F2CC envisions meaningful school food environments where all students feel welcomed and nourished in body, mind and spirit. The story presented below takes place in a time of colonization and we acknowledge that Canada’s colonial history includes many traumas created by both residential schools and harms done through food, and many of these systems persist today. F2CC is committed to reflecting, honouring and amplifying Indigenous voices, perspectives and values in our work.
Learn more about our commitments and actions to nourishing Indigenous food and foodways in schools here.
*The term “Local food to school” can be used instead of “farm to school.” This term is preferred in some regions and Indigenous communities. It reflects the diversity of local and traditional foods that can be enjoyed in schools from coast to coast to coast, many of which are not sourced from a farm.
School gardens date back more than a century (Canada and US examples) and teaching food skills in schools was normal, if not expected, until recent decades. The beginnings of farm to school as a coordinated “movement” in Canada can be traced back to 2006 in Quesnel, BC where school food champion Michelle Lessard started the first farm to school salad bar program at Dragon Lake Elementary School. What followed was a network of programs under the Public Health Association of BC (PHABC) coordinated and championed by Joanne Bays, first in BC’s Northern and Interior Health regions and, eventually, the province. Meanwhile, similar interest and programs designed to connect students to healthy, local food at school were emerging in other regions across the country and in 2008 national conversations between enthusiasts began to happen, with an interest in exploring how folks could work together on a coordinated Canada-wide movement.
This effort was further inspired by the momentum building south of the border. The National Farm to School Network was hosting bi-annual conferences to convene individuals and organizations with a shared interest in helping children and youth to better understand how the health of people, the planet and local economies are all connected through food. In 2009, delegates from BC and across Canada began to regularly gather at these conferences to share ideas, inspiration, challenges, and successes. Relationships were built, opportunities for collaboration soon followed, and Canada’s coordinated farm to school movement took root.
Farm to Cafeteria Canada (F2CC) was formed in 2011 as a national network of many of these early champions. Today, it is a partnership-based registered Canadian Charity and serves as a go-to resource for educators, partners and funders who are transforming food systems in schools across Canada.
The timeline below shares some of the key events and factors to date that facilitated the evolution of F2CC as an organization and have also been instrumental in the growth of Canada’s farm to school movement. To our knowledge this history has not been previously documented.