Project Title
Community Food Circles - Capacity Building and Community Engagement
Project Description
The HSCFN is now in its third and final year of the Community Food Circles (CFC) project.
The aims of the CFC project are:
- To strengthen collaboration among food security Service Providers
- To identify gaps in our programs and services
- To determine how to address the needs in our community
In Year 1 (2016-17) we trained 8 community members as facilitators who went on to conduct focus groups to get a sense of the needs of our community. In Year 2 (2017-18) the network followed through with the results of these focus groups by organizing five workshops with a goal to teach food skills to the community:
- Fall 2017 at Thunderbird - Food Bank Challenge (6 LFS students participated)
- Spring 2018 at Hastings - Two Food Waste Workshops (2 participants at first workshop, second workshop cancelled due to no-shows)
- Spring 2018 at Frog Hollow - Canning Workshop (9 participants)
- Spring 2018 at Kiwassa - Food Hub Workshop (9 participants)
Year 3 of the Community Food Circles project begins in Fall of 2018. This year the network will make use of the findings of the focus groups and workshops to increase the capacity of community members by engaging them in food security work.
Project Goal
HSCFN’s goal for the Fall 2018 project is to expand its outreach and engagement in order to build community capacity and ensure the sustainability of the network. Some possible outcomes include working with agency partners to:
- Maintain and develop food security programming and resources
- Increase engagement through outreach efforts - both in person (i.e. posters) and through website and social media to showcase the work of the HSCFN and its member agencies in the community
- Identify grassroots community leaders who are interested in gaining relevant food/nutrition experience or education in order to fulfill a personal or career-related goal
- Make connections to bridge gaps, strengthen the network, and build community
Skills Preferred + To Be Developed
- Experience in collaborative community development processes
- Network development in a non-profit setting
- Social media and Wordpress knowledge
Preferred Days of Week and Hours
Could include evenings and weekends, depending on each agency’s programming.
Project Location
The project will take place in the Hastings Sunrise neighbourhood in East Vancouver. The work could be affiliated with any of the 5 HSCFN agency partners (Hastings Community Centre, Thunderbird Community Centre, Kiwassa Neighbourhood House, Frog Hollow Neighbourhood House and CityReach Care Society). All of these locations are accessible by public transit and bicycle.
Project / partner orientation
Students should read previous LFS 350 group reports and blogs to get a better understanding of the CFC project. Additionally they could attend an HSCFN Steering Committee meeting and/or visit the 5 community agencies.
Related Community Service Opportunities for Students
Organizing and participating in hands-on food and garden programming (i.e. community garden harvests, food banks, workshops, meals etc) will help the students to connect more with the agencies and community members and get a better understanding of the neighbourhood’s successes and challenges.
Other
The Steering Committee has expressed interest in working more closely with the students this year. We discussed the possibility of having 2 students allocated to each agency or perhaps moving the group around somehow to work directly on engagement within each agency and therefore for the network in general.
Organization Information
Name
Hastings Sunrise Community Food Network (HSCFN)
Mission + Vision
The HSCFN was formed in 2012, and is a member of the VNFN (Vancouver Neighbourhoood Food Network). NFN’s are part of the Greenest City action plan as a strategy to increase access to local food. Please visit www.hscfn.com for more information on the role and mission of VNFN’s across the city.
The HSCFN works to help connect and support the Hastings Sunrise community towards the access of healthy and affordable food. We have a long, rich history of food programs and activities at our community centres and neighbourhood houses and we work to connect these programs with other community food and garden initiatives to help strengthen the overall capacity for a viable and resilient food system within Hastings Sunrise.
The role of HSCFN is to: ● Build individual and community capacity ● Learn about the needs of the community and identify gaps in programs, services, and information ● Provide insight, share best practices, and bring service providers together to build a just, sustainable, and resilient food system in Hastings Sunrise
Guiding Principles + Values:
- The HSCFN’s core belief is that access to safe, healthy, and affordable food is a basic human right.
Primary Contact
Contact Person(s): Heather Escobar - HSCFN Coordinator and Alex Chesney - Food & Garden Coordinator at Hastings Community Centre
- Email: Heather - info@hscfn.com , Alex - seasonsoffoodhcc@gmail.com
- Address: 3096 East Hastings St.
- Website: www.hscfn.com
- Best time(s) method(s) to contact: Email
Expected Outcomes
Learning Outcomes
- I hope students will learn about the complexities of food security work - both the challenges and the successes.
- I think students will come to appreciate the dedication and passion of each member involved that really shines through in our network.
- Students will develop an understanding of how different community groups can work together to build the capacity of a neighbourhood in order to grow and learn
together.
Organizational Outcomes
We hope to improve our outreach and engagement with the community by supporting community leaders, promoting food and garden programming and sharing information among agencies and through social media.