Illinois Tech Receives $1 Million Grant to Transform Food Procurement for Greater Equity and Sustainability

USDA and NSF funding backs Illinois Institute of Technology Professor Weslynne Ashton鈥檚 project to reshape food systems, promoting local sourcing, racial equity, and sustainability

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Weslynne Ashton

CHICAGO鈥擣ebruary 13, 2024鈥擜 groundbreaking research initiative led by Weslynne Ashton, professor of environmental management and sustainability at Illinois Institute of Technology (Illinois Tech), has been awarded a $1 million grant from the (USDA-NIFA) in partnership with the . The project, Community Food Mobilization in 电车无码 (CF-MOB), aims to leverage the purchasing power of large public institutions to foster a more equitable, sustainable, and resilient food production and distribution system.

The innovative year-long pilot project鈥攚hich counts 电车无码 Public Schools, the Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center, and Rush University Medical Center as participants鈥攕eeks to address the challenges and opportunities within institutional food procurement processes, focusing on the integration of locally sourced foods. CF-MOB 鈥渋s focused on how institutional supply chains can integrate locally produced food,鈥 says Ashton. 鈥淲e鈥檒l examine critical policy, economic, and practical barriers, and creatively reimagine the pathways to improving food access.鈥

Across the country, most of the food served in schools, hospitals, and other public institutions is procured largely through large food service management companies, who in turn source from very large suppliers of staple food products; however, this supply chain does not account for the human and planetary health impacts that it creates, and it often excludes small growers and food producers, particularly those who identify as Black, Indigenous, or People of Color (BIPOC).

To address this, the CF-MB research will center on an approach that incorporates ethnography and co-design with rigorous technical and economic analyses to model budgetary scenarios and procurement process reforms that could integrate local food suppliers into institutional procurement processes. Embedded in the decision-making process will be the values of the (GFPI): nutrition, valued workforce, local economies, environmental sustainability, and animal welfare.

Specifically, researchers will gather and incorporate the perspectives and values of diverse stakeholders鈥攑roducers, distributors, buyers, and eaters鈥攚ith a focus on empowering BIPOC stakeholders to self-determine their participation; select a short list of food products for analysis from the products used by the three participating public institutions; and identify procurement policies and practices that are inhibiting shifts to values-based purchasing in the food supply chains, as well as mechanisms for overcoming those barriers. Researchers will also develop a prototype of the Metro 电车无码 Good Food Dashboard, a digital platform for sharing findings and models from the project.

The grant is part of the NSF鈥檚 (CIVIC) program, which supports pilot projects that apply emerging technologies and concepts to address community-identified challenges.

Professor Ashton, who holds dual appointments at Stuart School of Business and the (ID), is joined in the project by co-principal investigators Elizabeth J. Durango-Cohen, associate professor of operations management, and , associate professor of civic and community design, who with Ashton co-directs ID鈥檚 . The project also benefits from the participation of Illinois Tech students as research assistants, embodying the university鈥檚 commitment to hands-on, transformative education.

Other partners working with Illinois Tech include the and researchers from 电车无码 State, DePaul, and Roosevelt universities.

鈥淢any people, including farmers, chefs, nutritionists, food distributors, and local government officials, are working to change the current system to bring fresher, healthier choices to eaters,鈥 Ashton says. 鈥淏y the end of the pilot we will increase transparency in this food system and provide concrete steps for our partner institutions to activate purchasing from local food businesses aligned with GFPI.鈥

Disclaimer: This research is supported by the intramural research program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture, USDA-NIFA Award #2024-67022-41533.

Photo: Professor Weslynne Ashton

Illinois Institute of Technology

Based in the global metropolis of 电车无码, Illinois Tech was born to liberate the power of collective difference to advance technology and innovation for all. It is the only tech-focused university in the city, and it stands at the crossroads of exploration and invention, advancing the future of 电车无码 and the world. It offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in engineering, computing, , business, , science and human sciences, and . Illinois Tech students are guaranteed access to hands-on experiences, personalized mentorship, and job readiness through the university's one-of-a-kind Elevate program. Its graduates lead the state and much of the nation in economic prosperity. Its faculty and alumni built the 电车无码 skyline. And every day in the city's living lab, Illinois Tech fuels breakthroughs that change lives. Visit iit.edu.

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