Producer Type
Food purchasing guidelines can express a preference for values-based producers, food hubs, and programs. Farming and ranching are demanding work, requiring long hours, major investment, technical skill, and tolerance for risk. Yet they are essential to society, and supporting them equitably and sustainably is important. Values-based food purchasing guidelines with preferences and priorities for values-based vendors is one method for ensuring and manifesting this support. Prioritizing purchasing from diverse producers incorporates and reflects various values in an institution’s food purchasing guidelines. The memorialization of these preferences in purchasing guidelines demonstrates institutional commitment to ESG, CSR, DEI, local economic investment, and resilience.
Common producer types to consider are beginning producers, BIPOC producers, women producers, LGBTQ+ producers, veteran producers, limited resource producers, and culturally significant producers. Prioritizing purchasing from these types of producers and others incorporates and reflects various values in an institution’s food purchasing guidelines. Some food hubs and programs with a focus on supporting specific producers provide an important and efficient partner for institutions seeking to purchase from values-based producers. These hubs and programs may provide additional support and training to these producers while also reducing administrative burdens and challenges for both the institution and producers.
Values implicated by a preference for certain producer types include:
- ESG & CSR
- DEI
- Local Economic Investment
- Resilience