A Co-Founder's Reflection: Why Being Irrelevant is a Good Thing

FRN's co-founders get together for a selfie with the attendees of the 2016 NFRD.

FRN's co-founders get together for a selfie with the attendees of the 2016 NFRD.

Nearly five years ago, in September 2011, Food Recovery Network was just beginning to take off at the University of Maryland. After spending a summer planning for the new academic year, we turned our campus FRN-green: recovering five nights a week, recruiting volunteers from 11 different student groups, coordinating our first football game recovery, and, of course, making FRN’s first clip art logo. During the day, Ben, Cam and I — along with the dedicated FRN leadership team at UMD — spent our time in between (and during) classes texting volunteers details of the upcoming recoveries, calling our dining managers, and communicating with our partner agencies about drop-off times. In the evenings, we’d meet as a leadership team at the McKeldin Library to celebrate our rapid growth and work through any challenges. Pretty quickly, we were donating thousands of pounds of food monthly to hunger-fighting agencies in Prince George's County, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.

Does this story sound familiar? That’s because if you replace the names and locations, you would have the story of the founders, presidents, and leaders of FRN’s 186 chapters across the country.

If you were in room 1101 of the University of Maryland's BioScience Research Building on April 2, 2016 at 9 a.m. — just a minute's walk from the very library where FRN had its first meetings — you would have seen an auditorium filled with more than 400 people, many of whom were FRN student founders and leaders, for the 2016 National Food Recovery Dialogue. I felt humbled to be standing before hundreds of people who have dedicated their time to fighting food waste and hunger with my fellow co-founders: Ben, Cam, Becca, Lauren, and Nick. After we shared the story of our respective chapters, and what it was like to work together to spread FRN to colleges and universities across America, I had the opportunity to reflect with Becca. “You know what’s really cool?” she said. “Our co-founder story is irrelevant.”

"Irrelevant?" I thought, almost in a panic. This is my life’s work, our lives’ work. But as she continued to explain, it really sunk in. Our story isn’t unique anymore. We have hundreds of FRNds who can relate to the struggles we faced as students: worry constantly about not having enough volunteers, learning how to coordinate logistics with supplies, and even skipping class to go on last-minute recoveries. There are nearly 200 chapters we can celebrate successes with. Our students ask the questions of, “What university did you go to?” and, “Does it have an FRN chapter?” just as often as we do, and as seen in this Huffington Post article, they are the voice of the movement now. 

I’m proud to say that my story has become irrelevant.

 

To find out more about what happened at the NFRD, check out the 2016 NFRD event page and recent recap blog post.

FRN at the 2016 Smart and Sustainable Campuses Conference

Even after the National Food Recovery Dialogue, we still had energy for one more conference! The day after the NFRD wrapped up, we traveled to Baltimore for the 2016 Smart and Sustainable Campuses Conference. The SSCC is a conference that gathers people working on sustainability issues at the university level for two days of workshops, presentations and conversation. The conference was started in 2005 by the Environmental Protection Agency, which hoped to better understand the roles colleges play in reducing our environmental impact. Since then, the SSCC evolved to be lead by the universities that have a stake in issues of sustainability — such as the University of Maryland — and now covers much wider territory.

FRN was offered the opportunity to present on our work and how we exemplify a sustainable sustainability community in higher education. Speaking to other people who care about food recovery and its impact on the environment and who are working to improve their campuses' impact was a great experience. They offered us a lot of great ideas for how we can continue to build our relationships with campuses, dining service operations and our hunger-fighting partner agencies. These are ideas we're excited to bring back to our whole team and think about as we move into the summer season.

Throughout the SSCC, we connected with many people who had an FRN chapter on their campus and were excited to hear more about our national movement. Many had worked peripherally with our students or staff and had only positive things to say. Others had heard of us and wanted to know more so that they could encourage students at their school to start a chapter. Seeing so many people who were excited about our mission in one room inspired us to keep up the post-NFRD energy and excitement.

Two conferences later, we're more excited than ever to keep fighting food waste and hunger in college and university communities nationwide. Our biggest takeaway from the SSCC? There are FRNds everywhere who are just as passionate about sustainable communities as we are. We can't wait to keep connecting with them.

BioCycle Features Food Recovery Network

This story originally appeared in March/April 2016 issue of BioCycle and online at biocycle.net. We'd like to thank Marsha Johnston, editor of Earth Steward Associates and a Contributing Editor to BioCycle, for this wonderful piece on Food Recovery Network.

The Food Recovery Network (FRN) still gets phone calls from people mistaking it for the Food Network, but if the pace of its growth over the last five years continues, FRN brand recognition may one day rival that of the culinary TV channel. “They are on fire,” notes Shondra Jenkins, director of community relations for Sodexo and executive director of the Sodexo Stop Hunger Foundation.

In the summer of 2013, FRN received a $150,000 grant from the Sodexo Stop Hunger Foundation and became a 501(c)3 nonprofit. Over the next two years, FRN exploded from 11 schools to 100. It is now at 171 schools (chapters) in 40 states that, in total, have donated 1.1 million pounds of food. “Over the past year, FRN’s volunteers have recovered more food than in all of the previous years combined,” adds Camila Pascual, one of FRN’s seven cofounders.

FRN launched in September 2011, when Ben Simon, Mia Zavalij, Pascual and four other students at the University of Maryland (UMD), College Park noticed still edible dining hall food ending up in the trash. Operating out of the main university library, FRN at UMD had recovered 30,000 meals for DC-area partner agencies by the end of the school year.

In Spring 2012, a second FRN chapter was founded at Brown University, and the two schools joined forces with two other campus food recovery programs — the University of California at Berkeley and Pomona College. By June, Simon, who had become Executive Director, was recognized as a regional honoree and received a $1,000 grant from Sodexo’s Stephen J. Brady STOP Hunger Scholarship. Simon maintained his relationship with the foundation, which eventually culminated in the $150,000 Sodexo Foundation grant.

Today, FRN operates with a $500,000 annual budget. The majority of its funding comes from dining services companies and their foundations, including the Sodexo Stop Hunger Foundation, Chartwells Higher Education, and General Mills. Its work sustains an estimated 250 organizations, thanks to the thousands of volunteers every semester.

The food FRN recovers, explains Pascual, runs the gamut from surplus prepared food like chicken parmesan to fresh produce and baked goods (see box). All FRN chapters are trained in food safety and supplied with funding to purchase food safety supplies like gloves, hairnets and thermometers to monitor the food being donated. “Through Sodexo’s expertise, we have been able to coach [FRN] with food safety and food handling procedures,” notes Jenkins. “Our employees are contributing skills and time to develop the organization.”

She adds that funding FRN since 2013 has enabled it to positively impact one of the foundation’s primary objectives: engaging youth to fight hunger. “Although it is young, FRN, as an organization, is doing amazing things with the funds we’ve invested, developing youth leaders and engaging the community. They are getting this generation actively involved in ending hunger in their generation.” There are 50 FRN chapters on campuses where Sodexo operates dining services.

Corps Of Volunteers

Volunteers are at the heart of FRN. Its 2014-2015 annual report states: “Our students are putting higher education on track to be the first sector of the economy without food waste. They’re pioneering. They’re self-publishing books on the homeless in their local communities. They’re transporting recovered food in bike carts. They’re organizing sleep-outs and food justice panels and skill-sharing sessions to learn how to use food scraps in recipes. They’re working with app developers and starting their own food recovery nonprofits to fight food waste off campus. These students are an emerging generation of leaders fighting food waste, fighting hunger, and changing the way we think about food…letting the country know that enough is enough: wasting 40 percent of the food we produce while one in six Americans don’t know where their next meal is coming from just won’t stand. Together we can continue making food recovery the norm, not the exception. Let’s fight waste and feed people!”

On the day of BioCycle’s visit, the FRN office near the UMD campus was buzzing with at least a dozen staff and volunteers on the phones. (FRN now has 14 full-time staff of predominantly recent grads, including 8 fellows). On one wall, a couple dozen colored post-it notes covered a large grid laying out FRN’s multistep approval process. Each note denotes a new applicant.

Applicants must meet the following requirements to start a new chapter:

1. Be a current student or faculty member at a college or university in the United States or a U.S. territory that is not listed on the “Chapters” page of the FRN website.

2. Be “serious” about starting a recovery program at their school and commit to being responsive to email and phone.

3. Have between 2 and 4 hours per week for a given semester to dedicate to starting a program and sustaining it.

The applicants have a wide range of preparedness. “It ranges from ‘I just saw this and want to apply but I know nothing about food waste’ to ‘I’ve already talked to our dining services manager and we have $1 million in our program budget!’,” explains Pascual. After submitting an online application to establish an FRN chapter, the applicant must complete a bimonthly phone training with a FRN office staffer that teaches them how to: build a leadership team; find a partner NGO (nongovernmental organization) agency for the donations; engage with the university’s dining service; transport food safely; and secure materials for recoveries. “It’s totally student-driven; they are in complete control,” she adds. “As long as the group they want to donate to is an NGO that can follow all of the food safety regulations and has the equipment, they get to pick.”

Depending on the school, the leadership teams are comprised differently, but are often drawn from sustainability clubs or service organizations, notes cofounder Mia Zavalij.

The phone training allows FRN to provide new members with best practices and answers gleaned from its ongoing relationships with the country’s major dining hall service companies, including Sodexo, Aramark, Chartwells Higher Education, and Bon Appetit Management Company. “The information is all based on their experience working with FRN at the schools they serve,” says Pascual.

After selecting their NGO partners, the new applicants finalize a member agreement with FRN and a partnership agreement with the nonprofit to receive the food. Some university dining service organizations ask the FRN chapter to comply with their company’s policies, e.g., wearing nonslip covers on their shoes during recoveries, but typically there is no official signed agreement, explains Sara Gassman, FRN director of member support and communication. “We are trying to keep this as nonbureaucratic as possible,” notes Pascual.

While Sodexo provides FRN its expertise, FRN is helping it come up with a turnkey solution to campus food recovery. “One of the challenges to developing food recovery is the transportation piece, so their enthusiastic students provide that piece,” explains Jenkins. “They show up at the dining hall at whatever date, the students and Sodexo staff load it into the students’ cars, and they deliver to shelters and food banks in the community.”

A number of FRN chapters have reported source and food cost reductions based on the food recovery data provided by FRN to the dining services. For example, the South Campus Dining Hall at UMD adjusted its production accordingly after seeing the data on the amount of food recovered every week and no longer has a regular FRN pickup. And Texas A&M’s Sbisa Dining Hall reported a 7 percent decrease in Gross Product Cost, from 38 to 31 percent, due to its work with FRN.

“Some people ask me if we’re working ourselves out of a job,” notes Pascual. “While I wish that were true, at most places there will always be food surplus, and given how few food businesses currently recover their food, there’s a lot more work to do to start up programs.”

From Regina's Desk: Keep the Message Alive and Moving

Executive Director Regina Northouse during the 2016 National Food Recovery Dialogue.

Executive Director Regina Northouse during the 2016 National Food Recovery Dialogue.

“If you want to be part of a community, get involved with what the community is doing.” Those were the words of Josh Singer, Garden Specialist for the District of Columbia's Department of Parks and Recreation, during one of the many incredible National Food Recovery Dialogue breakout sessions, as he went through his top 15 ways to successfully plan urban gardens in gentrifying neighborhoods. Josh’s words overlay the entire Dialogue, and why we were all there. Even if you were not at the Dialogue in person, these words hold for why we are a part of FRN: We wanted to learn and share ways to deepen our connection to the FRN community and to the communities we inhabit across the country.

We want to do things differently, and we want to do things better. To some, that might sound lofty, but to us, it is a commitment to our present as much as it is a vision for our future. Recovering more than 1 million meals to date happened because we care, because we won’t stop, and because we involve our whole community in doing.things.better.

Remember the two calls to action I stated at the NFRD? We’re going to continue to lean on all of you to get THERE. Even after you graduate, we’ll still need your support!

1. By the time the first years in our network graduate (roughly 4 or 5 years from now), let’s see if we’ve moved the needle for making higher education the first sector in our country where food recovery the normal practice.

2. Let’s make the Food Recovery Certified program a national standard. We started FRC because of feedback from all of you -- that while we support our dining halls in recovering surplus food, restaurants and events should be doing the same. Let’s make it easy for the business sector to do the right thing.

And what else? I heard the FRN Fellows state a common rejoinder throughout the Dialogue in breakout sessions, during lunch, and between panels when we heard a good idea from you: “That is an awesome idea! Connect with me so you can write about it in our blog.” Or, “I love that idea; let’s make sure the full network hears about that!” The National Food Recovery Dialogue represented, in a moment in time, the commitment, passion, and drive we have to reduce waste and feed people. As I said, these BIG issues we’re tackling don’t stop. To keep that momentum going -- that fight -- between now and our next national gathering, it’s critical that we keep in touch, raise our voices, and support one another in working smarter and more ingeniously to combat these complex social issues.

I know this is the group to make the difference.

 

Reflecting on the NFRD (We're Impressed)

NFRD 2016 attendees bring it together for a group photo on April 3 at the University of Maryland, College Park. 

NFRD 2016 attendees bring it together for a group photo on April 3 at the University of Maryland, College Park. 

The National Food Recovery Dialogue is over, and all of us at FRN National have had a bit of time to wipe away our happy tears, get some rest, and delve into our leftover Hampton Creek vegan cookie dough and Hungry Harvest fruit. We’ve also had time to reflect on the unforgettable three days we spent with more than 400 students, food activists, community leaders, and industry professionals. 

Our initial feeling is simple: we’re impressed. We’re impressed by how intelligent, accomplished, kind, and engaged FRN students are. While we knew this already, having 400 FRNds sitting in a room asking insightful questions, sharing best practices, and encouraging each other to make change was a powerful experience. Our This Recovered Life speakers blew us away, and we know that each FRN student has a story that is similarly powerful.

The NFRD was also a reminder that our efforts in food recovery fit into a broader fabric of complex social justice and environmental issues. Many of our speakers and presenters shared personal experiences of racial injustice, hunger, homelessness, and poverty. Dreaming Out Loud founder Christopher Bradshaw ended his moving presentation by challenging us to ask difficult questions and have uncomfortable conversations about the problems with our world, and to do it with love, respect, and care. We hope that you’ll accept this challenge -- we know our team will strive to do the same. 

The NFRD left us with the distinct feeling that the time to change the food waste norm is now. There is momentum and willpower from so many organizations, policymakers and individuals. We have stronger research that is yielding more data than ever about the environmental impacts of food waste and the ways we can combat it. Policymakers are beginning to take note of the issue as well, which made it possible for FRN students to advocate for food recovery legislation during our first ever Lobby Day. Stories like Jen Rustemeyer’s, one of the filmmakers behind the documentary “Just Eat It: A Food Waste Story, remind us of the scale of the issue while also reaffirming the power of individuals to make change in their everyday lives. 

Looking forward, we know that our student leaders will continue to be change-makers in their communities. FRN students are bright and motivated. They understand the complexity of the issues and have strong principles; at the end of the day, they prioritize action and promote feasible solutions. This spring, many of our chapters will build upon the amazing work they already do by organizing Feeding our FRNds events across the country, hosting meals curated from recovered food that will bring communities together. 

 

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Below are some thought from our team about the NFRD:

Mia Zavalij

It was incredible to be surrounded by hundreds of people with so many varying life experiences, all connected because of food recovery. We had our student leaders fighting food waste on the ground, representatives of dining service providers, formerly homeless individuals, hunger-fighting community leaders, chefs, USDA and EPA Reps, and the Mayor of College Park (and more) all in one room -- that felt really powerful!

Hannah Cather

It's almost unreal to realize that more than 400 who care about fighting waste and feeding people were able to come together for one weekend. I get chills when imagining what that means for the future and the way that FRN student leaders initiate change. We got to spend quality time listening and learning and sharing ideas with people from all across the country. Our stories may look a bit different, but ultimately we're all telling the same tale: solve America's food waste and hunger problems. 

Jamie Brocker

I was blown away by our students all weekend long. They were poised, knowledgeable, and showed an overwhelming commitment to take ideas from the conference back to their campuses. I was especially moved by our Lobby Day students who spoke passionately about food waste and hunger and seriously impressed the staffers!

 

Want to learn more about what happened at the 2016 NFRD? Check out our Events page and recent press release for more information about the conference.