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A Food Systems Spire of Excellence at the University of Vermont. Submitted by:. Prof. Vern Grubinger, Extension (Chair) Prof. Linda Berlin, Extension and CALS Prof. Elizabeth Berman, Libraries Prof. Naomi Fukagawa, College of Medicine Prof. Jane Kolodinsky, CALS Prof. Deborah Neher, CALS
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A Food Systems Spire of Excellence at theUniversity of Vermont
Submitted by: • Prof. Vern Grubinger, Extension (Chair) • Prof. Linda Berlin, Extension and CALS • Prof. Elizabeth Berman, Libraries • Prof. Naomi Fukagawa, College of Medicine • Prof. Jane Kolodinsky, CALS • Prof. Deborah Neher, CALS • Prof. Bob Parsons, CALS • Prof. Amy Trubek, CALS • Prof. Kimberly Wallin, Rubenstein School
Paradox to address • Diet-related health problems • Food-borne disease • Food insecurity/hunger • Agricultural pollution Amidst unparalleled productivity
Food systems defined • An interconnected web of activities, resources and people that extends across all domains involved in providing human nourishment and sustaining health (including production, processing, packaging, distribution, marketing, consumption and disposal of food). • Reflects and responds to social, cultural, political, economic, health and environmental conditions • Can be identified at multiple scales, from a household kitchen to a city, county, state or nation.
Our vision Develop solutions to pressing problems in food systems through world-class transdisciplinary research, teaching and outreach dedicated to improving economic, ecological and human well-being.
Our focus • Local and regionally-scaled food systems to: • Move goods and services within a day’s time • Minimize storage, handling and energy usage • Enable the establishment of mutually beneficial relationships among food system entities • Provide consistent political, social, and regulatory support
Why Vermont as a laboratory? • History of challenging business as usual • Varied topography, harsh climate and limited infrastructure leads to entrepreneurship • Food is significant economic engine in Vermont (31% of private business establishments involve food) • Direct sales, organic farming, conservation easements
Why UVM? • Northeast opportunities • Research and funding • Nationally acclaimed entrepreneurship • UVM commitments to environment and health • Undergrads exploring food systems • Already involved in transdisciplinary approaches
4 research focus areas • Food, Culture and Health • Energy and Food • Policy, Ecology and Land Use • Regional Value Chains
Achieving success • Create 4 faculty positions • Endow a Chair in Regional Food Systems Research • Offer food systems research planning grants • Host biennial national symposia • Establish UVM Regional Food Systems Advisory Council • Engage the campus community • Capitalize on food systems research to recruit students • Commit to a leadership role
Potential Funding • NIFA (food security, climate change, sustainable energy, childhood obesity and food safety) • NIH Roadmap for Medical Research • Vermont foundations • W.K. Kellogg and other national foundations
Measuring Success - internal • Year 1 • 3 transdisciplinary proposals submitted ($1 million) • Masters in Food Systems program launched; 2 Ph.D. students • 5 faculty associate refereed publications with food systems • Campaign initiated to endow a Food Systems Chair • Year 2 • $5 million in grant proposals submitted • 15 faculty associate publications with food systems • Chair’s endowment reaches $2 million in pledges • 5 master’s students and 2 doctoral students