The Saline County Food Action Community Team’s mission is to build a strong, culturally appropriate local food system and improve access to healthy food for all in Saline County. We envision a thriving community with open pathways leading to healthy living fueled by local food resources.
What is the food system?
The food system includes all the activities, people, and resources involved in producing, transportation, processing, packaging, buying, cooking, eating, disposing, and reusing food.
What is a food policy council?
A food policy council partners residents, stakeholders, and policymakers to examine how the local food system operates. These councils bring together diverse stakeholders to develop recommendations that will improve the food environment. These recommendations can take the form of policy, systems, or environmental changes.
Why do food policy councils matter?
Food systems out of balance hurt people. If people don’t eat well, they won’t live well.
Imbalanced food systems can affect communities in many ways. These include chronic and infectious diseases the obesity and overweight epidemic, food deserts and food swamps, social inequity and inequality, a loss of agricultural land, declining farming employment, animal welfare, environmental degradation, and the concentration of economic power.
A food policy council’s goal is to build bridges across sectors to coordinate action that addresses the entire food system, not just parts of it. Actors within the food system may not otherwise work together.
The “what” of food policy councils is also “why” communities form them. They:
- Encourage team problem solving to improve the local food system
- Make the local food system more sustainable and socially just
- Help spur local economic development
- Improve body weight in the overall population
- Give voice to many stakeholders and serve as a public forum to discuss food issues
- Democratize food policy decisions and reflect diverse perspectives
- Build relationships between government, nonprofit and private sectors, as well as community members.
- Play an active role in educating policymakers and the public about the food system
Our Mission and Approach
Community Partnerships
By working closely with local organizations, businesses, and community members, we aim to understand the unique needs and challenges faced by our neighbors. This allows us to develop targeted solutions that make a real difference in people’s lives.
Educational Initiatives
We believe that education is key to empowering individuals and creating lasting change. Our team aims to advocate for food at the local, county, state, and federal level working with multiple food organizations.
Sustainable Food Systems
By promoting local gardening, supporting local farmers, and reducing food waste, we work to build a more resilient and environmentally-friendly food system. This not only benefits the health of our community but also the planet.
Our Team
Michelle Coats (Chair) – Mobility Manager
Kirsty Hartley (Vice Chair) – Prairieland Market/Local Food Works Foundation
Rev. Libby Themis – Church of the Cross
Sabrina Rosario – Kansas Wesleyan University Community Resilience Hub
Tara Baxter – Church of the Cross
Karen Couch – Salina Emergency Aid Food Bank
Not Pictured:
Sheila Kjellberg (Community Needs Specialist)- Kansas Wesleyan University Community Resilience Hub
Meagan Rico – Saline County Health Department
Lisa Newman – Kansas State Research and Extension