust's vegetable garden, Food Rescue US - Fairfield County
gleaning at a local farm, Greenwich Community Garden's Neighbor to Neighbor garden bed 
 

 
THE FOODSHED FORUM 
invites you to
 
A   T A L E    O F    T W O    T O W N S 
Addressing Food Insecurity in Greenwich 
 
A panel discussion featuring members of Greenwich Food Alliance. 
 

 
Tuesday, October 10, 2023
7:00 - 8:30pm
 
Greenwich Town Hall Meeting Room
101 Field Point Road
Greenwich, CT
06830
 
7:00 - 7:15  | Welcome
7:15 - 8:00 | Panel discussion
8:00 - 8:30 | Community conversation
 

Kindly RSVP & submit questions to ali@thefoodshednetwork.org 

P A N E L    S P E A K E R S
 
For more information about the panelists, click photo or name.

Greenwich Department of Human Services

Gaby Rattner, Executive Director
Barbara's House

Ali Ghiorse, Founder of The Foodshed Network, will facilitate.

 
Greenwich is home to some of the wealthiest families in Connecticut, it is also home to families who struggle to afford their basic needs, such as housing, child care and food. According to Community Eligibility Provision Annual Notification of Schools: School Level Data for 2023 - 24, four of Greenwich’s public schools have a notably high percentage of their student body eligible for free and reduced meals based on participation in other means tested programs: New Lebanon (43.06%), Hamilton Ave (38.03%), Julian Curtis (37.10%) and Western Middle School (28.43%). The Greenwich United Way’s Needs Assessment 2020 found that 7% of the town's population live below the poverty level, and 22% are ALICE: Asset Limited Income Constrained Employed. Almost one third of Greenwich residents are just one family illness or missed paycheck away from financial catastrophe. 
 
The root causes of food insecurity are systemic, complex, and fraught with inequities. This panel discussion will feature leaders from our community who work closely with food insecure families. They will discuss fundamental barriers to accessing nourishing affordable food. Panelists will address the stigma and false assumptions that people, including children, endure because they are food insecure.   
 
We will highlight local and statewide solutions that include, and go beyond, emergency assistance. Initiatives such as Fridgeport, Food Rescue Fairfield County, CT Farm to School, Produce Prescription Programs, Universal School Meals, double SNAP benefits at farmers markets, community gardens and farms, all aim to foster dignity and solidarity between neighbors. 
 
No one is immune to financial hardship, regardless of one's class status. Initiatives that work towards a just and equitable food system are powerful connectors, with great potential to lessen misconceptions, bridge disparities, and cultivate community.  We hope you will join us.
 

 
Thank you 
Greenwich Food Alliance
& other community partners 
for supporting this event.
 
 To learn more about each initiative, click logo
 

 
Kindly RSVP & submit questions to ali@thefoodshednetwork.org 
 

 
The Foodshed Network is a community joined together to increase awareness 
and support and socially and ecologically responsible food system. Our intention 
is to direct urgently needed attention and resources in a resilient foodshed so that everyone has access to affordable, nourishing and local food. 
 
Learn more here.
 

 
Subscribe to our newsletter ~ The Foodshed Thymes here.