Our September Waste Hater is leading the charge against climate change through a group of diverse, young voices who accept no excuses.
Read MoreReplate’s looking for a street team to help spread our mission! You get free stuff, too.
Read MoreNet Impact unites students and professionals around the world in a mission to use business as a force for good.
Read MoreKate Flynn, founder & CEO of Sun & Swell Foods, shares the ups and downs of her entrepreneurial journey launching a sustainable food retail company.
Read MoreSometimes the quest for happiness and prosperity leads us on unforeseen adventures through life. Sometimes, we end up making hummus.
Read MoreRock Steady Farm is a queer-owned and operated cooperative farm in New York, working towards environmental and social justice.
Read MoreA college campus finds a new, sustainable approach to countering food insecurity.
Read MoreGeorge McGraw and his foundation DIGDEEP are working to ensure all Americans have access to clean water resources.
Read MoreSome tasty ideas for utilizing this fresh Spring vegetable.
Read MoreWhen people think of Harlem, agriculture may not be the first thing that comes to mind, but that’s changing.
Read MoreGood food never goes to waste under our watch! We wanted to share an idea for how to use some items lying around your kitchen to create a new dish for lunch or dinner, along with our friend Pat the Spatula.
Read MoreMost of us love delicious food, good company, a nice stroll through the park. These are some of the magical elements of life. Yet each year, such simple luxuries are altered dramatically by climate change, and for some of our nation’s communities, the impacts are deep.
Read MoreIf anyone knows how to Replate, it’s this remarkable leader. Mother, entrepreneur, minister and activist, Mama Shu hails from Detroit, Michigan, where she’s spent the past decade rebuilding her neighborhood in Highland Park.
Read MoreAs COVID-19 continues to exacerbate and illuminate systemic inequities, we’re seeing more clearly than ever how increased unemployment quickly leads to greater food insecurity. But our national hunger crisis didn’t start with the pandemic. 35.2 million people lived in food-insecure households in 2019, and that’s the lowest number we’ve seen in eight years.
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