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	<title>The Auroran</title>
	<link>https://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran</link>
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	<pubDate>Tue Apr 28 17:08:24 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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			<title>Minimum wage is not enough, food insecurity often hits working residents, says new leader of York Region Food Network</title>
			<link>http://www.newspapers-online.com/auroran/?p=26172</link>
			<pubDate>Tue Apr 28 17:08:24 2026 / +0000  GMT</pubDate>
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<p>As a child growing up in Aurora, Kate Greavette remembers
her parents bringing in veggies from their backyard garden. At the time, she
didn't think too much of their efforts and sometimes found herself asking, “Why
can't we just go to a grocery store?”</p>
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<p>Now, as Executive Director of the Aurora-based York Region
Food Network, she is answering that question herself on a daily basis.</p>
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<p>Ms. Greavette recently took the helm of the York Region
Food Network (YRFN) upon the retirement of long-time head Joan Stonehocker
earlier this year.</p>
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<p>She comes to the table after studying International
Development and Globalization at the University of Ottawa, an academic path
which took her all around the world, exposing her to the role food plays all
around the world, from acting as medicine to fostering healthy communities.</p>
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<p>“I just love everything about food,” she says. “I feel
like food is the perfect medium for bringing people together, people of all
ages, all backgrounds, all languages – everyone has a connection to food. Even
if we have a room full of people who don't speak the same language, food
connects them in a way. To me, that is such a powerful tool for community
development.”</p>
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<p>It is a scene she has witnessed play out many times since
she first joined the YRFN in the Spring of 2012.</p>
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<p>After graduating from the University of Ottawa, Ms.
Greavette says she didn't yet know what she wanted to do with her life and
career. She always had an interest in agriculture and health, but didn't know
what that meant for her. After a year spent travelling, she took a
post-graduate course at Ryerson University in food security where she undertook
projects on urban agriculture in the United Kingdom and South Africa.</p>
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<p>Upon her return to Aurora to visit family, she first
stumbled upon the work of the YRFN and a perfect fit was found.</p>
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<p>“It has just been a beautiful journey,” she says.</p>
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<p>She began work with the YRFN focused on the development
of the York Region Food Charter, work which allowed her to develop an expertise
in food policy, not just within York Region but across the country. She was
given autonomy to find her feet, spearhead the projects she felt were
important, and look for ways to address local food security challenges.</p>
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<p>“As an organization, we have changed quite a lot over the
years,” she says. “We started as an organization to coordinate food bank
efforts throughout the Region and over that time we started to look at more
sustainable solutions to food insecurity and food insecurity as a systemic
issue, knowing that people need immediate access to food, but we need to change
the systems we operate in order to have lasting sustainable change.”</p>
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<p>As Executive Director of the York Region Food Network,
Ms. Greavette says one of her primary focuses will be continued work to address
inequities within the system. Food insecurity, she says, is a result of
“inadequate incomes” and most people experiencing food insecurity are those who
are holding down a job.</p>
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<p>“Minimum wage is not enough,” she says, adding Ontario
Works and ODSP are also missing the mark. “On the one side, it is education,
making sure we're talking to companies, making sure we talk to our partners,
making sure we talk to our governments and letting them know employment
practices need to change. People need adequate incomes and less precarious
employment. From an advocacy perspective, it is about having those
conversations, letting people know the realities of food insecurity and letting
people know that food insecurity is a growing issue in this Region.”</p>
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<p>From a programming perspective, the York Region Food
Network is putting an increased emphasis on regenerative agriculture and
environmental sustainability.</p>
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<p>To this end, the YRFN is in the early stages of
developing a compost education centre which would be a demonstration project
for people to come and learn not only how to compost their waste but make a
positive impact on the environment. Such a space, she says, will also provide
opportunities for participants to explore Indigenous growing techniques, how
different cultures understand food, and have meaningful discussions on how food
impacts changing climates.</p>
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<p>“A lot of people think of food insecurity and they think,
‘This person doesn't have food because they are lazy and not working, it's
their own fault, they're not managing their budgets well,' but, for us, we're
lucky to have the research to say, ‘No, the people who are food insecure are
people who are working.' It tends to be the unattached, the people who are the
best budgeters and are cooking food at home, for the most part. To be able to
better communicate that to the public is huge so people understand what the
issue is.</p>
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<p>“We often get people thinking that we at the YRFN are a
food bank and we often get people who think we're part of the Regional
Municipality of York. We are a charity and our focus is on connecting and
building food skills in the community. Food insecurity will be solved by
increasing people's incomes, but we also know that a lot of people who are
experiencing food insecurity, who are constantly worrying about food, who
aren't able to purchase food regularly, who run out of food and aren't able to
purchase more, we do know that they often forego social events because of that.</p>
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<p>“We often hear people won't go out for coffee or they
won't go out for dinners with friends because they are constantly worried about
money, food and food access. We know that a lot of people who are struggling
with food are socially isolated. The purpose of our programs is really to
connect people, to reduce that social isolation, build that social inclusion,
build those friendships, and we want to build resiliency within that so if
people have those community connections, they are more resilient and they have
more people to turn to in times of crisis.”</p>
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<p>For more information on the York Region Food Network, visit yrfn.ca. or call 905-841-3101.</p>
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<p><strong>By Brock Weir</strong></p>
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			<excerpt-encoded><![CDATA[]]></excerpt-encoded>
			<wp-post_id>26172</wp-post_id>
			<wp-post_date>2020-03-12 19:51:49</wp-post_date>
			<wp-post_date_gmt>2020-03-12 23:51:49</wp-post_date_gmt>
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