re-imagining the cuny food system for health, equity and sustainability

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Re-imagining the CUNY Food System for Health, Equity and Sustainability Nicholas Freudenberg City University of New York School Of Public Health and Hunter College Healthy CUNY October 21, 2014 Thanks to Sara Barton, MPH and Kim Libman, PhD, MPH for their research on CUNY food system and to Patti Lamberson,MPH and Stephanie Kneeshaw Price, PhD, for their contributions to Healthy CUNY student surveys

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Re-imagining the CUNY Food System for Health, Equity and Sustainability. Nicholas Freudenberg City University of New York School Of Public Health and Hunter College Healthy CUNY October 21, 2014 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

Re-imagining the CUNY Food System for Health, Equity and Sustainability

Nicholas Freudenberg City Univers i ty of New York School Of Publ ic Health and Hunter Col lege

Healthy CUNY October 21, 2014 Th an k s t o S a ra B a r ton , M PH an d K im L i b man , Ph D , M PH f o r t h e i r re s e a rc h on CU N Y f ood s ys te m an d t o Pa t t i Lamb e rs on ,M PH an d S te p h an ie K n e e s h aw Pr i c e , Ph D , f o r t h e i r c on t r i b u t i on s t o H e a l th y CU N Y s tu d e n t s u rv e ys

Page 2: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

What is CUNY? A Profile of CUNY’s Undergraduate Students in 2013

45% are first generation to attend college 42% speak a native language other than English 39% live in households that earn > $20,000 per year 38% born outside United States mainland 30% work for pay more than 20 hours a week 27% are age 25 or older 15% are caring for their children

29% Latino, 26.8% Black, 25.6% White, 18.3% Asian or Pacific Islander

In 2013, CUNY enrolled 260,000 degree students and 240,000 continuing education students

Page 3: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

The Health and Social Well-being of CUNY Students

Surveys show CUNY undergraduates report in last 12 months:

42% some level of food insecurity

42% some level of housing instability

37% are obese or overweight

19% symptoms of depression

17% no health insurance coverage

14% no regular source of health care

Page 4: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

Overview of Unhealthy Behaviors of CUNY Undergrads

Page 5: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CUNY Student Food BehaviorsFood Behavior Percent Healthy behaviors

More then 3 portions fruits & vegetables a day 33

Purchased healthy food from campus vending machine in past month

38

Purchased healthy food from campus cafeteria in past month 42

Less than 1 can soda a day 73

Unhealthy behaviors

More than 1 can soda a day on campus 18

More than 1 can soda a day 27

Purchased unhealthy food from cafeteria in past month 28

Purchased unhealthy food from vending machine in past month 58

Less than 2 portions fruits & vegetables a day 67

Page 6: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

CUNY: The face of universities in America’s future

Page 7: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Components of University Food Systems

1. Cafeteria food services --- facilities, food, labor, cooking, pricing , quality, revenues, sourcing and procurement

2. Vending machines contracts – product mix, revenues, accessibility

3. Pouring rights contracts –revenues, promotion

4. Waste practices-- recycling, composting

5. Policies on food served at campus events

6. Information and education -- calorie labeling, nutrition courses

7. Food benefits for students -- SNAP enrollment, financial aid, food pantries

8. Governance—who decides what?

9. Campus fringe food-- What can students buy and eat within short distance from campus?

Page 8: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

CUNY Food Service Contractors

Estimated number of employees: 475 FT 171 PT Total 646

Page 9: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Page 10: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

CUNY’s Pouring Right Contract with Pepsi

“the Board of Trustees of The City University of New York authorize the University to choose a beverage manufacturer to be the exclusive provider of soft drinks, teas, waters, juices and certain other beverages to the University (i.e., “pouring rights”), in exchange for the payment of royalties and other valuable consideration to the University and college related entities. At the University’s option, such beverage manufacturer also may be granted the right to operate beverage vending machines at some or all of the colleges and the Central Office, in exchange for a commission on sales…”

Page 11: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

More on CUNY and Pepsi Pouring Rights

In September 2013, CUNY signed $20.75 million agreement that gives the Pepsi-Cola exclusive rights to provide most carbonated and noncarbonated drinks on campuses for next 10 years. After contract took effect, Pepsi distributed first-year royalties of more than $1.38 million above the previous contracts that individual colleges had signed with varying vendors.

Future royalties will vary with sales. Colleges will use revenue to enhance programs. In addition, the CUNY Athletic Conference will receive $300,000 over 10 years; previously, it did not receive any income from “pouring rights.” Another $200,000 over the life of the contract will support CUNY-wide or campus-based sustainability initiatives.

Page 12: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Food Served at Campus Events

Page 13: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

The Campus Food Fringe

Page 14: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

The City University of New York should

• Mandate that CUNY food vendors meet the New York City Agency Food Standards for healthier food for all food sold and meals served on campus and campus vending machines.

• Subsidize “Quick & Healthy” daily lunch specials so that every student can find at least a few healthy and affordable foods every day.

• Eliminate “pouring rights” contracts at CUNY that allow one beverage company to have a monopoly on that campus in exchange for a payment to the college.

• Require CUNY cafeterias to post menu boards that list the calorie and fat content of the products they sell.• Consider making selection of a food service vendor a CUNY-wide rather than a campus decision in order to

increase the University’s market influence for healthier more affordable cafeteria food.

Page 15: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Page 16: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Recommendation for improving the CUNY food system Create a CUNY Food Council that serves an advisory body on food issues for CUNY

Create central CUNY standards for campus RFPs for prospective food vendors

Offer free, chilled water in all CUNY food service facilities Implement a university-wide local procurement requirement

Reduce food waste through composting, food recovery and/or cooking oil recycling Distribute savings in energy use for food system improvements

Require food service vendors to pay living wage and prepare career development plan for their employees

Page 17: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Vision of a Transformed University Food System

Healthier food is easier to find and less expensive than unhealthy food

No university student experiences food insecurity

A large and growing portion of food served is regionally grown

University food procurement practices encourage regional sourcing and fair labor practices

Every graduate has essential knowledge about food, nutrition, cooking and food policy

University practices discourage waste and promote recycling, composting and sustainability

University food practices contribute to local and regional economic development

Page 18: Re-imagining the CUNY Food System  for Health, Equity and Sustainability

CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

For more information or to volunteer contact:

Healthy CUNY http://www.cuny.edu/about/resources/healthycuny.html or [email protected]

New York City Food Policy Center [email protected]

Nick Freudenberg [email protected]