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MDARD Launches Good Food for Michigan Project

New initiative cultivates opportunities for farmers to feed their communities, institutions to source Michigan-grown food

LANSING, Mich. - The Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD) today announced the Good Food for Michigan project, which will focus on keeping locally grown food in Michigan communities. 

“The Good Food for Michigan project will strengthen regional food systems by equipping community colleges, schools, hospitals and other institutions across the state with tools they need to access nutritious, locally grown and prepared foods,” said MDARD Director Tim Boring. “By helping institutions purchase Michigan-grown foods, we can create new opportunities for farmers to sell locally, improve families’ access to nourishing foods and build healthier, more resilient economies and communities.” 

Good Food for Michigan is a product of Director Boring's conversations with growers and community groups around the state who have expressed concerns about the strain federal policies are putting on food access and affordability, as well as with those who voiced a desire for more opportunities to feed their communities with local foods. 

The Center for Good Food Purchasing – a national leader in transforming how public institutions purchase food – is MDARD’s partner in the project.  

“Michigan has shown what’s possible when communities, institutions, and producers move in the same direction,” said Alexa Delwiche, Executive Director at the Center for Good Food Purchasing. “This partnership lets us apply the Center’s proven model and approach—clear standards, hands-on technical assistance, cross-sector stakeholder engagement and rigorous measurement and verification—to deepen relationships across the state, strengthen local supply chains and help more schools, hospitals and public agencies buy nourishing Michigan-grown Good Food. Together, we’ll expand new market opportunities for growers, align public dollars with community values and build on Michigan’s role as a learning and innovation hub for Good Food Purchasing.”

Among other actions, MDARD’s Good Food for Michigan project will prioritize local food supplies by assisting partner community institutions with: 

  • Assessing their food procurement practices   
  • Meeting good food purchasing targets   
  • Creating supplier/vendor diversification plans that include local and regional food sources   
  • Developing and implementing comprehensive institutional policies that reflect community needs and values as they relate to food 

Increased consumption of locally grown foods can improve individual and community health outcomes while supporting local farmers and reducing the environmental costs of food production and transportation.  

Additionally, the project will utilize a proven model that equips schools and other institutions with the tools and technical support they need to source and procure locally grown foods. The Good Food Purchasing Program model emphasizes: 

  • Strengthening local and community-based economies  
  • Improving community health  
  • Supporting a valued workforce  
  • Promoting environmental sustainability  
  • Ensuring accountability, equity and transparency in food systems.   

The Good Food for Michigan project will complement other innovative MDARD programs focused on strengthening regional food systems across the state. In its first year, MDARD’s Farm to Family Program has awarded more than $730,000 to support food hubs and farm stops that give Michigan producers and consumers more opportunities to sell and buy locally grown foods. So far, work completed with support from grant funding has resulted in moving nearly 85,000 pounds of local produce and meat and serving nearly 1,400 Michigan families. 

Visit MDARD’s website for more information about efforts to improve Michigan families’ access to nutritious, locally grown foods.     

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