Research Report: National Childhood Nutrition/Health 2010
1 out of 5 children between the ages of 6-11 years are obese -Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, 2008
1 out of 5 children between the ages of 6-11 years are obese -Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, 2008
National Childhood Nutrition/Health Experts
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Foundation Professionals (F)
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Other (consultants, journalists, policy makers) (O)
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Jeanette AbiNader
CFSC Evaluation Program Director Community Food Security Coalition See Bio Jeanette Abi-Nader is the Evaluation Program Director of The Community Food Security Coalition (CFSC), a non-profit organization dedicated to building strong, sustainable, local and regional food systems that ensure access to affordable, nutritious, and culturally appropriate food for all people at all times. |
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Peggy Agron
Section Chief California Department of Public health See Bio Peggy Agron oversees the California Project LEAN (Leaders Encouraging Activity and Nutrition) (CPL) at the California Department of Public Health. She is a recognized expert on school nutrition and physical activity policy. In 2004 CPL received an Innovation in Prevention Award, part of the national initiative Steps to a Healthier US. The award recognized CPL's efforts to educate school decision-makers on the importance of nutrition policies. CPL conducted the 2000 Fast Food Survey, the first survey to quantify the proliferation of unhealthy foods on California campuses. Ms. Agron was part of a national expert panel that developed standards for school foods. These standards were incorporated into California’s first school nutrition legislation. In 2005 Ms. Agron also played a role in educating state elected officials, resulting in the passage of additional legislation. She is a steering committee member of the Strategic Alliance for Healthy Food and Physical Activity Environments and the California Action for Healthy Kids Coalition. |
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Alice Ammerman
Professor of Nutrition; Director, Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention University of North Carolina- Chapel Hill See Bio Dr. Ammerman is a Professor of Nutrition at the UNC School of Public Health, as well as the Director for the Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. She has worked to create strong practice collaborations across the state to address childhood obesity and was appointed by the Lieutenant Governor to serve on the Childhood Obesity Study Committee. More recent research interests focus on school nutrition policy associated with childhood obesity, sustainable agriculture as it relates to improved nutrition, and social entrepreneurship as a sustainable approach to addressing public health concerns. Among Alice’s favorite food memories is her early morning bike ride to the Saturday Farmer’s Market, which inevitably is easier on the way to market than on the way home. Her ride home proved to be especially challenging one hot day in July when she couldn’t say no to a beautiful, but rather large, watermelon. Though it was difficult to steer home and avoid popping the back tire, Alice says her first bite into a sweet, ripe, North Carolina melon made it all worth it. |
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Maggie Anderson
School Food & Fitness Coordinator Washington State University, King County Extension See Bio Maggie Anderson is the School Food & Fitness Coordinator at Washington State University, King County Extension. She received her BA in Human Services from Western Washington University. |
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Marice Ashe
Executive Director Public Health Law & Policy See Bio As founder and director of Public Health Law & Policy (PHLP), Marice Ashe manages long-term strategic planning for all of its projects and guides their day-to-day activities. She has been with the Public Health Institute for nearly 15 years, establishing and directing pioneering efforts that leverage legal and policy tools to promote public health. She teaches public health law at the University of California at Berkeley School of Public Health, and serves on the board of the California Center for Public Health Advocacy. She has also worked with the UC Office of the President and the Contra Costa County Health Services Department, and as a consultant with numerous private philanthropies and state and federal health agencies. She is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, the UC Berkeley School of Public Health, and the UC Berkeley School of Law. |
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Kymm Ballard
SPARK Partnership Development Specialist School Specialty See Bio Kymm Ballard is currently SPARK Partnership Development Specialist at School Specialty. She was previously the Physical Education, Athletics and Sports Medicine Consultant with the North Carolina Department of Public Instruction, which serves as an important link to local school districts and schools in these areas of instruction. Her professional experiences include service for more than a decade as a physical education teacher, several years as an administrator and the co-developer of North Carolina's first high school demonstration school. Kymm's direct service to children influences her work at the state level today. Recently, she was the primary writer and advocate for the Healthy Active Children Policy of the State Board of Education and of the state's Standards for Physical Education. As a result of this, Kymm was awarded with the National 2002 P. E. 4 Life Advocate of the Year award for her work both in North Carolina and in Washington, DC. Other recognizable awards include Kymm as North Carolina's first and only teacher to receive both the Physical Education Teacher of the Year and Health Education Teacher of the Year Awards in the same year. A strong advocate for physical education and for providing support to help young people make healthy lifestyle choices, Kymm provides guidance to schools and local boards of education to help them provide safe and quality athletic programs, as well as strong physical education curricula. In addition to being a Past-President of the Society of State Directors for Health, Physical Education and Recreation, she also serves as part of the North Carolina infrastructure Team to Promote Coordinated School Health and on numerous committees representing physical educators through updates, meetings and workshops. Currently, Kymm serves for the National Association for Physical Education and Sport as the Public Relations Coordinator and sits on the NASPE Board of Directors. A 1985 graduate of Appalachian State University in Physical Education with a concentration in Health Education, Kymm also holds a Master's degree in Physical Education with a focus in Sport Administration from Appalachian. She currently is pursuing a doctorate in Education through the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. |
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Elissa Bassler
CEO Illinois Public Health Institute See Bio Elissa Bassler is the CEO of Illinois Public Health Institute (IPHI), which works through partnerships to promote prevention and improve public health systems that maximize health and quality of life for the people of Illinois. Under Elissa’s leadership, IPHI has developed several program areas, including the Center for Community Capacity Development, a Policy and Partnership Intiatives program, the Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities Action Council, and Center for Health Information Technology, which is building a new web-based data query system for Illinois. In 2003, IPHI led efforts to pass groundbreaking legislation requiring that Illinois develop a State Health Improvement Plan (SHIP) every four years, and subsequently, IPHI led the process to develop Illinois’ first SHIP. Most recently IPHI led efforts to pass the Obesity Prevention Initiative, which will result in public hearings and public engagement on the need to address obesity, physical activity and nutrition. Prior to joining IPHI in early 2001, Bassler was the Public Policy Program Director of the Day Care Action Council of Illinois for nearly seven years, the Executive Director of the Coalition for New Priorities from 1991-1994 and the Executive Director of the Chicago Chapter of Physicians for Social Responsibility from 1989-1991. Bassler has a Masters of Fine Arts degree in Directing from the Goodman/DePaul School of Drama. In 2004, she received the Illinois Public Health Association’s Excellence in Public Policy Award for her work on developing and passing the State Health Improvement Plan Act. She served as a member of Governor-Elect Blagojevich’s Transition Advisory Committee on Public Health in 2002 and was a member of Governor Ryan’s Children and Families Leadership Subcabinet from March 2000 to January 2001. She also served as a member of Governor-Elect Ryan’s Transition Committee on Children and Families in December 1998. Bassler was featured as one of eight “Amazing Women of 1998” in the June 1998 issue of Redbook Magazine for contributions to child care. She was presented the magazine’s Mothers & Shakers Award by Hillary Clinton at a White House luncheon in June, 1998. Under Bassler’s leadership, the public policy program of the Day Care Action Council of Illinois received the WPWR Channel 50 Foundation Award for a Singular Advocacy Achievement in February, 1998. |
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Adam Becker
Executive Director Children's Memorial Hospital See Bio A graduate of Tufts University in Medford, MA, Adam B. Becker received his Master of Public Health in 1994 and his Ph.D. in 1999, both in Health Behavior and Health Education from the University Of Michigan School Of Public Health. Dr. Becker has extensive training and experience in the practice of Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) and has written a number of book chapters and articles on this approach to examining and addressing public health problems. Some of the issues to which Dr. Becker has applied this methodology include: the impact of stressful community conditions on the health of women raising children, youth violence prevention, and the impact of the social and physical environment on physical activity. Dr. Becker was a member of the faculty for six years at Tulane University’s School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine. He taught courses in community organizing, qualitative methods and CBPR, program evaluation, and community change strategies. Prior to becoming the Executive Director of the Consortium to Lower Obesity in Chicago Children (CLOCC), Dr. Becker was the Director of Evaluation and Research at the Louisiana Public Health Institute in New Orleans. Dr. Becker began his public health career as a U.S. Peace Corps volunteer in Senegal, West Africa. Dr. Becker was born on Chicago’s south side and raised in the south suburbs of Chicago. |
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Joseph Beiting
Director of Development Action for Healthy Kids See Bio Joseph Beiting is the Director of Development for Action for Healthy Kids, which addresses childhood undernourishment, obesity and prevention by working with schools to help kids learn to eat right and be active every day. This focus is because of the unique position and influence that schools have on children and their families, in addition to their responsibility to provide nutrition and physical education and their many opportunities to promote healthy eating and active living. |
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Cody Belzley
Vice President of Public Affairs Colorado Children's Campaign See Bio Cody Belzley serves as the Vice President of Public Affairs for the Colorado Children’s Campaign, the leading voice for Colorado’s 1.2 million children. In this capacity, she leads the organization’s policy, legislative and communications efforts. Prior to joining the Children’s Campaign, Cody served as Senior Health Policy Analyst for Colorado Governor Bill Ritter Jr. Cody has also worked on state and federal government affairs for a major safety net health system and as a political and policy communications consultant. Cody was integrally involved in the successful 2009 legislation to provide health insurance to more than 100,000 uninsured Coloradans, the 2006 Denver ballot campaign to make preschool accessible for all Denver four-year-olds and the 2004 statewide tobacco tax initiative that is generating over $170 million annually for health programs in Colorado. |
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Marjorie Benjamin
Project Director American School Health Association See Bio Marjorie Benjamin is the Project Director of the American School Health Association. The mission of the American School Health Association is to build the capacity of its members to plan, develop, coordinate, implement, evaluate, and advocate for effective school health strategies that contribute to optimal health and academic outcomes for all children and youth. |
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Joel Berg
Executive Director New York City Coalition Against Hunger See Bio Joel Berg is a nationally recognized leader in the fields of hunger and food security, national and community service, and technical assistance provision to faith-based and community organizations. He is also author of the book All You Can Eat: How Hungry is America?, and a Visiting Fellow at the Center for American Progress. Before becoming executive director of the New York City Coalition Against Hunger in 2001, Berg served two years as USDA coordinator of community food security, a new position, in which he created and implemented the first-ever federal initiative to better enable faith-based and other nonprofit groups to fight hunger, bolster food security, and help low-income Americans move from poverty to self-sufficiency. He was USDA coordinator of food recovery and gleaning the previous two years, working with community groups to increase the amount of food recovered, gleaned, and distributed to hungry Americans. Also while at the USDA, he served as director of national service, director of public liaison, and as acting director of public affairs and press secretary. From 1989 to 1993, he served as a policy analyst for the Progressive Policy Institute and a domestic policy staff member for the President-elect Bill Clinton's transition team. Berg has published widely on the topics of hunger, national and community service, and grassroots community partnerships. A native of Rockland County, NY, and a 1986 graduate of Columbia University, Berg now resides in Brooklyn. He is the past winner of the US Secretary of Agriculture's Honor Award for Superior Service and the Congressional Hunger Center's Mickey Leland National Hunger Fighter Award. |
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Linda Berlin
Extension Assistant Professor University of Vermont See Bio Dr. Linda Berlin has been with the University of Vermont (UVM) since 1992, when she began coordinating a federally funded nutrition education program for underserved families. In 1999, she moved into a faculty position within the Department of Nutrition and Food Sciences, at which time her role shifted to include broader involvement in food and food systems’ issues. In March 2009 she became half-time Director of the UVM Center for Sustainable Agriculture, and also continues as an Extension faculty member focused on food systems. She holds a M.S. from Cornell University in human nutrition (1990), and a doctorate from Tufts University where she was enrolled in a program titled “Agriculture, Food, and Environment” based out of the Tufts School of Nutrition Science and Policy (2006). Since being in Vermont, she has chaired boards for two Burlington- based non-profits (Friends of Burlington Gardens; Vermont Campaign to End Childhood Hunger) and recently completed a three-year term on the board for the national Society for Nutrition Education. She currently co-facilitates the Vermont Sustainable Agriculture Council and is a member of the Governor’s Commission on Hunger and the Chittenden County Hunger Council. |
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Amanda Bloom
Policy Director California Center for Public Health Advocacy See Bio Amanda Bloom is the Policy Director for the California Center for Public Health Advocacy. The Center raises awareness about public health issues and mobilizes communities to promote the establishment of effective health policies. In 2005, the Center successfully sponsored the two pieces of legislation that curtailed junk food and soda sales in California schools. As Policy Director, Amanda manages the Center’s state-level advocacy and legislative efforts. Previously, Amanda served as an Evaluation Specialist with California Project LEAN during which time she managed school-based nutrition and physical activity policy efforts throughout California. |
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Ed Bolen
Senior Nutrition Program Analyst California Food Policy Advocates See Bio Ed Bolen is the food program advocate at California Food Policy Advocates, a statewide non-profit that works on hunger and nutrition issues. |
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Dorothy Brayley
Cofounder and Executive Director Kids First See Bio As cofounder and executive director of Kids First, a Providence-based nonprofit organization, Dorothy Brayley fights for the welfare of children on a daily basis. It’s an important battle – 32 percent of U.S. children are overweight, and 16 percent are obese. Much of this obesity epidemic, and its detrimental effects on health, is due to a lack of nutritious food choices and education in public schools. Brayley and her staff educate state schools on nutrition and physical fitness to help children stay strong. Brayley’s involvement with child health initiatives stems from her own interest in food preparation – she’s a trained chef – and a deep concern for what she saw happening in her children’s school cafeterias. “The food that was available to children was nutritionally deficient,” says Brayley. Kids First is responsible for significant positive change in all Rhode Island schools through its innovative technical assistance programs and activities. “I have an incredibly charged and dedicated staff who work tirelessly for the children of this state,” Brayley says. “The changes that we’ve brought about have resulted in three new laws, which ensure our advocacy sustains the future of our kids.” In June 2005, Brayley coauthored a law that requires every school district in Rhode Island to form a Health and Wellness Subcommittee that comprises a majority of members who are not school district employees. “It’s the subcommittee’s job to develop, implement, and monitor nutrition and physical activity policies,” she says. “Currently, all 36 Rhode Island school districts have active subcommittees to implement their policies. This says a lot about how our state cares for its children.” The other two laws Brayley helped write and guide through the legislature set strict standards for beverages and snacks provided on school premises. She’s also leading a statewide change in school meals with more fruits, vegetables, and whole grains and fewer processed, high-sodium foods. This program will be completed in September 2009. |
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Vanessa Briggs
Executive Director Health Promotion Council See Bio Vanessa Briggs, MBA, RD, LDN, is executive director of the Health Promotion Council (HPC), a nonprofit organization with the mission to promote health, and prevent and manage chronic diseases, especially among vulnerable populations, through community-based outreach, education & advocacy throughout Pennsylvania. She joined HPC in 2001, after working 15 years in the for-profit healthcare industry. She is responsible for organizational strategic direction with programming for at-risk, diverse populations. Ms. Briggs, who serves on numerous boards and advisory groups, is a generalist in the field of health promotion and population health with emphasis in dietetics and physical activity, forges alliances resulting in new initiatives to bring multi-sector groups together to transform marginalized communities into healthy communities. She received her bachelor degree in nutrition from Rowan University and her MBA in Healthcare Administration from Eastern University. She is a Registered Dietitian, Licensed Dietetic-Nutritionist and holds her Certification in Adult Weight Management. The Health Promotion Council is one of the largest, most influential nonprofit health promotion and prevention service providers in the mid-Atlantic region. Its programs in chronic disease risk reduction, prevention, community capacity building and professional education reach more than 40,000 people and focus on high-risk populations, including the African American, Hispanic/Latino, and Asian communities. |
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Elizabeth Brood
National Program Coordinator Fitness Forward See Bio Elizabeth Brood is the National Program Coordinator at Fitness Forward. Their signature program, Drive 2 Fitness (D2F), motivates and empowers children and their families to lead healthier lifestyles through education, personalized tracking tools, social marketing, and rewards. |
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Kelly Brownell
Professor, Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity Yale University See Bio Kelly Brownell is a Yale psychologist on a decade-long crusade against what he calls America’s “toxic food environment.” Brownell wants to “hit junk-food junkies where it hurts: in their wallets” by “slapping high-fat, low-nutrition food with a substantial government ‘sin’ tax.” He is best known for having first proposed the infamous “Twinkie tax.” Brownell demonizes restaurants and food producers, hoping that they will one day face “the same social climate that has enveloped the tobacco companies.” He serves on the scientific advisory board of the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI), the undisputed leader among America’s activist dietary scolds. Brownell believes that governments should regulate all food advertisements seen by children, ban high-calorie and high-fat foods (and all soda pop) from schools, and -- to pay for it all -- slap punitive taxes on the foods that he considers “bad.” He has admitted, however, that the real motive behind such taxes is to increase the cost of high-calorie foods to the point where they will be priced out of the public’s reach. Brownell places the blame for obesity squarely on food providers, but he should know better from his own experience. In November of 2002, the Associated Press reported that he “sports a good-sized paunch thanks, he says, to a book project that has kept him relatively sedentary and snack-prone for the last year or so.” Brownell is perfectly willing to trample individual rights when it serves his ends. Writing in CSPI’s Nutrition Action Healthletter, Brownell wrote: “I recommend we develop a militant attitude about the toxic food environment, like we have about tobacco … [smoking] became so serious that society overlooked the intrusion on individual rights for the greater social good.” |
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Charlene Burgeson
Executive Director National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE) See Bio Charlene R. Burgeson is Executive Director of the National Association for Sport and Physical Education (NASPE). NASPE, a nonprofit membership organization of over 17,000 professionals in physical education, physical activity, and sport fields, is the preeminent national authority of physical education and a recognized leader in sport and youth physical activity. NASPE seeks to enhance knowledge, improve professional practice, and increase support for high quality physical education, sport, and youth physical activity programs through research, development of standards, and dissemination of information. From 1997-2003, Burgeson was employed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in Atlanta, GA where she served as a health scientist in the Division of Adolescent and School Health and a public health advisor in the Division of Nutrition and Physical Activity. As a physical education and activity specialist, she provided guidance regarding physical activity surveillance, programs, and training; and developed tools to assist with the planning, implementation, and evaluation of programs in schools and communities. In 2000 she co-authored a report from the Secretaries of Health and Human Services and Education to the President of the United States entitled, Promoting Better Health for Young People through Physical Activity and Sport. She was also the lead author for the physical education chapter of the 2000 School Health Policies and Programs Survey (SHPPS) published by CDC. In 2001, Charlene was honored by the American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance (AAHPERD) with the Mabel Lee Award for achieving national recognition as a professional leader prior to reaching age 36. From 1994-1997, Burgeson worked at NASPE as a program administrator facilitating physical education issues and projects. A former elementary physical education teacher in the Fairfax County (VA) Public Schools, she also coached local youth sports. Burgeson received her master of arts in physical education from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and bachelor of science in health and physical education from Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania. Her interests include swimming, tennis, reading, traveling, and being a Mom to her 6-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter. |
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Frances Byfield
Director of Curriculum/Staff Development/Special Projects Santa Ana Unified School District See Bio Frances Byfield, Ed.D., is the administrator in charge of the Special Projects Department who coordinates Santa Ana Unified School District's broad array of nutrition and physical fitness efforts. |
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Kathleen Cappellano
Instructor, Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy Tufts Univesity See Bio Kathleen Cappellano is an Instructor in the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University. She holds an M.S. in Nutrition Communications from Boston University and is a Registered Dietitian. She currently researches Internet-based resources pertaining to nutrition and health; child nutrition. |
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Katherine Kaufer Christoffel
Professor of Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine, Director of the Community-Engaged Research Center of the NUCATS Institute Pediatric Faculty Foundation See Bio Katherine Kaufer Christoffel, MD, MPH is a Professor of Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine, and the Director of the Community-Engaged Research Center of the NUCATS Institute. Dr. Christoffel is also Deputy Director of the Feinberg School of Medicine’s Programs in Public Health, in the Department of Preventive Medicine. In addition to her teaching commitments, Dr. Christoffel serves as the Director for the Center on Obesity Management and Prevention (COMP) and Medical Director for the Consortium on Lowering Obesity in Chicago Children (CLOCC) at the Children’s Memorial Hospital and Research Center in Chicago. She is also an attending pediatrician at Children’s Memorial Hospital in Chicago. Dr. Christoffel’s career has included research based in primary care practices, schools, and community based organizations. She has documented cholesterol screening guideline effects in primary care practice, intentional and unintentional injury patterns in the US and Chicago, and clarified family level risk factors for pedestrian injury. Her current work examines clinical, family, and community level obesity correlates in community samples. Dr. Christoffel has also established innovative and enduring clinical, research, and advocacy programs including the Children’s Memorial Hospital (CMH) Nutrition Evaluation Clinic, the Pediatric Practice Research Group, and several programs that grew into the endowed Smith Child Health Research Program at the Children’s Memorial Research Center (CMRC). As deputy director of FSM’s Programs in Public Health, she oversees community and international education for the Feinberg School's Public Health students. She has been principal investigator on federal grants from NICHD, MCHB, AHRQ, and on many innovation projects funded by philanthropy. Dr. Christoffel has mentored fellows and junior faculty who became independent researchers in areas ranging from child development to injury prevention and practice-based research. |
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John Cook
Associate Professor of Pediatrics Boston University School of Medicine See Bio Dr. John Cook is an Associate Professor of Pediatrics in Boston University’s School of Medicine where he conducts research on the causes and consequences of food insecurity and hunger, particularly their impacts on the health, growth and development of young children. As a Colorado Energy Research Institute fellow, Dr. Cook studied Resource Economics in the Department of Economics at Colorado State University from 1980-83, then went on to receive his Ph.D. in Planning for Developing Areas from the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. From 1990 to 1998 Dr. Cook was an Assistant Professor in Tufts University’s School of Nutrition Science and Policy where he did research on poverty and food insecurity. During that time Dr. Cook was the Principal Investigator for the USDA/National Center for Health Statistics-sponsored Food Security Measurement Study overseeing development of measures of food security, food insecurity and hunger for the U.S. population. Those measures are implemented annually in the Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey and their results reported by the USDA Economic Research Service. Over the past three years Dr. Cook and colleagues at the Children’s Sentinel Nutrition Assessment Program have conducted research on household energy security and its associations with food security and child health, growth and development. |
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Ann Cooper
Nutrition Services Director Boulder Valley School District See Bio Chef Ann Cooper is a celebrated author, chef, educator, and enduring advocate for better food for all children. In a nation where children are born with shorter estimated life expectancies than their parents because of diet-related illness, Ann is a relentless voice of reform by focusing on the links between food, family, farming and children’s health and wellness. A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Hyde Park, NY, Ann has been a chef for more than 30 years including positions with Holland America Cruises, Radisson Hotels, Telluride Ski Resort as well as serving as Executive Chef at the renowned Putney Inn in Vermont. She has been featured in The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Chicago Tribune, Newsweek , and Time Magazine and has appeared on NPR’s ‘Living on Earth,’ ABC’s Nightline, CNN, PBS’ To The Contrary and the CBS Morning Show and many other media outlets. Ann has shared her knowledge and experience by speaking at the Smithsonian Institute, the National Restaurant Association, the Heifer Foundation, Chefs Collaborative, the International Association of Culinary Professionals and numerous conferences. She has been honored by SLOW Food USA, selected as a Kellogg Food and Society Policy Fellow, and awarded an honorary doctorate from SUNY Cobleskill for her work on sustainable agriculture. Ann is the author of four books: Lunch Lessons: Changing the Way We Feed Our Children (2006), In Mother’s Kitchen: Celebrated Women Chefs Share Beloved Family Recipes (2005), Bitter Harvest: A Chef’s Perspective on the Hidden Dangers in the Foods We Eat and What You Can do About It (2000) and A Woman’s Place is in the Kitchen: The Evolution of Women Chefs (1998). She is past president of The American Culinary Federation of Central Vermont, and past president and board member of Women's Chefs and Restaurateurs. She also served on the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Organic Standards Board, a Congressional appointment, and was an Executive Committee member of Chefs Collaborative - all in an effort to raise awareness about the value of healthful, seasonal, organic, and regional foods. Ann’s research for and writing of A Bitter Harvest provided a true epiphany for this always curious and proactive chef. No longer could the environmental and health facts be ignored when it came to producing food in this country. Ms Cooper’s career shifted from primarily cooking to a path of cooking, writing, and public speaking – all advocacy work for a healthier food system. There is no doubt that Ann is an accomplished chef, however her focus is now on using her skills and background to create a sustainable model for schools nationwide to transition any processed food based K-12 school meal program to a whole foods environment where food is procured regionally and prepared from scratch. In 2009, Ann founded Food Family Farming Foundation (F3) as a nonprofit focusing on solutions to the school food crisis. F3's pivotal project is The Lunch Box - a web portal that provides free and accessible tools, recipes and community connections to support school food reform. Chef Ann is happily doing the work of three as a Chef, Nutrition Services Director, Consultant, Author, Public Speaker, and Advocate because she sees a need for change and has the gifts to help. She envisions a time soon when being a chef working to feed children fresh, delicious, and nourishing food will no longer be considered “renegade.” |
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Erin Croom
Farm to School Coordinator Georgia Organics See Bio Erin Croom is the Program Manager at Atlanta Recycles, and Farm to School Coordinator at Georgia Organics. She studied at University of Vermont. Georgia Organics is a member supported non-profit organization working to integrate healthy, sustainable and locally grown food into the lives of all Georgians. |
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Joseph Curtatone
Mayor Somerville, MA See Bio Joseph A. Curtatone, First elected in November of 2003, began his fourth term as Mayor of Somerville on January 4, 2010. He had previously served for eight years as an Alderman at Large. 38-years old at the time his first election, Curtatone is the second youngest Mayor in Somerville’s history. A 1984 graduate of Somerville High School, he earned his B.A. from Boston College in 1990, and a J.D. from New England School of Law in 1994. Prior to his election as mayor, he had served as an attorney in private practice and a volunteer assistant football coach at Somerville High School. Under his leadership, Somerville has also earned national recognition for its successful joint effort with Tufts University to implement “Shape Up Somerville,” an effective program to reduce the incidence of childhood obesity among the city’s elementary school children, which was lauded by First Lady Michelle Obama during the launch of her "Let's Move" initiative. |
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Sheilah Davidson
Policy Program Manager and Stakeholder Liaison School Food FOCUS See Bio Sheilah coordinates the FOCUS Policy Working Group, made up of school food service professionals and FOCUS’ local and national partners, and implements strategies to promote the priorities they identify. An activist for more than 20 years, Sheilah is passionate about working with organizations that support solutions. She has worked on many social change initiatives, most recently with the National Campaign for Sustainable Agriculture. She earned a degree in Social Work from San Jose State University. Much of her education and work background is in leadership development and training, community organizing, and fundraising, involving a broad range of issues. |
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Rochelle Davis
Founding Executive Director Healthy Schools Campaign See Bio Rochelle Davis is the Founding Executive Director of the Healthy Schools Campaign, a national not-for-profit organization that advocates for healthy school environments. Davis also served as the Principal Investigator for Healthy Schools Campaign’s NIEHS-funded Partnership to Reduce Disparities in Asthma and Obesity in Latino Schools, where she worked closely with community organizing for environmental justice around children’s health disparities. She was the founding director of Generation Green, a national membership organization that works on children’s environmental health issues, and has more than 20 years of experience in not-for-profit management and finance. Davis is a member of the EPA’s Committee for the Protection of Children’s Health and a founding member of the Green Cleaning Network. She served as a judge for Health magazine's Healthiest Schools Contest and American School & University magazine's Green Clean Award. She is co-author of Fresh Choices, a cookbook published by Rodale Press, and is the recipient of the Chicago Tribune’s 2007 Good Eating Award. |
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Linda Jo Doctor
Program Director W. K. Kellogg Foundation See Bio Linda Jo Doctor is a Program Director in Health at the W. K. Kellogg Foundation. Previously, Ms. Doctor was deputy director for The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation’s Allies Against Asthma program and directed the prevention division at the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. She has worked in substance abuse prevention and managed a national training and technical assistance delivery system supported by the federal Center for Substance Abuse Prevention. She has had leadership roles in several professional associations including Prevention Network and the Association of State and Territorial Health Promotion Directors. Ms. Doctor received her bachelor’s degree from the University of Cincinnati and her master’s degree from Boston University. |
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Lisa Feldstein
Doctoral Student and Instructor University of California, Berkeley See Bio Lisa Feldstein is a Ph.D. student in the Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of California at Berkeley, where her research focuses on land use and social inequality. She has worked in the San Francisco Bay Area's affordable housing and land use arenas for nearly two decades. Prior to commencing her doctoral studies, Lisa was the Public Health Law Program's Senior Policy Director and the Director of PHLP's Land Use and Health Program (now the Project for Healthy Places). A committed community activist, she serves on the boards of Livable City, the Chinatown Community Development Center (for which she chairs the Housing Committee), and the San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association (of which she is a Vice-Chair and co-chairs the Urban Planning Committee). She also serves on the advisory board of Human Impact Partners, an Oakland-based non-profit. Lisa has provided program, policy, and financial technical assistance to local governments and non-profits on a broad range of housing-, community development-, and land use-related issues. She also served as policy analyst to a public-sector labor union, developing a deep understanding of the complexities of local government. Ms. Feldstein also served as a San Francisco Planning Commissioner from 2002-2004, where she was a strong advocate for community-based planning and public benefits. Author of the textbook General Plans and Zoning: A Toolkit on Land Use and Health and co-author of the textbook Economic Development and Redevelopment: A Toolkit on Land Use and Health, Lisa has also written a number of articles for a variety of publications. Lisa graduated from the University of Massachusetts at Boston with a B.A. in American Studies – Urban Focus, and earned her J.D. from the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California at Berkeley. A longtime resident of San Francisco, she enjoys spending time with her husband and their ten-year-old daughter, eating locally, baking, and dabbling in the blood sport that is San Francisco politics. |
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Daylyn Finnegan
30+5 Program Assistant Southern Vermont Area Health Education Center (SV AHEC) See Bio Daylyn Finnegan currently works for a grant-based program called 30+5 to curb childhood obesity in middle school children at the Southern Vermont Area Health Education Center (SVAHEC), which is one of three regional AHECs in Vermont. These AHECs work in partnership with the University of Vermont College of Medicine, School of Nursing, School of Allied Health, College of Education and Social Services, and the Fletcher Allen Residency Programs. They focus on rural health care workforce development to meet the needs of communities and health care professionals. |
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Stacey Flanagan
Deputy Director, Public Health Service Programs Public Health Solutions See Bio Stacey Flanagan is the Deputy Director of Public Health Programs at Public Health Solutions, one of NYC's largest nonprofit agencies. In addition, she teaches at The New School's Graduate Program for International Affairs. Stacey has 15 years experience in nonprofit training and technical assistance starting with her Peace Corps experience. Stacey's expertise ranges from anti-hunger and public health to the environment and urban policy. Stacey has worked at several international agencies such as US Peace Corps, Big Brothers Big Sisters, The Drucker Foundation, and Share Our Strength where she led staff in strategic planning, program design, and implementation. Stacey received her Bachelor's in Political Science from Michigan State University, and her Master's in Nonprofit Management from Milano the New School for Urban Policy and Management where she is currently working on her PhD. Stacey Flanagan is the Deputy Director of Public Health Services Programs for Public Health Solutions. Public Health Solutions is a nonprofit organization that develops, implements and advocates dynamic solutions to prevent disease and improve community health. They conduct comprehensive research providing insight on public health issues, create and manage community health programs, and provide services to organizations to address public health challenges. |
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Lindsey Ford
Consultant Milagro Foundation See Bio Lindsey Ford is the Milagro consultant for the Kellogg projects. The Milagro Foundation is a publicly supported foundation established by Carlos Santana and his family in 1998. Milagro benefits underserved and vulnerable children around the world by making grants to community based tax-exempt organizations that work with children in the areas of education, health and the arts. |
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Robert Gottlieb
Professor of Urban and Environmental Policy and Director of the Urban & Environmental Policy Institute Occidental College See Bio Robert Gottlieb is Professor of Urban and Environmental Policy and Director of the Urban & Environmental Policy Institute (UEPI) at Occidental College in Los Angeles. He is the author or co-author of eleven books, including: Reinventing Los Angeles: Nature and Community in the Global City (2007); The Next Los Angeles: The Struggle for a Livable City (2005); Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement -- New and Revised Edition (2005); Environmentalism Unbound: Exploring New Pathways for Change (2001); and A Life of its Own: The Politics and Power of Water (1989). He has written for numerous other publications, including newspapers, magazines, academic journals, and on line blogs. He is the editor of two MIT Press series, Urban and Industrial Environments; and Food, Health, and Environment. A long-time activist and historian of social movements, Professor Gottlieb has been directly engaged in policy, program development and community action projects in such areas as food systems, transportation and land use, the urban environment, resource policy, and work and industry. |
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John Govea
Senior Program Officer Robert Wood Johnson Foundation See Bio John Govea, J.D., M.P.A., senior program officer, joined the Foundation in 2007. His work on childhood obesity focuses on identifying advocacy strategies that advance policies and environmental changes leading to increased physical activity and better nutrition for children. He also works to help young men and boys of color realize their potential. Believing in RWJF’s “respect, credibility, and ability to inform policy,” Govea views his work as “engaging the very populations we’re trying to impact in changing their own health.” Previously, he served as senior program officer for the State of California’s Service Commission, where he oversaw implementation of the state’s AmeriCorps programs. He has prior experience in philanthropy with the David and Lucile Packard Foundation and the Community Foundation for Monterey County. He also had a 15-year career as an attorney and law partner representing farm workers suffering work injuries in Salinas, Calif. A California native, his parents were grassroots community organizers active with the Community Service Organization, an effort that also trained United Farm Workers (UFW) founder Cesar Chavez. Govea, who “grew up on community meetings,” views his experiences with this movement as enabling him to “witness history.” His eldest sister’s work with UFW was featured in the PBS series entitled “Chicano! The Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement.” He has been active with a variety of nonprofit boards ranging from La Raza Galeria Posada in Sacramento, Calif., an arts and cultural center dedicated to the culture of Chicano, Latino and Native populations to serving as vice president for ethnic emphasis for the Monterey Bay Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America. Govea earned a J.D. from the University of California School of Law, Boalt Hall, an M.P.A. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, and an A.B. from Stanford University. He resides in Princeton with his partner, Denise Keller, coordinator of the National Community-Based Research Networking Initiative at Princeton University, and has two adult children who live in California. He enjoys birding and backpacking, and continues to enjoy his lifelong passion for competitive wrestling. |
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Jasmine Hall Ratliff
Program Officer Robert Wood Johnson Foundation See Bio Jasmine Hall Ratliff, program officer, who joined the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation in 2008, brings her programmatic and grant management expertise to the Foundation’s effort to reverse the childhood obesity epidemic by 2015. Seeing her role as “helping to create healthier communities where children have access to affordable, healthy foods and physical activity,” Ratliff focuses her efforts on developing a national RWJF center that provides expertise and support to organizations, policy-makers and communities as they build a nationwide movement to prevent childhood obesity. She describes this national effort as “seeking to reach children in low-income communities, both rural and urban, and in communities of color.” Previously, Ratliff worked with the Missouri Foundation for Health where she directed the Women’s Health grant program and the development of the Smiles Across Greater Missouri Oral Health program. Within the Women’s Health grant program, violence against women was addressed, and various treatment centers and prevention organizations were funded. She was a member of the Foundation’s Healthy and Active Communities initiative team and contributed to its 2008–2010 strategic plan. Her prior work included research at the Saint Louis University School of Public Health, and developing a business plan for integrating an off-site acute care facility into the main medical campus of the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. Ratliff earned a master of health administration from the Saint Louis University School of Public Health and a B.A. from the University of Virginia. She is a member of the American College of Healthcare Executives, the Emerging Practitioners in Philanthropy, and the Association of Black Foundation Executives. She has presented at the American Public Health Association Annual Conference on the issue of the digital divide and access of African-American women to public health centers, and on religious diversity in a health care setting. Born in Virginia, Ratliff now resides in Edison, N.J., with her husband, Geoff, who works for Habitat for Humanity in Newark. In her leisure time, she reads historical fiction, goes to the movies and the beach, contributes to a blog, and enjoys her cat, JT, who, she believes, knows how to “talk.” |
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Amie Hamlin
Executive Director New York Coalition for Healthy School Food See Bio Since 2004, Amie Hamlin has been Executive Director of New York Coalition for Healthy School Food (NYCHSF), which is a statewide nonprofit that works to improve the health and well-being of New York's studentsShe has been successful in promoting plant based entrees in schools. She has been a vegan for the last 21 years and a vegetarian for 10 years before that. She has been active and involved in promoting the benefits of a vegan diet. She founded “Club Veg”, which is a vegetarian education group, in 1995, worked in tobacco control to ban smoking in public places, and worked for two environmental non-profits. |
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Heather Hartline-Grafton
Senior Nutrition Policy Analyst Food Research and Action Center (FRAC) See Bio Heather Hartline-Grafton, DrPH, RD is a Senior Nutrition Policy Analyst at the Food Research and Action Center (or FRAC), the leading national nonprofit organization working to improve public policies and public-private partnerships to eradicate hunger and undernutrition in the United States. Heather’s work at FRAC focuses on obesity as it impacts low income and food insecure children and families, with emphasis on the federal nutrition programs. She has a rich background in nutrition policy research, obesity prevention, and healthy eating strategies, including her prior work at the American Cancer Society, Mathematica Policy Research, and Tulane University. Heather is a Registered Dietitian and holds bachelors’ degrees in nutritional sciences and dietetics from the University of Delaware, a MPH in nutrition from the University of North Carolina, and a DrPH in community health sciences from Tulane University. |
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Jamie Harvie
Co-Director, Healthy Food in Health Care Project, Health Care Without Harm, Executive Director, Institute for a Sustainable Future. Institute for a Sustainable Future See Bio Jamie Harvie is a civil engineer, and presently serves as both the Co-Director of HCWH’s Healthy Food in Health Care Project, and as Executive Director for the Institute for a Sustainable Future (ISF), a not-for-profit organization based in Duluth, Minnesota. He has coordinated HCWH’s purchasing effort, which has resulted in a strong relationship between HCWH and the country’s five largest Group Purchasing Organizations. Jamie also serves on the steering committee for the Green Guide for Healthcare Construction; design, construction, operations and maintenance guidelines for the healthcare industry, and coordinated the GGHC Food Credit. He was instrumental in negotiations with major pharmacy chains, which successfully resulted in a national voluntary phase-out of mercury thermometer sales. Mr. Harvie is a nationally recognized mercury expert and has been invited to speak internationally on pollution prevention. Mr. Harvie was recently a Growing Green award from NRDC in recognition for his leadership on sustainable foods in the healthcare sector. Together with his wife Nancy, they attempt to raise two happy, healthy, well adjusted children, Emma and Nathaniel. |
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Kenneth Hecht
Executive Director, Co-Founder California Food Policy Advocates See Bio Kenneth Hecht is the executive director and one of the co-founders of California Food Policy Advocates. Begun in 1992, CFPA is California's statewide nutrition policy and advocacy organization, whose mission is to improve the health and well-being of low-income Californians by increasing their access to nutritious, affordable food. The chief focus of CFPA's work is expansion and improvement of the federal food programs in order to prevent hunger, food insecurity and childhood obesity. CFPA’s headquarters are in Oakland, with regional offices in Los Angeles and Sacramento, and CFPA works with affiliated nutrition advocacy organizations in San Diego and Fresno. Upon completion of law school, Ken worked for fifteen years as a public interest attorney, first at San Francisco Neighborhood Legal Assistance Foundation and then as executive director of the San Francisco Legal Aid Society. At the Legal Aid Society, he played a leading role in establishing the Youth Law Center and the Employment Law Center, two specialized test case, law reform organizations. After that, Ken worked at the San Francisco Foundation, where he was the associate director during a time of very rapid growth for the Foundation. This was followed by nearly ten years as an independent consultant -- to city and county governments, foundations and nonprofit organizations -- on the growth and operation of emergency food systems. |
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Mary Hendrickson
Extension Associate Professor University of Missouri See Bio Mary Hendrickson is director of Food Circles Networking Project, a program of the University of Missouri Extension. She currently is focusing her work efforts on consumer education and community building as well as connecting farmers with distributors and helping food service source locally produced food. Her work has led to several community-based processing activities, making local food programming a strong priority in the Kansas City and St. Louis urban extension programs. Hendrickson also serves as associate director of Community Food Systems and Sustainable Agriculture Program where she works with mid-sized cooperatives in beef and pork processing from initial planning to start-up, researching potential opportunities in direct-marketing to restaurants and establishing connections between distributors and farmers. She also has worked with numerous community groups focusing on building community relationships through food and helping to develop economic bases of communities through food entrepreneurship. In addition to her professional endeavors, Hendrickson currently serves as co-chair for Healthy Farms and Communities Work Group for the 2007 Farm Bill Policy Collaboration. She also is past president of Community Food Security Coalition; vice-president for Agriculture, Food and Human Values Society; a member of the Rural Sociological Society, Missouri Farmers Union and Midwest Sustainable Agriculture Working Group; and is a past board member of Sustainable Farms and Communities (Columbia, Missouri). Hendrickson was a W.K. Kellogg Foundation Food and Society Policy Fellow. She was awarded the 2001 Cooperative Service Award by the National Farmers Union and received the Family Farm Leadership Award presented by the Missouri Farmers Union. She has her Ph.D. in Rural Sociology from University of Missouri, M.S. in Rural Sociology from University of Missouri, and B.S. in Agricultural Honors and Agribusiness from University of Nebraska-Lincoln. |
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Dana Hudson
Northeast Farm-to-School Coordinator Shelburne Farms - Vermont FEED See Bio Dana Hudson works for Shelburne Farms and Vermont FEED (Food Education Every Day) as the Northeast Regional Co-Lead of the National Farm to School Network. She was raised on her family’s farm in Maryland and has 13 years of experience working on food, farming and education issues. She has a Bachelors in Environmental Analysis and Planning and a Masters in Environmental Studies – focused on Agriculture Education and Nonprofit Administration. Dana has facilitated farmer to school relations throughout the state of Vermont. She led in the project management of the initial 3 years of Burlington School Food Project, highly successful multi-partner farm to school initiative in Vermont’s largest city. She is an adjunct faculty at Johnson State College and has run graduate level professional development courses on farm to school throughout the state, as well as farm-based multi-day seminars and workshops for farmers from all over the US and Canada. She is a founding and current board member of the Farm Based Education Association. She loves to garden, cook, and kayak and lives with her husband and son in Huntington. |
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Nancy Huehnergarth
Executive Director NYS Health Eating and Physical Activity Alliance See Bio Nancy Huehnergarth is the Executive Director of NYS Health Eating and Physical Activity Alliance. She co-founded and led a statewide non-profit alliance to improve healthy eating and physical activity policies and practices to reduce obesity and chronic disease. She coordinated NYSHEPA advocacy efforts in NYS for sugary beverage tax, school nutrition standards, calorie labeling, trans fat ban, the breastfeeding bill of rights, and Complete Streets. She was previously the Executive and Project Director of Westchester Coalition for Better School Food, which is a county-wide coalition dedicated to improving nutrition and fitness in Westchester County public and private schools. She received her B.A. in English at Emory University. |
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Grace Huppert
Public Health Nutrition Consultant California Department of Public Health See Bio Grace Huppert is a Registered Dietitian and Public Health Nutrition Consultant with California Project LEAN CPL. Ms. Huppert has held this position since 2007 and her area of expertise is school food and beverage policy and childhood obesity. Prior to joining the CPL team, Ms. Huppert held positions as a Program Manager for the Network for a Healthy California, a clinical and community nutritionist for Solano County, and a regional nutritionist for three rural counties in East Tennessee. Ms. Huppert received her Bachelor’s degree in Dietetics from the University of California, Davis, and her Masters degree in Nutrition Science, Public Health Nutrition, from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. |
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Linda Jimenez
vice president of public relations for CNC Holdings, LLC and chief government affairs officer for TransLogic Auto Carriers, LLC VIDA Enterprise See Bio Linda Jiménez has been appointed vice president of public relations for CNC Holdings, LLC and chief government affairs officer for TransLogic Auto Carriers, LLC. Jiménez was the president/CEO and founder of VIDA Enterprise, Inc., a minority-owned consulting company. Fluent in Spanish, she is an adjunct faculty member at Wayne State University in the Division of Kinesiology, Health and Sport Studies. With a strong background in startups, fundraising, grant writing and entrepreneurship, she founded two 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations. She was the founding executive director of Detroit After-School All-Stars, a Detroit chapter of The Arnold Schwarzenegger Youth Foundation. In addition, Linda was the founding executive director of Get Active Detroit, a state initiative to promote physical activity. Linda has served as a federal grant reviewer for the U.S. Department of Education. Currently, Jiménez serves as a Board of Trustee for Henry Ford Health System and Vice Chair for Michigan Minority Business Development Corporation Healthcare Sector and was appointed as the first Hispanic board member of the Governor’s Council on Physical Fitness, Health and Sports. Her civic involvements include vice chair of the Michigan Fitness Foundation and Cabrini School Advisory Commission. Linda and her husband Salvador have established The Jiménez Family Annual Scholarship at Wayne State University for Kinesiology students. Linda has a Bachelor of Science degree in Exercise Science specializing in Sport Medicine and a Master of Education degree in Kinesiology from Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan. |
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Tamiko Johnson
Healthy Eating Active Living Oakland Site Coordinator Alameda County Public Health See Bio Tamiko Johnson is the Healthy Eating Active Living Oakland Site Coordinator for Alameda County Public Health. |
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Anupama Joshi
Director National Farm to School Network See Bio Anupama Joshi is the director of the National Farm to School Program. Since 2002, Joshi has spearheaded the successful “farm-to-school” movement that is revolutionizing school cafeterias across the country and providing additional marketing avenues for small family farmers. Joshi provides training and assistance to school districts and farmers for developing farm to school programs, promotes the program through its Web site, www.farmtoschool.org, a national clearing house and repository of farm-to-school programs. Joshi has been instrumental in establishing a national farm to school network with more than 30 organizations to promote the farm-to-school movement. Currently, her work focuses on expanding and consolidating this network, and coordinating media and marketing campaigns, policy work, information dissemination, networking, and technical assistance to support the program. From 2002 to 2005, Joshi led the California Farm-to-School Program in bringing together stakeholders to explore barriers and opportunities for developing farm-to-school in the state. Joshi has worked with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific in Bangkok, Thailand; the Pesticide Action Network; and consulted with various non-profit organizations in Asia. Joshi has presented at various conferences and workshops including those organized by the School Nutrition Association, Society for Nutrition Education, Community Food Security Coalition, California Nutrition Network, American Public Health Association, and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s Food and Society Networking Conference. Joshi has been quoted extensively in print and other media pieces on farm-to-school programs. She has been a past board member of the Community Alliance with Family Farmers, and is a member of the Society for Nutrition Education and the American Dietetic Association. |
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David Katz
Associate Professor Adjunct in Public Health Practice Yale University, Griffin Hospital See Bio David L. Katz MD, MPH, FACPM, FACP is an internationally renowned authority on nutrition, weight management, and the prevention of chronic disease, and an internationally recognized leader in integrative medicine and patient-centered care. He is a board certified specialist in both Internal Medicine, and Preventive Medicine/Public Health, and Associate Professor (adjunct) in Public Health Practice at the Yale University School of Medicine. Katz is the Director and founder (1998) of Yale University's Prevention Research Center; Director and founder of the Integrative Medicine Center at Griffin Hospital (2000) in Derby, CT; founder and president of the non-profit Turn the Tide Foundation; and formerly the Director of Medical Studies in Public Health at the Yale School of Medicine for eight years. Katz has published over 100 scientific papers, numerous textbook chapters, nearly a thousand newspaper columns, and 12 books to date. He is the principal inventor of the Overall Nutritional Quality Index utilized in the NuVal™ nutrition guidance program (www.nuval.com), currently offered in over 500 supermarkets throughout the United States. Along with his wife, Catherine, Katz developed the Nutrition Detectives (http://www.davidkatzmd.com/nutritiondetectives.aspx) and ABC for Fitness (http://www.davidkatzmd.com/abcforfitness.aspx) health promotion programs, both active in hundreds if not thousands of schools throughout the U.S., and abroad. Katz is a prominent voice in medical media, serving as a expert source for most leading newspapers and magazines, serving on the editorial advisory boards of several leading health periodicals and professional journals (including Health, Prevention, Men's Health, Best Life, and the American Journal of Health Promotion). He contributes a monthly column to O, the Oprah Magazine; near daily blogs to Prevention Magazine (http://www.prevention.com/cda/expertblog/health/health.experts); a weekly Preventive Medicine column to the New Haven Register; and has served as a Medical Contributor to ABC News and a health columnist to the New York Times Syndicate. Katz has been recognized by the Consumers Research Council of America three times (2004; 2006; 2009) as one of America’s top physicians in Preventive Medicine and in 2009 he was named one of the 25 most influential people in the lives of children by Children's Health magazine. He has consulted to the US Secretary of Health, the National Governors Association, and the World Health Organization. In 2009, Katz received the Distinguished Service Award from the Association of Yale Alumni in Public Health. Also in 2009, Dr. Katz was nominated for the position of U.S. Surgeon General to the Obama Administration by the American College of Physicians, the American College of Preventive Medicine, and the Center for Science in the Public Interest, among other national and international health organizations. In September of 2009, Dr. Katz, the only speaker on the program from North America, delivered the opening keynote address during the health symposium at the European Alpbach Forum, an annual event since 1945 at which speakers routinely include Nobel laureates, Heads of State, and this year, the Secretary General of the United Nations. |
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Ruth Kava
Consultant Self Employed See Bio Ruth Kava, PhD, RD, is an independent consultant. She was previously the director of nutrition at the American Council on Science and Health in New York, which is a nonprofit organization that is a consumer education consortium concerned with issues related to food, nutrition, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, lifestyle, the environment and health. |
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Debra Kibbe
Director, Physical Activity and Nutrition International Life Sciences Institute (ILSI) Research Foundation See Bio Debra Kibbe serves as Director of the Physical Activity and Nutrition (PAN) Program for the International Life Sciences Institute Research Foundation (ILSI RF) headquartered in Washington, D.C. Ms. Kibbe has helped coordinate and evaluate several school and health care intervention projects aimed at the prevention and management of pediatric overweight. Debra serves on Georgia’s Physical Activity and Nutrition Initiative Steering Committee and co-chairs the Healthcare Workgroup for the state’s obesity task force. She is faculty for the American Dietetic Association’s certificate program on pediatric overweight. Debra earned her B. S. in Psychology from Hiram College and her MS in Personnel & Employment Relations from Georgia State University. |
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Pamela Koch
Executive Director, Center for Food & Environment Columbia University, Teachers College See Bio Pamela Koch is the executive director of the Center for Food & Environment at Teachers College Columbia University in New York City. She has been the primary author of the Linking Food and the Environment (LiFE) Curriculum Series since its inception in 1997. She is also an adjunct assistant professor in the nutrition program at Teachers College. She completed her doctoral dissertation, the evaluation of Cookshop discussed in this essay, under the direction of Drs. Isobel Contento and Joan Gussow at Teachers College. She received her B.S. (Human Nutrition and Dietetics), Cook College, Rutgers University; M.S. (Applied Nutrition) Rutgers University; M.Ed. (Community Nutrition) Teachers College,and Ed.D. (Nutrition Education) Teachers College, Columbia University. |
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Lynne Kunins
Executive Director Florida Introduces Physical Activity and Nutrition to Youth (FLIPANY) See Bio Lynne Kunins is the Executive Director of FLIPANY ( Florida Introduces Physical Activity and Nutrition to Youth), which provides affordable physical activity and nutrition programs for youth and their families in South Florida. |
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Gretchen Kunkel
President KC Healthy Kids See Bio Gretchen is the President of KC Healthy Kids, which strives to reduce obesity and improve the health of Greater Kansas City’s children by informing, advocating, and mobilizing the resources and talents of the community. |
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Hannah Laurison
Senior Associate Public Health Law & Policy See Bio Hannah Burton Laurison is a Senior Associate with Public Health Law & Policy's Planning for Healthy Places project, where she specializes in community and economic development. Prior to joining PHLP, she staffed an $80 million public-private initiative that worked to develop new grocery stores in Pennsylvania's low-income communities. She has also served as a consultant to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, coordinated a hunger relief program, and organized community gardens in low-income communities. She is the author of Stimulating Supermarket Development; a contributor to The Price Is Wrong: Getting the Market Right for Working Families in Philadelphia, published by the Brookings Institution; and a co-author of What's Cooking in Your Food System: A Guide to Community Food Assessment. She is a graduate of Brown University (magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa) and Tufts University's Department of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning. |
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Toni Liquori
Adjunct Associate Professor of Nutrition Education; Executive Director of School Food Focus Columbia University, Teachers College See Bio Toni Liquori, founder of Liquori & Associates LLC, is a public health nutritionist who has spent more than 25 years pioneering change in the NYC food system through the development of several initiatives featuring “cooking” as a touchstone of community engagement. Toni Liquori is a public health nutrition scholar and an experienced facilitator of large-scale institutional change. Toni's recent experience in transforming children's food options in the nation's largest school system (New York City) now informs her goals and strategies for schools across the country via School Food FOCUS. FOCUS, a national initiative envisioned by and now directed by Toni, helps large school districts with 40,000 or more students serve more healthful, more sustainably produced and regionally sourced food so that children may perform better in school and be healthier in life. Funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and launched in late 2008, FOCUS works with food service and other stakeholder groups to collect, analyze, and use food system data and peer-tested research to spur change in procurement methods. FOCUS supports a network of people who are engaging over 20 big-city school districts in systems change and also facilitates the sharing of best practices and lessons learned. More than a decade ago, Toni developed the CookShop™ Program, a now-beloved food and nutrition education program in NYC schools that connects classroom education and school meals with regional farms. A longtime faculty member of Teachers College at Columbia University, Toni continues to work with graduate students to deepen their understanding and engagement with food procurement reform. Working with the Sustainable Food Lab, she has also "translated" some of the most exciting institutional food procurement change models in Europe to practitioners in the United States. Toni serves on the Advisory Board of the NYC Wholesale Farmers Market, the Advisory Committee for the National Farm-To-School Network and is also the founder of the NYC Nutrition Education Network and remains on its leadership team.She received her B.A. from Emmanuel College, Boston, MA; MPH from the School of Public Health, Columbia University; and Ed.D. from Teachers College, Columbia University. |
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Javier Lopez
Director of Strategic Alliance for Health for the East and Central Harlem District Public Health Office New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene See Bio Javier Lopez is the Director of Strategic Alliance for Health for the East and Central Harlem District Public Health Office for the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene. The South Bronx and East & Central Harlem, two adjacent areas of NYC, have significantly high rates of obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The population in these areas report limited physical activity, limited access to fresh fruits and vegetables and higher rates of smoking than NYC as a whole. The Strategic Alliance for Health (SAfH) is designed to leverage the initiatives of SAfH partners, Elected Officials, City and State agencies/coalitions and non-public health focused community based organizations in an effort to improve the environments, systems, and policies that influence physical activity, nutrition, and tobacco use within schools and the broader community. |
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Erin MacDougall
Program Manager, Healthy Eating and Active Living Public Health Seattle and King County See Bio Erin MacDougall is a healthy food specialist and scientist dedicated to ensuring a future in which every person has access to healthy food produced in a just and sustainable manner. With a background as a nutrition scientist studying heart disease, Erin approaches real-world problems with a systems view toward comprehensive solutions. In her public health role, she works with a diverse group of community-based organizations, government agencies, policymakers and community residents to help identify and realize tangible changes for policy and systems to improve the food system and public health for residents in the Pacific Northwest. Erin is passionate about community gardening in Seattle and appreciates the abundance and diversity of the foods grown and harvested in the Pacific Northwest. She is committed to promoting the work of local chefs and restaurants that focus on procuring and serving locally and sustainably produced foods. Currently, her food-focused work in Seattle and King County, Washington, includes helping to lead the Kellogg Foundation-funded King County Food and Fitness Initiative and the Puget Sound School Gardens Collective. She is also a member of the Acting Food Policy Council for Seattle and King County. She is committed to improving school food both locally and across the nation, advancing efforts to institutionalize Farm to School and school garden programs. She works to improve access to healthy foods in low-income communities by helping to advance policy efforts for local farms and food harvesters to sell to low-income residents and institutions, while simultaneously promoting economic development through green jobs. She serves as a National Advisory Board member for Leadership for Healthy Communities, an advisory member to the Western Regional Farm to School planning efforts led by Ecotrust in Portland, OR, and a volunteer board member for the P-Patch Trust in Seattle. Prior to working in public health, Erin worked as a scientist studying cardiovascular disease, in particular researching the impacts of systemic inflammation on late-stage heart disease. Her commitment to promoting lifelong health for all people comes from her understanding of the origins of chronic diseases and the importance of a healthy diet in preventing them. |
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Kate MacKenzie
Director, Program Development and Policy City Harvest See Bio Kate MacKenzie is the Director of Program Development and Policy at City Harvest. Previously, she worked as the Director of Food and Nutrition at FoodChange and as a Public Health Epidemiologist at the New York City Department of Health. She has a BS in Nutrition from Cornell and an MS, RD , Public Health Nutrition from Teachers College of Columbia University. |
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Lynn Mader
Senior Program Associate Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy See Bio Lynn Mader is a Senior Program Associate in the Local Foods program, and has worked extensively for the University of Minnesota and other organizations developing and implementing farm to school programs. Her work focuses on improving the health of K-12 children through educational programs, experiences and school food service that connects children, farmers and healthy foods. She has been involved with local foods and alternative nutrition initiatives for the last 20 years. She is a registered, licensed dietitian, has taught college-level nutrition and cooking-for-health classes, and has foodservice and clinic management experience. Lynn has served on various boards including the Minnesota Institute for Sustainable Agriculture (MISA), Hunger and Environmental Nutrition (HEN), Dietetics Practice Group of the American Dietetic Association, Montevideo Nutrition and Fitness Task Force, Montevideo Schools Wellness Committee and The Cultural Diversity Council of the Upper Minnesota River Valley. She lives in Montevideo, Minn. |
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Kristen Mancinelli
Manager, Policy and Government Relations City Harvest See Bio Kristen Mancinelli is the Manager of Policy and Government Relations at City Harvest. She attended the Teachers College of Columbia University. |
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Kristen Markley
National Farm to Institution Program Manager Community Food Security Coalition See Bio Kristen Markley is the National Farm to Institution Program Manager of The Community Food Security Coalition (CFSC), a North American coalition of diverse people and organizations working from the local to international levels to build community food security. |
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Anna Martin
Manager of Research and Evaluation REDF See Bio Anna C. Martin is REDF’s Manager of Research and Evaluation. Anna oversees measurement strategies and impact evaluation for REDF’s portfolio of social enterprises, as well as impact measurement for REDF’s policy-driven work. She ensures that the impact of employment in REDF social enterprises is well-documented and that REDF impact evaluation contributes to social entrepreneurship and workforce development while simultaneously creating systems that increase practitioners’ access to and use of information. Anna has held research and evaluation roles at such organizations as the University of California (Berkeley), The Public Health Institute, BTW Consultants in California, and the Harvard School of Public Health and the National Center on Family Homelessness (formerly the Better Homes Fund), in Massachusetts. She has co-authored several publications and presentations. Anna received her Ph.D. in the Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences from The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, M.A. from The Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, and B.A. from Carleton College. Anna lives in Alameda with her husband, two children, a dog and a tortoise. |
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Barbara McCann
Executive Director National Complete Streets Coalition See Bio Barbara McCann is a public policy and communications expert who has spent the last eleven years bringing transportation, land use, and active living issues into the public debate. In addition to the more recent work listed on the home page, she authored Measuring the Health Effects of Sprawl, the report explaining groundbreaking new scientific research linking the built environment to physical activity and health. The report brought widespread media attention to the issue of creating more walkable and bikeable communities. She is a co-author of the Island Press Book, Sprawl Costs, and edited Chris Leinberger's book, The Option of Urbanism. Ms. McCann coined the term Complete Streets and serves as Executive Director of the National Complete Streets Coalition, a national Coalition working for the adoption of Complete Streets policies at the federal, state, and local level. She previously served as Director of Information and Research at Smart Growth America (SGA), a national land use policy organization based in Washington DC. Prior to working at SGA, Ms. McCann directed a high-profile campaign at the Surface Transportation Policy Project which used federal data to illuminate the impact of transportation policies on everyday life. Her work at STPP included the Mean Streets series on pedestrian safety and other reports from 1998 through 2002. The reports drew extensive attention for government officials, interest groups, and the media, including coverage on all national network evening news shows and stories in every major newspaper in the United States. She worked at for 13 years as a writer and producer at Cable News Network, including senior positions on award-winning news programs and newsmagazines. She has served on the Board of the Washington Area Bicyclist Association and the WalkScore Advisory Board. |
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Kari Mcfarlan
Deputy Director Community Health Partnership See Bio Kari McFarlan is deputy director for Community Health Partnership: Oregon's Public Health Institute. Currently, she directs the organization's strategic focus on prevention of obesity as well as staff and project management. Prior to relocating to Oregon, Ms. McFarlan was the Deputy Director of the Robert Wood Johnson Health Policy Fellowships Program and Program Officer at the Institute of Medicine at The National Academies. Ms.McFarlan received her bachelor's degree in psychology and sociology at the University of California at Santa Cruz and her master's of public health with an emphasis in health policy from The George Washington University in Washington, DC. |
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Leslie Mikkelsen
Managing Director Prevention Institute See Bio Leslie Mikkelsen, Managing Director at Prevention Institute, advances the conceptual work of the organization and supervises the Supporting Healthy Eating and Active Living projects and team. She develops tools and materials to support local and state initiatives, and guides government bureaus, foundations and community organizations throughout the country on effective environmental approaches, coalition building, and interdisciplinary partnerships. Leslie is the co-founder and Project Director for the Strategic Alliance for Healthy Food and Activity Environments, a statewide advocacy network involved in creating healthy food and physical activity opportunities. Her research and publications had aided in the development of ENACT (Environmental Nutrition and Activity Community Tool), and the ENACT Local Policy Database. She is also a Policy Consultant to the national Healthy Eating Active Living Convergence Partnership, where she directs research and helps shape national strategy related to policy priorities that support healthy food and activity environments. Leslie has written many articles, including Setting the Record Straight: Nutritionists and Health Professionals Define Healthful Food and Where's the Fruit? Fruit Content of the Most Highly Advertised Children's Food and Beverages. Prior to joining Prevention Institute in 1999, Leslie worked for the Alameda County and New York City Food Banks. Leslie is the winner of the American Public Health Association Food and Nutrition Section 2008 Catherine Cowell Award for Excellence in Public Health Nutrition. She received her MPH from UC Berkeley. |
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Helen Mont-Ferguson
Director of Food & Nutrition Services Boston Public Schools See Bio Helen Mont-Ferguson is the Director of Food & Nutrition Services for Boston Public Schools. |
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Barbara Moore
President and Chief Executive Officer Shape Up America! See Bio Dr. Moore is President and Chief Executive Officer of Shape Up America!, a national initiative to promote healthy weight and increased physical activity in America. Committed to providing achievable science-based messages, Shape Up America! was founded by C. Everett Koop, M.D. in 1994. Dr. Moore joined in June 1995 and serves as key liaison with the scientific, professional, and corporate communities. Dr. Moore earned an undergraduate degree from Skidmore College and a doctorate from Columbia University. She has several years of postdoctoral training at the University of California at Davis. Dr. Moore was appointed a Henry Rutgers Fellow at Rutgers University, where she held a tenure track position in the Department of Nutritional Sciences. After leaving academia, Dr. Moore served as General Manager of Program Development and primary technical policy advisor for Weight Watchers International. Dr. Moore joined the Executive Office of the President in 1993 as Acting Assistant for Social and Behavioral Science in the Office of Science and Technology (OSTP). She was involved in the process of policy formation and budgetary support of fundamental scientific research. Prior to joining Shape Up America!, Dr. Moore worked at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Division of Nutrition Research Coordination, where she was responsible for providing guidance on nutrition policy and dietary guidance materials promulgated by the federal government. In this position, Dr. Moore focused on the development of the 1994 Progress Report to the Assistant Secretary of Health on the nutrition objectives of Healthy People 2000. She maintains active membership in the American Society for Nutritional Sciences (ASNS), American Society for Clinical Nutrition (ASCN), North American Association for the Study of Obesity (NAASO), Society for the Study of Ingestive Behavior (SSIB), and Sigma Xi. |
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Kay Morris
Founder & Executive Director Marathon Kids See Bio Kay Morris founded the non-profit, Marathon Kids, in 1996, as a grassroots initiative. Ms. Morris has appeared on CNN, CBS, and has been a "Fit Nation" summit panelist with President Bill Clinton and Dr. Sanjay Gupta of CNN. She actively advocates for increased physical activity time for elementary children and improved nutritional choices for children. It is her particular love to help galvanize an inner city school district and to also "wrap the goodwill" of town members of all shapes and sizes. With support from school officials, community runners, health organizations, the six month Marathon Kids program helps elevate a child's athletic self perception, as well as sense of himself or herself as a person who can complete a difficult and long-term project. There are currently almost 170,000 registered Marathon Kids in its 7 "marquee cities". Ms Morris has received awards from local community health organizations and was honored with the Runner's World Magazine "Hero of the Year' Award. |
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Elizabeth Nahar
Program Director, Children in Balance Tufts University See Bio Elizabeth K. Nahar, has served as Program Director for the Children in Balance childhood obesity prevention initiative at the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy (Tufts University) since 2006. In her role as Program Director, Ms. Nahar stewards the dissemination efforts of tools and curricula from Children in Balance's research projects around the country. Working closely with Professor Christina Economos, she also oversees the strategic planning, positioning, fundraising and day-to-day operations of Children in Balance. Prior to joining Tufts, Ms. Nahar's commitment to family and community health led her to professional positions in family service organizations, youth leadership and community organizing programs. Ms. Nahar received her Bachelor of Arts from the University of Michigan in 1990, and her Master of Social Work and Master of Business Administration degrees from Boston College in 1997. |
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Abbie Nelson
Education Coordinator of NOFA Vermont and VT Food Education Every Day (VT FEED) Director Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont See Bio Abbie Nelson is the Education Coordinator of NOFA Vermont and the VT Food Education Every Day (VT FEED) Director involved in all aspects of local purchasing and professional development of school food service. She has been a teacher for over 20 years in regular and special education, and worked on an organic vegetable and flower farm. As part of NOFA Vermont and a VT FEED partner, she has been working in Vermont schools linking Food, Farm, and Nutrition education for 8 years. Her role has been focused on school food by connecting kitchen managers with local farmers, helping farmers with agricultural education on their farms, training school food service personnel, and teaching school staff how to introduce new foods to students. |
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Meghan O'Connell
Research Associate Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity See Bio Meghan O'Connell is a Research Associate at the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity at Yale University. Meghan received her Bachelor of Social Work degree from Providence College and her Masters in Public Health from Curtin University in Perth, Australia. Prior to coming to the Rudd Center, Meghan worked as a Research Associate at the Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, where she managed nutrition and physical activity related studies, as well as research on adolescent and adult smoking cessation. Meghan is interested in childhood obesity prevention and improving school nutrition, in particular. At the Rudd Center, her research focuses on the development of food preferences and eating habits in early childhood, as well as strengthening food policies in Connecticut schools. |
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Angela Odoms-Young
Assistant Professor, Kinesiology and Nutrition University of Illinois See Bio Angela M. Odoms-Young, Ph.D., is an assistant professor in Kinesiology and Nutrition at the University of Illinois at Chicago. Odoms-Young earned a B.S. degree in foods and nutrition from the University of Illinois-Urbana/Champaign and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Cornell University in human nutrition and community nutrition, respectively. Prior to her position at UIC, she was a faculty member in Public Health and Health Education at Northern Illinois University. She completed a Family Research Consortium Postdoctoral Fellowship examining family processes in diverse populations at The Pennsylvania State University and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a Community Health Scholars Fellowship in community-based participatory research at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. |
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Laura Ojeda
Deputy Program Director, Leadership for Healthy Communities Global Policy Solutions/Leadership for Healthy Communities See Bio Laura Ojeda is the Deputy Director of Leadership for Healthy Communities, which is a $10-million national program of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation designed to support local and state government leaders nationwide in their efforts to reduce childhood obesity through public policies that promote active living, healthy eating and access to healthy foods. She has worked in the field of public health in the areas of program planning, policy and evaluation for more than 12 years. Most recently, Laura served as a Program Officer with First 5 LA, a major funding agency dedicated to improving the lives of young children in Los Angeles, California. In this capacity, she designed and managed a five-year $100 million health insurance program targeting low-income children ineligible for public programs due to income restrictions and immigration status. Laura also represented First 5 LA in the Children's Health Initiative (CHI) Coalition of Greater Los Angeles. This work involved collaborating with numerous stakeholders and advocates throughout Los Angeles County, including governmental agencies, community based, and philanthropic organizations, to inform statewide health policy reform. In addition, Laura played a critical role in the development of the agency's five year strategic plan specific to its health priorities. Prior to this experience, Laura planned and evaluated HIV prevention programs with Clinica Para Las Americas, a community clinic serving uninsured, low income, Latino immigrants in Los Angeles, California. Laura also worked as a Research Analyst with the UCLA School of Public Health providing technical assistance to nonprofit organizations in evaluation and needs assessments. Laura holds a master of public health from UCLA in community health sciences with a policy concentration. |
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Christine Olson
Professor Cornell University See Bio Christine M. Olson, Professor of Nutritional Sciences, was involved in the initial development of the questions used annually in the Current Population Survey to assess the food security status of households in the United States. She conducts research on the antecedents and consequences of food insecurity in food-rich countries with a particular focus on women and their children, health and human capital issues, and rural poverty. She has over 30 years of involvement in extension-outreach programs with Cornell Cooperative Extension and will contribute to the outreach activities of this ISS theme project. She brings expertise in the use of mixed methods (qualitative and quantitative) and longitudinal research approaches to development of theory and measures relevant to poverty-associated nutrition and health issues. She will coordinate the seminars on the Measurement portion of the project. |
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Debra Oto-Kent
Executive Director Health Education Council See Bio Debra Oto-Kent is executive director of the Health Education Council, which is dedicated to promoting healthy communities and preventing disease among at-risk populations. Oto-Kent founded the Council in 1991 after working for more than 13 years in the nonprofit health sector. She received her undergraduate degree in health science and safety studies from San Diego State University and her master’s degree in health education and behavioral science from UCLA’s School of Public Health. Oto-Kent’s primary area of interest and expertise is health education — with an emphasis on traditionally underserved populations, such as the socio-economically disadvantaged and diverse ethnic populations — about which she has written and spoken extensively. She has served on boards and committees of numerous local and statewide health promotion organizations including her current service as a founding board member of the Sacramento Community Clinic Consortium and educational materials reviewer for the California Healthy Kids Resource Center. Oto-Kent received the Outstanding Women of Achievement in Healthcare Award from the Downtown Capitol Chapter of Business and Professional Women and the Sacramento Women’s Council’s Leadership Award. |
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Margo Pedroso
Deputy Director Safe Routes to School National Partnership See Bio Margo Pedroso serves as the Deputy Director for the Safe Routes to School National Partnership. In this role, she manages government relations, grassroots lobbying, policy research and analysis to advance the SRTS national movement, and assists the Director with partner outreach, fundraising, and strategic planning. Prior to joining the SRTS National Partnership, Margo spearheaded public policy and advocacy for MENTOR/National Mentoring Partnership. During her tenure, she built bipartisan Congressional support for youth mentoring, resulting in a four-fold increase in federal funding for mentoring programs and a Congressional pilot program that allows mentoring programs to use FBI background checks to screen volunteers. Margo served as the policy liaison with human service organizations, state partners, and federal agencies. She also carried out a wide-reaching initiative to conduct a national conversation on mentoring and develop a “National Agenda for Action” to expand the availability and quality of youth mentoring. Margo has also held positions with the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services and the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Education and the Workforce, focused on government relations and education policy. In total, she has over twelve years of experience handling appropriations and policy issues, focusing particularly on priorities that will improve the lives of children. |
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Janet Poppendieck
Professor of Sociology Hunter College, City University of New York See Bio Janet Poppendieck is Professor of Sociology at Hunter College, City University of New York. She is the author of Free for All: Fixing School Food in America; (University of California Press, 2010); Sweet Charity? Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement (Penguin, 1999); and Breadlines Knee Deep in Wheat: Food Assistance in the Great Depression (Rutgers University Press, 1985). |
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Elena Quintanar
Community Health Promotion Specialist San Diego County Health & Human Services Agency See Bio Elena Quintanar, MPH, is the Community Health Promotion Specialist at San Diego County Health & Human Services Agency. The Health and Human Services Agency is one of five groups or divisions of the San Diego County government. The Agency provides a broad range of health and social services, promoting wellness, self-sufficiency, and a better quality of life for all individuals and families in San Diego County. |
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Rosa Ramirez
Policy & Outreach Coordinator Healthy Schools Campaign See Bio Rosa comes to Healthy Schools Campaign with strong abilities in analysis, research and advocacy and five years experience in the nonprofit sector, including grassroots advocacy, local government, and intermediaries. She is passionate about environmental justice issues related to health, transportation, land use, and the overall impacts on historically disenfranchised communities. As a previous youth organizer in Chicago's Little Village neighborhood, she has successfully strengthened multi-generational coalitions and managed competing projects in Chicago’s Latino community. She also helped provide technical assistance to diverse community groups and collect and promote best practices during her time working for the national research and action institute PolicyLink. Rosa holds a bachelor's degree in Public Policy and Sociology from DePaul University and a master's of science degree in Community Development from the University of California at Davis. Healthy Schools Campaign is an independent not-for-profit organization, and is the leading authority on healthy school environments and a voice for people who care about our environment, our children, and education. |
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Rebecca Reeves
Assistant Professor, Managing Director Baylor College of Medicine See Bio Dr. Rebecca S. Reeves completed her MPH and DrPH degrees from the University of Texas School of Public Health in Houston, Texas. For the past 30 years she has conducted clinical trials in nutrition and obesity at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. As the Managing Director of the Behavioral Medicine Research Center, Dr. Reeves combines supervision with her research skills. She has focused on heart disease and the behavioral treatment of obesity which has included trials on weight loss treatments for African American and Mexican American women. Currently she is the project director for Look AHEAD study at Baylor College of Medicine. Dr. Reeves has over 40 publications and has addressed many audiences on the topic of weight management. In 1994, Dr. Reeves was selected as the Distinguished Dietitian of the Texas Dietetic Association and in March 2000 her state dietetic association honored her with title of Distinguished Scientist. Dr. Reeves was named a Fellow of the American Dietetic Association in 1995. Dr. Reeves served as the Speaker of the House of Delegates of the American Dietetic Association from 1999-2000. In October 2001, the American Dietetic Association selected Dr. Reeves to receive the Medallion Award, a prestigious award bestowed on members for meritous service to the profession and significant contributions to their professions. Dr. Reeves was elected to the office of President-elect of the American Dietetic Association in 2004 and served as the President of the American Dietetic Association from 2005-2006. |
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Thomas Robinson
Professor of Pediatrics and of Medicine Stanford University, School of Medicine See Bio Thomas N. Robinson, MD, MPH is the Irving Schulman, MD Endowed Professor in Child Health, Professor of Pediatrics and of Medicine, in the Division of General Pediatrics and the Stanford Prevention Research Center at Stanford University School of Medicine, and Director of the Center for Healthy Weight at Stanford University and Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. Dr. Robinson focuses on "solution-oriented" research, developing and evaluating health promotion and disease prevention interventions for children, adolescents and their families to directly inform medical and public health practice and policy. His research is published widely in the peer-reviewed scientific literature. Robinson received both his B.S. and M.D. from Stanford University and his M.P.H. in Maternal and Child Health from the University of California, Berkeley. He completed his internship and residency in Pediatrics at Children's Hospital, Boston and Harvard Medical School, and then returned to Stanford for post-doctoral training as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar. Robinson joined the faculty at Stanford in 1993, was appointed Assistant Professor in 1996, and promoted to Associate Professor with tenure in 2003. He was a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Generalist Physician Faculty Scholar, was a member of the Institute of Medicine's Committees on Prevention of Obesity in Children and Adolescents and Progress in Preventing Childhood Obesity, and is Principal Investigator on numerous prevention studies funded by the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Robinson also is Board Certified in Pediatrics, a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, and practices General Pediatrics at Lucile Packard Children's Hospital at Stanford. |
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Jean Ronnel
Director, nutrition and commercial services St. Paul Public Schools See Bio Jean Ronnei has been the Director of Nutrition and Commercial Services for 19 years for a large urban district in Minnesota, where 70 percent of the 40,000 students are eligible for free or reduced-price meals. In addition to overseeing a $21 million Nutrition Service budget, Jean is responsible for the district storehouse, distribution and graphic service operations. She is the current President-Elect of the Minnesota Nutrition Association and was named 2006 FAME School Nutrition Association Director of the Year. Jean received her bachelor’s degree from Iowa State University in hotel and restaurant management. |
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Sarah Samuels
President Samuels & Associates See Bio Sarah Samuels, DrPH is President of Samuels & Associates, a public health evaluation, research and policy consulting firm created in 1994. Samuels & Associates serves as consultants to foundations, local and statewide public agencies, community-based organizations, and non-profit health programs. Samuels & Associates designs philanthropic initiatives, conducts policy related research and multi-site program evaluations. She was previously a program officer at Kaiser Family Foundation for 9 years, and received her DrPH , Public Health from University of California, Berkeley. |
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Nancy Schaefer
Health Educator Southern Vermont Area Health Education Center (SV AHEC) See Bio Nancy Schaefer is the Health Educator for The Southern Vermont Area Health Education Center (SVAHEC), which is one of three regional AHECs in Vermont. These AHECs work in partnership with the University of Vermont College of Medicine, School of Nursing, School of Allied Health, College of Education and Social Services, and the Fletcher Allen Residency Programs. They focus on rural health care workforce development to meet the needs of communities and health care professionals. |
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Marlene Schwartz
Senior Research Scientists Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity See Bio Dr. Marlene Schwartz, PhD, MS serves as the Deputy Director for the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University. Prior to joining the Rudd Center, she served as Co-Director of the Yale Center for Eating and Weight Disorders from 1996-2006. Dr. Schwartz's research bridges the fields of eating disorders and obesity and is focused on how home environments, communities, and school landscapes shape the eating attitudes and behaviors of children. She frequently collaborates on local state projects with the Connecticut State Department of Education and recently completed a large research study examining the effectiveness of an intervention to remove unhealthy beverages and snacks from schools. Dr. Schwartz is the recipient of two grants from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Healthy Eating Research Program. The first was awarded in 2006 and examined the predictors and outcomes associated with local School Wellness Policies in Connecticut. The second grant, awarded in 2007, moves this field inquiry to a younger age group and examines predictors and consequences of food policies in preschool and daycare settings. Dr. Schwartz co-authored a book for parents of children with eating disorders, entitled Helping Your Child Overcome an Eating Disorder: What You Can Do at Home (New Harbinger Press, 2003), and co-edited the book Weight Bias: Nature, Extent, and Remedies (Guilford Press, 2005) |
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Pam Seamans
Executive Director North Carolina Alliance for Health See Bio Pam Seamans, MPP, serves as the Policy Director of the North Carolina Alliance for Health, a seven-year old coalition of over 75 statewide organizations that have come together to promote tobacco use and obesity prevention policies at the state level. The most significant policy issues taken on by the Alliance to date were multi-faceted efforts (advocacy, media and grassroots) to increase NC's cigarette tax (2003-05, 2009), make the General Assembly buildings smoke-free (2006), make all state-government buildings smoke-free (2007), and make all worksites and public places smoke-free (2009). Pam has also led the Alliance in its transition to tackling on obesity prevention policy issues. Prior to working with the Alliance, Pam lobbied and developed policy implementation strategies in the health and human services policy arena while working as the public policy director of the United Way of North Carolina from 1995 - 1998 and as chairperson of the Covenant for North Carolina's Children from 1997-2001 and 2005-2006. Pam received both her undergraduate and graduate degrees in Public Policy from Duke University. |
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Michael Seserman
Director, Strategic Health Alliances American Cancer Society See Bio Michael Seserman is the Director of Strategic Health Alliances at American Cancer Society. He was previously Director of Tobacco and Program Services at American Cancer Society, a Public Health Prevention Specialist at Centers for Disease Control. He received his MPH , Public Health from Boston University, and his BS in Nutrition from University of Rhode Island. |
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Marion Standish
Director, Healthy Environments The California Endowment See Bio Marion Standish joined The California Endowment with an extensive legal and philanthropic background. As director of Healthy Environments, she leads the foundation’s efforts to develop initiatives to address the health disparities and environmental factors that contribute to the poor health of underserved communities. In that capacity, Standish serves as lead officer on many of The Endowment’s major funding initiatives, including Healthy Eating Active Communities, which supports community coalitions to develop and implement policies and programs to reduce obesity; Community Action To Fight Asthma, which focuses on reducing environmental triggers for asthma among school-aged children; and, The Partnership for the Public’s Health, a five-year program designed to build strong, effective partnerships between local public health departments and the communities they serve. She also designed The Endowment’s partnership project with The Rockefeller Foundation, California Works for Better Health, a four-year effort to build the capacity of community-based organizations to improve neighborhood health status through regional employment strategies. Previously, Standish served as a senior program officer for The Endowment. In that capacity, she managed the foundation’s San Francisco office and was responsible for overseeing the grant-making activities in the Bay Area. She conducted outreach to organizations to increase their awareness of funding opportunities, reviewed health-related grant proposals from community-based organizations, helped to develop programs to assist underserved communities and monitored a portfolio of foundation grants. Prior to joining The Endowment, Standish was founder and director of California Food Policy Advocates (CFPA), a statewide nutrition and health research and advocacy organization focusing on access to nutritious food for low-income families. Before launching CFPA, she served as director of the California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, a statewide advocacy organization focusing on health, education and labor issues facing farm workers and the rural poor. She began her career as a staff attorney with California Rural Legal Assistance, a federally funded legal services program. Standish serves on the board of directors of the Food Research and Action Center, the San Francisco Community Boards Program, and the Neighborhood Funders Group. She was recently appointed by California’s Chief Justice to the Judicial Council’s Legal Services Trust Fund Commission and by Mayor Gavin Newsom to San Francisco’s Children Youth and Families Commission. She received her J.D. from the University of San Francisco School of Law, and both her M.A. and undergraduate degrees from New York University. |
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Judith Stern
Distinguished Professor, Department of Nutrition, Nutritionist in Agricultural Experiment Station University of California at Davis See Bio Professor Stern joined UC Davis in 1975. She is internationally known for her research and for translating science for the public. She is a distinguished professor in the Departments of Nutrition and Internal Medicine/Division of Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. Some of her over 270 research papers published in scientific journals deal with obesity, nutrition, exercise, dietary supplements. She has written over 150 articles for magazines like Vogue and Family Circle. Professor Stern is a member of several professional organizations, and has received numerous awards for excellence in research and public service. Some examples of her honors: member of the Institute of Medicine of National Academies of Sciences; Fellow (American Society of Nutrition, American Association for the Advancement of Sciences; Richard L. Atkinson and Judith S. Stern Distinguished Public Service Award (The Obesity Society), Excellence in Research (California Dietetic Association). Along with Dr. Richard L. Atkinson she was founder of The American Obesity Association, a lay advocacy organization dedicated to advancing understanding of the disease of obesity, where she also served as Vice President (1995-2006). AOA merged with The Obesity Society in 2006. Stern is an accomplished public speaker at scientific meetings and on radio and TV. She learned public speaking as a cherry pie baking champion in 4-H. Stern has written two popular books (How to stay slim and health on the fast food diet, Prentice Hall, 1981; Obesity, a reference book for the public and libraries, ABC-CLIO Press, 2009). Two of her popular messages are “Eat dessert first” and “Chocolate should be an honorary vitamin” – she has to eat a little every day. |
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Mary Story
Professor, Epidemiology and Community Health; Program Director, Healthy Eating Research, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Co-Director, Obesity Prevention Center University of Minnesota See Bio Dr. Story is a professor in the Division of Epidemiology and Community Health and Associate Dean for Student Life and Leadership at the University of Minnesota, School of Public Health. She is also an adjunct professor in the Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, at the University of Minnesota. She is the Director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Healthy Eating Research program. Dr. Story has her Ph.D. in Nutrition and her interests are in the area of child and adolescent nutrition and obesity prevention. Her research focuses on understanding the multiple factors related to eating behaviors of youth, and environmental, community and school-based interventions for obesity prevention, healthy eating and physical activity. She has published widely in the area of child and adolescent nutrition and obesity. She is currently on the editorial boards for the Journal of the American Dietetic Association, Journal of Adolescent Health and Nutrition Today. She was a member of the Institute of Medicine committees on food marketing and the diets of children, the Nutrition Standards for Foods in Schools and is currently on the Institute of Medicine committee on Childhood Obesity Prevention. Mary Story has received the Medallion Award from the American Dietetic Association (ADA) in recognition of her outstanding service and leadership to ADA and the dietetics profession. |
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Rodney Taylor
Student Nutrition Director Riverside Unified School District See Bio Rodney Taylor, the RUSD Student Nutrition Director is the former Food Service Director from the Santa Monica Malibu School District. Taylor is known as the man who is revolutionizing a change in school lunches in a district that serves 43,000 students, well over half of which are from at-risk families. One of the most "wow-inspiring" aspects of Taylor's Farm to School program is the daily farmers market salad bar offered as an alternative to the hot lunch meal in 26 of the district's 31 elementary schools. They have been successful in bringing about a change in perception about school food service to the point where we've been able to grow the program at $1 million a year, and the lunch participation rate has increased from 47 percent when the Farm to School program was introduced to a current 65 percent. An average of 33 percent of the elementary students are choosing a farmers market salad bar lunch, so that means one-third of the kids in their elementary schools are eating healthier each day. Riverside Unified School District’s salad bar program has been recognized nationally and internationally. |
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Sarah Timmins DeGregory
Child Nutrition Coordinator The NYC Department of Health & Mental Hygiene See Bio Sarah Timmins DeGregory, MPH, is a Health Promotion Coordinator for the East and Central Harlem District Public Health Office (NYC DOHMH), Harlem School Health Program. She works with school administrators, staff and parents in elementary schools throughout Harlem to assess the school health environment, develop strategies, and broker health programs that address gaps in service. Prior to her work at the city health department, Sarah worked as a child nutrition advocate in NYC public high schools promoting the universal breakfast program. She has a Master’s degree in Public Health Nutrition from New York University. |
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Nat Turner
Executive Director Our School at Blair Grocery See Bio Nat Turner left a six figure job as a debate teacher to reclaim a New Orleans landmark after witnessing the devastation post-Katrina. Blair Grocery, the first black owned business in the Lower Ninth Ward, like much of the neighborhood became disenfranchised, run-down and boarded up after Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005. Turner re-opened the grocery store in 2008, and turned it into a home schooling base for neighborhood students, who are also being taught about nutrition and local food through the school's vacant lots-turned gardens. Turner this past spring discussing the agri-educational revolution he was starting. Turner one-ups Obama: not only is he putting sustainable food on his students' lunch trays, he is teaching them to grow their own food in the abandoned plots that surround the neighborhood. |
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Rick Voakes
MD (Private practice) Self Employed See Bio Dr Rick Voakes is an experienced board-certified pediatrician. He is also President of Healthy Weight Kids Coalition of Southern Kentucky, a coalition of health-related professionals and organizations with the goal of preventing and treating the serious problem of overweight in children. |
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Jennifer Walker
Director of Youth Development and Education Independence School District See Bio Jennifer Walker is the Director of Youth Development and Education of the Independence School District. |
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John Weidman
Deputy Executive Director The Food Trust See Bio John Weidman, The Food Trust's Deputy Executive Director, and Joel Rotz of the Pennsylvania Farm Bureau made a compelling case for Pennsylvania to invest in new farmers' markets and to expand the WIC and Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Program (FMNP). They also encouraged the State to invest more in wireless technology that allows customers to use EBT cards at market. Founded in 1992, the Trust works to improve the health of children and adults, promote good nutrition, increase access to nutritious foods, and advocate for better public policy. |
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LeeAnn Weniger-Mandrillo
SNAP-Ed Senior Program Coordinator for Social Marketing Rutgers University See Bio LeeAnn Weniger-Mandrillo is a passionate public administrator and community nutritionist accomplished in effectively governing a wide range of management responsibilities. She is currently the Senior Project Administrator at Rutgers University and has previously been the Senior Program Coordinator for Social Marketing at Rutgers University and the Senior Program Coordinator/County Department Head at Rutgers University. She attended Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey-Newark and Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey-New Brunswick. |
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Walter Willett
Chair, Department of Nutrition; Fredrick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition Harvard University, School of Public Health See Bio Dr. Walter Willett, MD, DrPH.,is an American physician and nutrition researcher. Currently, Dr. Willett is the Fredrick John Stare Professor of Epidemiology and Nutrition, and Chair of the Department of Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health, and is a Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Willett is the principal investigator of the second Nurses' Health Study. He has published over 1,000 scientific articles regarding various aspects of diet and disease and is the second most cited author in clinical medicine. In the public eye, Dr. Willett is perhaps best known for his 2001 book Eat, Drink and Be Healthy, which presents nutritional information and recommendations based on the currently available body of nutrition science. The book is also critical of many popular misconceptions about diet and nutrition, including ideas presented by guidelines from American organizations such as the USDA. Dr. Willett is frequently quoted by the media in articles regarding nutrition. |
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Amy Winterfeld
Health Policy Analyst National Conference of State Legislatures See Bio Amy Winterfield is the Health Policy Analyst at the National Conference of State Legislatures. She tracks wellness and obesity. The National Conference of State Legislatures is a bipartisan organization that serves the legislators and staffs of the nation's 50 states, its commonwealths and territories. NCSL provides research, technical assistance and opportunities for policymakers to exchange ideas on the most pressing state issues. |
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William Wong
Professor Baylor College of Medicine See Bio William Wong is the Professor of Pediatrics for Baylor College of Medicine. His main research involves studies of dietary supplementation to prevent chronic diseases and intervention of childhood obesity. He was the principal investigator of a Texas Department of Health-funded project to determine the prevalence and risk factors of childhood obesity in Texas. |
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Susan Wooley
Executive Director American School Health Association See Bio Susan Wooley is the Executive Director of American School Health Association. She received her PhD , Health Education from Temple University, her M.Ed. , Health Education from University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and her B.A. in Biology from Case Western Reserve University. The mission of the American School Health Association is to build the capacity of its members to plan, develop, coordinate, implement, evaluate, and advocate for effective school health strategies that contribute to optimal health and academic outcomes for all children and youth. |
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Sophia Yen
Clinical Instructor, Pediatrics - Adolescent Medicine Stanford University, School of Medicine See Bio Sopha Yen is a Clinical Instructor for Pediatrics-Adolescent Medicine at Stanford University, School of Medicine. Yen, who has a master's in public health from Berkeley in addition to her MD from the University of California, San Francisco, and board certification in both pediatrics and adolescent medicine, seeks to educate the public about emergency contraception, obesity, and reproductive health. |
Jeanette AbiNader
Adam Becker