Chicago Considers ‘Good Food’ Procurement Policy

(Linda N. / Flickr)(Linda N. / Flickr)

Chicago could become the first U.S. city outside of California to adopt a policy requiring it to purchase food from suppliers that meet a certain set of health, environmental and fair labor standards.

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On Tuesday, the Chicago City Council’s Health and Environmental Protection Committee is set to consider a proposal from Mayor Rahm Emanuel to implement “good food” purchasing standards designed to support small and mid-sized food sources that pay fair wages, provide humane care for animals and avoid the use of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers.

If adopted, the Good Food Purchasing Program would require city departments and agencies to evaluate existing food and beverage contracts to determine whether they meet the new standards. New contracts would also need to meet the requirements.

The city’s intent to adopt such a program was mentioned last year in the publication of Healthy Chicago 2.0, the city’s four-year plan with 200 strategies for improving public health, including increasing fruit and vegetable consumption and decreasing soda consumption among youth. 

“The only real consideration for the food we buy as a city is that it has to be the cheapest,” said Jose Oliva, co-director of Food Chain Workers Alliance and a parent of two Chicago Public Schools students. “I don’t want necessarily the cheapest possible food going to [my kids]. I want the best food.”

In 2012, Oliva and FCWA, which advocates for improved wages and working conditions for food workers, helped Los Angeles become the first U.S. city to implement “good food” benchmarks. San Francisco and Oakland adopted similar policies in 2015.

This summer, the Chicago Board of Education voted to update Chicago Public Schools’ Wellness Policy to incorporate “good food” purchasing standards, a move that will affect nearly $80 million in annual food purchases by the district.

The Chicago Park District also piloted a “good food” purchasing program last summer that impacted more than $5 million in food purchases.

Oliva said he did not know the value of food contracts that would be affected if the policy is approved for city departments and agencies, though he said it would be significantly less than with CPS, which serves nearly 27 million breakfasts and 43 million lunches to students per school year. 

“Having my hometown be the first one outside of California to do this would put us in a different category,” Oliva said. “It’s been really exciting to see how Chicago has gotten ahead of the curve on this.”

Nationally, the Good Food Purchasing Campaign provides a metric-based framework for cities and other institutions looking to direct their buying power toward suppliers that fulfill five core values: local economies, environmental sustainability, valued workforce, animal welfare and nutrition.

The program, run by the Center for Good Food Purchasing, has expanded from LA to more than 15 school districts, public hospitals and city agencies across the country. Similar programs are under consideration in Austin, Cincinnati, Denver, Madison, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York and Washington, D.C., Oliva said. 

“What we’ve seen in Los Angeles is that it actually does not increase the price of the food significantly,” Oliva said, adding that LA’s public school district has been able to offset increased costs by implementing “meatless Mondays,” which now feature pizza, pasta, rice and beans and other offerings. “That has essentially made the program cost neutral, but it has had a [positive] environmental impact.”

According to the Center for Good Food Purchasing, the LA program has redirected $12 million toward local produce suppliers, saved an eastimated 19.6 million gallons of water and created 150 food processing, manufacturing and distrubution jobs. 

The program has also been well received by students in LA, Oliva said.

“The reaction they’ve had is that the food is a lot better,” he said.

In Chicago, the resolution under consideration by City Council would give the city one year to collect data from existing food vendors and evaluate food procurement practices. The city would then have six months to incorporate the standards into procurement requests and contracts.

Contact Alex Ruppenthal: @arupp [email protected] | (773) 509-5623


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