MHC has been around for 20 years, serving families and individuals, talking about good food and the root causes of hunger, and building relationships and community. Our food pantry, community gardens, and nutrition programming have always prioritized healthy, fresh food in the pantry. At the same time, we've always known that emergency food alone doesn't address the reason that folks need our services to begin with and that education's usefulness is often limited by the opportunities and resources to exercise it. With all that in mind, when we started looking at advocacy and policy work several years ago, we knew we wanted to use the same values we've had in our direct service and education programs: community, equity, and sustainability, to name just a few. But we also wanted to make sure that our work was grounded in providing opportunities- opportunities for economic growth, community empowerment, and the growth of supportive networks.
These photos show those values in action. The first is our low-barrier food pantry, full of fresh greens and local goods. The second and third show our Hub Farm Stand and a Hub Dinner, respectively. In the pantry, we make sure that people get the food they need today. But with the Hub Farm Stand, pantry patrons like Lisa and Kenny can sell their homegrown produce and handmade goods to other community members, providing an economic opportunity for them while also increasing the availability of affordable, local, fresh goods for other patrons. Or take the Hub Dinners; these monthly meals give community members a chance to come together over delicious food and learn about a range of advocacy tools. In the third photo, patrons, Hub staff, interns, and community members are finishing piecing together a timeline of how the Indiana General Assembly works just before breaking into small groups to look at upcoming bills for 2019.
Though this work is still new for us, we've already seen its positive impacts. In the last year alone, we've seen 109 voters registered in the food pantry through efforts that began at a Hub Dinner. We've had Farm Stand vendors come back two years in a row to sell, who are already planning to join us for the coming season. We've brought community members together to discuss what makes it hard to access food and to start mapping out how we can impact policy change at the state level. It's new work, but we're excited to keep working on it.
Image credit: Hannah Lencheck and Laxmi Palde, Mother Hubbard's Cupboard, CLF Food Policy Networks Photo Contest, 2018.
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