Call for action on the critical issue of hunger that affects 4 million Canadians and 1 in every 6 of our children
TORONTO, March 29, 2018 /CNW/ - Yesterday, the Maple Leaf Centre for Action on Food Security ("the Centre") hosted its first food security symposium, bringing together over 160 participants representing a broad range of skills, experience and interests from across Canada and globally.
"For too long, non-profit organizations and other civil society groups have largely borne responsibility for the intractable problem of hunger in our country," said Michael McCain, President and CEO of Maple Leaf Foods and Honorary Chair of the Centre. "We need more inclusive efforts that bring civil society, business, academics and government together, to deliver critical social policies that reduce poverty, advance a more sustainable food system, and optimize our resources so that all Canadians can access healthy food."
The Symposium included speakers and panelists on topics including the importance of reframing the issue as poverty, not food; the right to food as a legal principle; strategies and challenges in scaling organizations advancing food security; and the role of business through a panel of CEOs including Sarah Davis, President of the Loblaw Group of Companies, Barry Telford, President and CEO of Sodexo Canada, and Michael McCain.
The afternoon focused on social policy that supports or impeded progress; and speakers from the Ontario and federal governments including Tom Rosser, Associate Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada who is leading the development of a national food policy for Canada and Karen Glass, Associate Deputy Minister for the Ontario Poverty Reduction Office, who is leading the development of a poverty reduction strategy.
About the Maple Leaf Centre for Action on Food Security
The Maple Leaf Centre for Action on Food Security is a registered charitable organization, founded in late 2016. The Centre has committed investments of approximately $4 million to support advocacy, awareness raising, learning and networking, and 11 innovative projects to date that advance food security across Canada. Maple Leaf Foods is contributing over $10 million within the next decade to the Centre, in addition to a $2.5 million endowment from Michael McCain. The Centre is deeply involved in advancing an integrated food policy for Canada, working with partner organizations to increase scale and impact, and ongoing investments that advance learning, reach and impact.
SOURCE The Maple Leaf Centre For Action On Food Security
Media Contact: Annemarie Dijkhuis, 905-285-1510, [email protected]; Maple Leaf Centre for Action on Food Security Contact: Sarah Stern, Leader, Maple Leaf Centre for Action on Food Security, [email protected]
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