Overall Rating | Silver - expired |
---|---|
Overall Score | 61.34 |
Liaison | Jennifer Kleindienst |
Submission Date | Dec. 20, 2019 |
Wesleyan University
OP-7: Food and Beverage Purchasing
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
2.28 / 6.00 |
Michael
Strumpf Bon Appétit Resident District Manager Campus Dining Service |
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indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Percentage of total annual food and beverage expenditures on products that are sustainably or ethically produced:
25
Percentage of total annual food and beverage expenditures on plant-based foods:
26
An inventory of food and beverage purchases that qualify as sustainably/ethically produced:
A brief description of the methodology used to conduct the inventory, including the timeframe and how representative samples accounted for seasonal variation (if applicable):
Bon Appetit tracks this data through its Farm to Fork Program. Students, working in conjunction with Bon Appetit, use the Real Food Calculator to track and inventory sustainable food purchases from Usdan Marketplace (largest dining hall). The RFC does not include locally-procured meat without certification (all of Wesleyan's ground beef is from NE family farms, but this does not apply to RFC). For Usdan alone, RFC found that 25% of Wesleyan's food purchases were "real food."
Website URL where the institution’s validated Real/Good Food Calculator results are publicly posted:
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Which of the following food service providers are present on campus and included in the inventory/assessment?:
Present? | Included? | |
Dining operations and catering services operated by the institution | No | No |
Dining operations and catering services operated by a contractor | Yes | Yes |
Student-run food/catering services | Yes | No |
Franchises (e.g., regional or global brands) | No | No |
Convenience stores | Yes | No |
Vending services | Yes | No |
Concessions | Yes | No |
Total annual dining services budget for food and beverage products:
$5 million - $9.9 million
A brief description of the institution’s sustainable food and beverage purchasing program:
Bon Appétit Management Company, Wesleyan's dining service, has a corporate commitment to sustainability that is evident at Wesleyan. All meals on campus are cooked from scratch. Bon Appétit's Farm to Fork program is a company-wide initiative that requires each of Bon Appétit’s 500 cafés across the country to purchase at least 20% of their ingredients from small, local, owner-operated vendors and farmers within a 150-mile radius of campus. Wesleyan purchases 24% of foods locally through its Farm to Fork program; another 2% of food and beverage purchases are sustainably sourced. All coffee is organic, fair trade, and kosher; all shell eggs are cage free and American Humane Certified; all poultry is antibiotic and hormone free; all seafood meets Monterey Bay Seafood Watch's "Best Choices" standards; all milk is RBST-free and purchased from Ronnybrook Farm, a local dairy; and the vegan program serves entirely organic, dry herbs, and rice.
In 2012, following the lead of students, President Michael Roth signed the Real Food Campus Commitment. This nationwide commitment pledges colleges and universities to buy 20% real food, defined as "local/community-based, fair, ecologically sound, and/or humane" by 2020. The commitment aims to get colleges and universities to use their purchasing power to support a healthy food system that strengthens local economies, respects human rights, ensures ecological sustainability, and facilitates community involvement and education. Currently, Wesleyan purchases 25% "real food."
In 2012, following the lead of students, President Michael Roth signed the Real Food Campus Commitment. This nationwide commitment pledges colleges and universities to buy 20% real food, defined as "local/community-based, fair, ecologically sound, and/or humane" by 2020. The commitment aims to get colleges and universities to use their purchasing power to support a healthy food system that strengthens local economies, respects human rights, ensures ecological sustainability, and facilitates community involvement and education. Currently, Wesleyan purchases 25% "real food."
Website URL where information about the food and beverage purchasing program is available:
Additional documentation to support the submission:
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Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
Data above is from Bon Appetit's FY19 (September 2018-May 2019).
Naked Juice contains fair trade bananas. Tomatoes are purchased through the Fair Food program. Fair trade coffee and bananas are purchased campus-wide.
The following animal product purchases are classified as sustainable:
Poultry: 6.9%
Meat: 44%
Seafood: 75%
Eggs: 92%
Dairy: 43%
For more information about Bon Appétit's Farm to Fork program, visit http://bamco.com/sustainable-food-service/farm-to-fork.
For more information about the Real Food Campus Commitment, visit http://www.realfoodchallenge.org/commitment.
Naked Juice contains fair trade bananas. Tomatoes are purchased through the Fair Food program. Fair trade coffee and bananas are purchased campus-wide.
The following animal product purchases are classified as sustainable:
Poultry: 6.9%
Meat: 44%
Seafood: 75%
Eggs: 92%
Dairy: 43%
For more information about Bon Appétit's Farm to Fork program, visit http://bamco.com/sustainable-food-service/farm-to-fork.
For more information about the Real Food Campus Commitment, visit http://www.realfoodchallenge.org/commitment.
The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.