
A Vision for Michigan’s Food Systems
Michigan has a thriving food economy distinguished by equity, health, and sustainability.
To achieve this vision, we need systemic change. Michigan food systems should:
- ensure food is accessible to everyone,
- promote healthy communities,
- use fair and sustainable production methods, and
- support a diverse and equitable society.
Want to stay informed about the Michigan Good Food Charter? Sign up to receive communications in your inbox.
Sign up for Charter communications
It's simple to join the Michigan Good Food Charter Council and sign the resolution of support as an individual or organization. There are three levels of Charter Council membership so everyone can find a level of support that suits their goals and needs. If you support the vision and initiatives of the Charter and would like to stay informed you can join as a Supporter. To implement the charter vision within your community, signing up as a Local Leader may be the right choice. Consider signing up as a Committee Member of one of the three Michigan Good Food Charter Committees If you are looking for ways to get more involved at the statewide level. Charter Committees support the implementation of Charter activities through coalition-building and coordinated policy action efforts.
Our Goals
To address the complex challenges of the food system, we have identified six interconnected goals describing the results we want to see in our communities.
- Food Access to Food Sovereignty: Everyone has the resources to access and afford healthy, culturally relevant food where they live, work, learn, and play and the ability to shape the food systems that impact them.
- Farm and Food Business Viability: The food system supports a dynamic mix of local, regional, national, and global food sources that offer opportunities for small-scale and marginalized Michigan farm and food businesses to thrive.
- Health Equity: The food system supports opportunities for everyone to be as healthy as possible, physically, mentally, socially, and spiritually.
- Fair Wages and Economic Opportunity: People who plant, harvest, process, pack, transport, prepare, serve, and sell food have access to living wages, benefits, safe work environments, and pathways for career advancement and leadership.
- Sustainable Ecosystems: The food system protects air, water, and soil now and for future generations.
- Climate Change Mitigation and Resilience: Communities are resilient in the face of climate change and the food system actively mitigates its impact on the climate.
How can we use the Charter?
The Michigan Good Food Charter is a tool for collaborative communication, advocacy, and evaluation. We can use it to:
- Explore ideas that advance a good food system in Michigan
- Identify common ground for collaboration within and across sectors
- Build action coalitions around food systems policy change
- Inform policymakers of statewide and local priorities
- Organize shared measurement for greater impacts
Charter Events
There are no entries at this time.
In the News
-
Growing Michigan Food: Good Agricultural Practices with Migrant labor
Published on March 31, 2017
Immigration is something that our food system in Michigan currently relies heavily on. The number of migrant workers employed in agriculture in Michigan is not well known, but it is thought that it is anywhere between 35,000-50,000 in a year. -
A Bite-sized Look at Progress on Good Food Access
Published on March 9, 2017
Snapshots of Michigan's progress on all 25 priorities filled the 2016 Good Food Charter report card. We think it's so important to recognize these accomplishments that we've created this bite-sized look highlighting a few of the successes! -
Good Food Life: Devon Wilson
Published on March 2, 2017
Devon Wilson is Founder of Sunlight Gardens in Battle Creek, an alumnus of the Michigan State University Organic Farmer Training Program, and winner of the Michigan Good Food Fund Battle Creek Bootcamp Pitch Competition.
Michigan Good Food Charter
Published