WHO WE ARE

 
 
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CFPAC was formed in 2002 as a result of an Illinois Food Summit organized by the Chicago Community Trust. The effort began with a series of open meetings held on Chicago’s Southside that utilized consensus to establish a mission and organizational operating structure. CFPAC officially became a 501(c)3 in 2011 and hired its first full-time staff member in 2017.

 
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Our Mission

Chicago Food Policy Action Council  

(CFPAC) co-develops, facilitates, advocates for, and supports implementation of policies that advance food justice and food sovereignty in Chicago and across the region.

 
 
 
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Our Vision

CFPAC envisions a food system where all Chicagoans, regardless of race, class, gender, and/or social identity, have the right to healthy and culturally-appropriate food produced through community-driven, ecologically regenerative, and economically viable processes. The Council recognizes the history and modern maintenance of structural racism in Chicago and across the country that have led to massive inequities in land access, food business ownership, food security, and political power along lines of racial identity. CFPAC works to address these inequities and dismantle racist structures in the food system by building local political power, supporting frontline workers throughout the food system, and facilitating Black/Brown partnerships and understanding.

 
 
 
 
 

Our Board

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daniel block

Director of the Fred Blum Neighborhood Assistance Center, Professor at Chicago State University

LinkedIn

Daniel Block is a professor of geography at Chicago State University and the coordinator of the Fred Blum Neighborhood Assistance Center, as well as an adjunct professor in the Department of Preventive Medicine at Northwestern University and the School of Urban Planning at UIC. He has completed many food access studies, including the Northeastern Illinois Community Food Security Assessment, a large-scale food access study of the six-county Chicago metro area. He is a past president of the Agriculture, Food, and Human Values Society. In 2018, he was named a fellow of the American Association of Geographers and is the co-author of Chicago: A Food Biography, a history of Chicago told through its food system, published by Rowman and Littlefield.

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Rodger Cooley

Executive Director, Chicago Food Policy Action Council

LinkedIn

Rodger Cooley, Executive Director of the Chicago Food Policy Action Council, has worked for 18+ years in urban agriculture and sustainable urban food systems developing policy and projects. Rodger previously spent 9 years with Heifer International, supporting the development of urban farming projects in Chicago and the mid-western United States.  He has a Master's degree in Urban Planning and Policy from the University of Illinois at Chicago and Bachelor of Arts from Oberlin College and has served as adjunct faculty at DePaul University and the Illinois Institute of Technology.

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Jose Oliva

Co-Director, Food Chain Workers Alliance

LinkedIn | @foodandlabor | @foodchainworker

Jose Oliva is Campaigns Director at the HEAL Food Alliance after serving as Co-Director of the Food Chain Workers Alliance for seven years. He is from Xelaju, Guatemala. Jose founded the Chicago Interfaith Workers’ Center in 2001 and then became the Coordinator of Interfaith Worker Justice’s National Workers' Centers Network. In 2008 he went on to run the Center for Community Change’s worker justice program. From 2009-2014, Jose held a number of leadership roles at Restaurant Opportunities Centers (ROC) United, the national organization of restaurant workers. He also served as Board Chair of the FCWA Board of Directors from 2010-2012. Jose was awarded the 2017 James Beard Foundation Leadership Award and the 2018 American Food Heroes Award from Eating Well magazine.

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L. Anton Seals, Jr.

Lead Steward, Grow Greater Englewood

LinkedIn

L. Anton Seals Jr. is an organizer, educator, community connector, filmmaker and entrepreneur. Anton’s work has been dedicated to service and active engagement through the use of media arts, community organizing and empowerment to dismantle oppressive system impacting divested and oppressed communities. 

Anton is the Lead Steward (Executive Director) of Grow Greater Englewood, a social enterprise focusing on building an equitable and resilient local food system that fosters protections of vacant land in divested communities and focuses on connecting those residents with community wealth building opportunities.

 

Former Board Members

  • Erika Allen is the Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Operations for the Urban Growers Collective.  She received her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and her MA in art psychotherapy from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Integrating the creative and therapeutic techniques with food security and community development have enabled Erika to establish multiple urban farms and agriculture training and education programs. She is passionate about social justice and working with multicultural groups in the elimination of racism and oppression. Erika served as Commissioner for the Chicago Park District from 2012 – 2017 and also serves on the board of Neighbor Space, as well as a founding member of the Growing Food and Justice for All Initiative. Erika is a visual artist and consults with individuals and organizations to support visioning and planning of social change objectives. Erika Allen founded and was the Director of Growing Power – Chicago for 15-years prior to the closing of the organization in 2017.

  • Kim Wasserman is the Executive Director of the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization (LVEJO), where she has worked since 1998. Kim joined LVEJO as an organizer and helped to organize community leaders to successfully build a new playground, community gardens, remodel of a local school park and force a local polluter to upgrade their facilities to meet current laws. As Executive Director of LVEJO, she has worked with organizers to reinstate a job access bus line, build on the recent victory of a new 23 acre park to be built in Little Village, and continue the 10+ year campaign that won the closure of the two local coal power plants to fight for remediation and redevelopment of the sites. Mrs. Wasserman is Chair of the Illinois Commission on Environmental Justice. In 2013, Mrs. Wasserman was the recipient of the Goldman Prize for North America. Her biggest accomplishment to date is raising three-community organizers aged 18, 11, and 8.

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Our Accomplishments

 

2019:

  • 14th Annual Chicago Food Policy Summit attracted over 400 attendees at the South Shore Cultural Center.

  • Urban Stewards Action Network (USAN) hosted 3 Food Fun(d)ing Friday events. Through these events 12 different projects received over $8,000 in funds.

  • Productive Landscapes Taskforce began. CFPAC is facilitating a multi-jurisdictional task force to determine innovative ways to bring a variety of land uses and projects regarding sustainable agriculture, stormwater management, public recreation, and wildlife habitat restoration to underutilized public lands.

  • Midwest Consortium on Equity & Research in Food (M-CERF): CFPAC is supporting a collaborative space for researchers and academics interested in equitable community food systems and food sovereignty to share research projects, explore opportunities to work together, and build a repository of publications and resources on Chicago’s food system. 

  • Hosted the opening plenary of the Center for Good Food Purchasing’s The Power of Procurement Conference

  • October was our inaugural effort to support a Chicago Good Food Month

  • Hosted Chicago’s first environmental justice focused forum for mayoral candidates

  • Worker cooperatives now legally recognized in Illinois, CFPAC is a founding member of the Illinois Coalition for Cooperative Advancement (ICCA)

  • Equitable Cannabis Legalization, CFPAC is a member of the People United for Racial Equity (PURE) Coalition to ensure that there are opportunities for all Chicagoans

2018:

  • Cook County not only adopted the the Good Food Purchasing Policy, but also added language regarding the necessity to acknowledge the residents, communities, and enterprises that have not had access to key resources in the past. As a result, Cook County received the Good Food Hero Award from the Center for Good Food Purchasing.

  • 13th Annual Chicago Food Policy Summit attracted over 300 attendees and featured 25 speakers at the South Shore Cultural Center.

  • Urban Stewards Action Network (USAN) – a project of the Chicago Food Policy Council – launched Food Fun(d)ing Fridays, a micro-grant contest and community fundraising event. The events continue on a quarterly basis.

2017:

  • The City of Chicago, Chicago Park District, and Chicago Public Schools, passed a resolution to approve the Good Food Purchasing Policy. The policy will transform the way county agencies purchase food, and will return millions of dollars to local food based businesses, urban farmers, and entrepreneurs.

  • Rodger Cooley named as Chicago Food Policy Action Council’s first full-time Executive Director.

2015:

  • 10th Annual Food Policy Summit

2014:

  • 9th Annual Food Policy Summit in collaboration with FamilyFarmed’s Good Food Festival

  • Compost Working Group created recommendations to reform Chicago Compost Policy

2013:

  • 8th Annual Food Policy Summit in collaboration with FamilyFarmed’s Good Food Festival

  • Compost Working Group Advocacy and Outreach efforts helped inform and pass two state level bills to revise compost policy (HB2335 & HB3319)

2012:

  • 7th Annual Food Policy Summit in collaboration with FamilyFarmed’s Good Food Festival

  • Urban Farmland Working Group published Urban Farmland and Green Jobs Creation White Paper

  • CFPAC Members created A Vision for Food Policy in Chicago

2011:

  • 6th Annual Food Policy Summit in collaboration with FamilyFarmed’s Good Food Festival

  • Engaged community in development of the urban agriculture zoning amendment for Chicago

2010:

  • 5th Annual Food Policy Summit in collaboration with FamilyFarmed’s Good Food Festival

  • Activated Neighborhood Food Policy council

  • Received 501c3 status

2009:

  • 4th Annual Food Policy Summit in collaboration with FamilyFarmed’s Good Food Festival

2008:

  • 3rd Annual Food Policy Summit

  • Published Building Chicago’s Community Food System

2007:

  • 2nd Annual Food Policy Summit

  • Effectively worked with City Council to stop ban on raising chickens in the city

  • Advocated for Illinois State Policy – The Food Farm and Jobs Act (HB1300)

2006:

  • 1st Annual CFPAC Food Policy Summit

2004:

  • CFPAC commissioned the Community Food Security Inventory of the City of Chicago, which looked into the city budget including policy recommendations and case studies of other national food policy work.

2002:

  • CFPAC has its inaugural meeting

 
 
 
 
 

Our Staff

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SARAH-JAYNE ASHENHURST
Director of Programs
LinkedIn

Sarah-Jayne is a systems thinker who is deeply invested in cultivating sustainable, restorative, regenerative economies that value people and planet over profit. She brings to CFPAC a history of community and professional leadership focused on shifting public consciousness away from individualism and toward a culture of solidarity, connection, and interdependence, with a focus on building and navigating collective power at the intersections of class, race, gender, and many other axes of oppression. Sarah-Jayne spends her time organizing with her neighbors, adventuring with her husband and son, cuddling with her cats, and generally doing whatever she can to help build the world we deserve. She wakes up every day to live into Angela Davis’s powerful invitation: “You have to act as if it were possible to radically change the world. And you have to do it all the time.” She is excited to be doing that at CFPAC.  

Sarah-Jayne holds a BFA from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts, an MBA from the University of Illinois, and a Certificate in Cooperative Management from Co-Op Cincy and Xavier University. Being an insatiable learner who can't sit still, she plans to return to school in 2025 for additional graduate studies in Community and Economic Development with an emphasis on building urban-rural solidarity through cooperativism and community stewardship models.

Jane Cajuste
IL Program Coordinator for Regional Food Business Center
LinkedIn

Jane brings over a decade of diverse experience in mental health and housing non-profit work, culinary arts education, and small business ownership to her role. Her most recent role was teaching culinary arts at Cook County Jail. With a strong focus on culturally relevant, people-centered approaches to food justice, Jane aims to promote equitable access to resources, diversify economic opportunities in underserved communities, and reduce barriers for overlooked food businesses, growers, and producers throughout Illinois and the region. Outside of work, she enjoys gardening, hiking, and exploring new cuisines.

 

RODGER COOLEY
Executive Director
LinkedIn

Rodger Cooley, Executive Director of the Chicago Food Policy Action Council (CFPAC), has worked for 24+ years in urban agriculture and sustainable equitable food systems helping facilitate policy, projects, and network development. Rodger previously spent 9 years with Heifer International, supporting the development of urban and rural farming projects in Chicago and the mid-western United States.  

Rodger serves on the Cook County Commission on Social Innovation, the Chicago Food Equity Council, the IL Local Food Purchasing Agreement Advisory Committee, the IL Agriculture Equity Commission and IL Good Food Task Force.  Rodger recently joined the Organizational Council of the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition.  He has a Master's degree in Urban Planning and Policy from the University of Illinois at Chicago and Bachelor of Arts from Oberlin College majoring in Studio Arts and has served as adjunct faculty at DePaul University and the Illinois Institute of Technology.

BRITISH GRIFFIS
Equitable Supply Chain Development Manager
LinkedIn

British is a Chicago native with a wide range of skills and expertise within the sciences. She obtained her B.S  in Agricultural Biotechnology from the University of Kentucky. Upon graduating she explored various career paths to further her interest in understanding the intersectionality between Food Systems & Healthcare. Her career path has not been linear as her expertise ranges from Community Outreach to Pharmacy to Scientific Research & Development. In 2019, after serving as a Peace Corps Food Security Specialist she became inspired to use her experience to create change within her former neighborhood by launching a community fridge and pantry in response to the pandemic. She furthered her engagement with Urban Agriculture and worked for a Biotech Startup as a Research Associate and spent 3 years working as Chemist. The culmination of these experiences has allowed her to view the Food System through various lenses at different levels. She hopes to bridge the food access gap for BIPOC communities in urban areas. 

 

JOEL LUCIANO
OPERATIONS COORDINATOR
LinkedIn

ADAM PETERSON
Metro Chicago Good Food Purchasing Manager
LinkedIn

Joel is originally from Puerto Rico. He moved to Chicago in 2016 and instantly fell in love with the city. During his time here he has tried to bring communities and neighborhoods together using environmental education and programming. He graduated with a Master's degree in Environmental Science from DePaul University in 2022. Joel has worked for the Chicago Park District's Outdoor Environmental Education (OEE) department for over 3 years. He focuses his time on finding ways to be more inclusive, as well as find ways to break down barriers and unify BIPOC communities, organizations, and overall individuals with nature. Currently, he works at the Field Museum, where he creates and facilitates bilingual environmental programing to communities within the West and South West sides.

In his free time he loves to cook, write, watch anime and play dodgeball. His favorite food is Piñon (a Puerto Rican dish made with Sweet plantains, and also his favorite dish his mom makes). He likes pineapples on his pizza, and absolutely loves nature. 

Adam Peterson brings a diverse background of fruit and vegetable production, native lands restoration, plant and ecology research, and community food system development. After finishing a degree in Cultural Anthropology from UIC, Adam joined a research team looking into food systems in Southwest Wisconsin where he joined his first production farm. From there, he worked on specialty crop farms ranging in size from 8 to 300 acres. After a placement as an AmeriCorps Vista in New Orleans developing a farm-to-school network, Adam began work on native lands restoration within the Chicago Park District. He spent the last several years working with plant researchers and community groups at the UIC Greenhouse.

Adam joins the CFPAC team as the Good Food Purchasing Program Coordinator. He works alongside Chicago’s Food Equity Council and Chicago Department of Public Health. In his spare time he enjoys cooking and baking, biking, and bird watching.   

 

KAITLYN POINDEXTER
Community Fund Manager
LinkedIn

Coming Soon

JUSTIN PREVOST-SCHULTZ
Director of Operations
LinkedIn

Justin Prevost-Schultz brings expertise and experience in operations management, team leadership, project management, and organizational strategy. Before joining CFPAC, Justin led internal operations for a Chicago health-tech startup and managed the vaccine operations of Chicago’s Mass Vaccination Site at the United Center.

He also served as a consultant and executive recruiter for nonprofit and public sector nationally and provides a strong foundation of fundraising experience after serving in the Advancement Office in various roles of increasing responsibility of his alma mater, North Park University, where he earned his bachelor's degree and MBA. During his free time, Justin enjoys cooking, golfing, and biking around the city to find new restaurants and neighborhood gems.

 

ALEXANDRA RODRIGUEZ
Good Food Purchasing Expansion Manager
LinkedIn

Born and raised in the northwest side of Chicago, Alex Rodriguez has always been dedicated to helping bring healthy food access to her communities. She graduated with a B.A in Public Health at the University of Illinois at Chicago, with a primary focus on Community Health. Her past experiences have led her to work with several Chicago neighborhoods that contributed to the equity of food access and nutrition. From teaching health and nutrition workshops in Humboldt Park to then managing a food pantry during COVID-19, Alex was motivated to learn more about urban agriculture and food sources in Chicago. She then joined Windy City Harvest in the spring of 2021 as the VeggieRx program assistant and worked primarily with Spanish-speaking families. In the course of time she oversaw the market and sales channels for all farm sites and incubator farmers. Her work motivated her to keep working in food sovereignty and health equity, and since then has joined CFPAC as the Good Food Purchasing Expansion Coordinator. In her free time Alex loves running, spending time with her family and friends, and playing with her small dog.

MABEL SHIU
Good Food Purchasing Initiative Director
LinkedIn

As Director of the Good Food Purchasing Initiative (GFPI), Mabel is working to advance the mission and values of GFPI including the convening an inaugural steering council, the implementation of the Good Food Purchasing Program (GFPP) at the City and County-level, and development a more equitable supply chain aligned with GFPP values. In her previous role as the GFPI Community Fund Manager, she launched a new grant program to increase opportunities for local farms and food businesses to service public meal programs and other community food access sites. After earning an MBA from the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, Mabel launched a micro grocery store and café called Southside Market to increase food access and collective ownership. She has gained practical knowledge through the years as an entrepreneur, impact investor, and former social enterprise consultant. She also brings to the team over 6 years of experience in Corporate Finance, Operations, and IT Implementation. In her spare time, she enjoys playing boardgames at local breweries, exploring neighborhood coffee shops, and paddleboarding when weather permits.

 

STEPHANIE ZARCO-JIMENEZ
Program Coordinator
LinkedIn

Stephanie Zarco-Jimenez is a native Chicagoan dedicated to elevating the welfare of her beloved Chicago communities and beyond. Her family’s background in farming has framed her perspective on what food, water, and land access mean to not only the rural farmer but the urban farmer as well. She has planted roots in many Chicago neighborhoods searching for opportunities to stay connected to local communities, while also striving to learn more about food equity issues across the city. Her education at Loyola University served as a platform to now explore the intersections of racial equity work and food systems work in her position as Program Coordinator with CFPAC.

Stephanie works on the Productive Landscapes Taskforce and also co-organizes the Chicago Food Justice Summit. In her free time, she enjoys exploring Chicago’s green spaces, practicing guitar, cooking with loved ones, and connecting with local growers.

Each year, we bring on new folks to organize the summit! Click here to learn more about the individuals who make up the Summit Leadership Team

Open Positions

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Director of Development

The Director of Development will create and drive annual growth strategies; identify, build, and manage relationships with investment-level donors; and strengthen CFPAC’s fundraising operations, creating a solid foundation for future departmental growth. This is a new position at CFPAC, designed for an individual interested in joining a meaningful mission, creating and building effective systems from the ground up, and cultivating transformational relationships to build sustainable funding for the organization.  This role reports to the Director of Operations and works in close coordination with the Executive Director. This role supports the organization’s goal of diversifying revenue as currently, CFPAC secures the majority of its funding from foundations, program revenue, and the government.

How to apply

Please submit your resume and a one-page cover letter tying your experience to specifics in the job description to Hiring@chicagofoodpolicy.com with the subject line “Director of Development application.” Please note, as a small, people-centered organization, our communication in response to you may be slow while we carefully and thoughtfully evaluate each candidate.

No Priority application deadline for this role


For additional opportunities, please see below for a few resources to aid in your job search.

The Chicago Food Justice Rhizome Network hosts bi-monthly Food Justice Job Fairs! Learn more about the next one at bit.ly/foodjusticejobfair

Are you looking to hire someone? Join the job fair as an employer by emailing info@chicagofoodpolicy.com.

We invite you to visit Advocate for Urban Agriculture’s Job Board and join their listserv for updates on grants for farmers and hiring opportunities.

Hiring for an urban/sustainable agriculture professional? Send a link or PDF job description to outreach@auachicago.org.