Rhode Island Food Policy Council
To develop and launch an open-source food system database.
To develop and launch an open-source food system database.
To continue the Solarize program in Connecticut and expand the model to Maine, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island.
To work toward chemicals policy reforms at the state level.
To make solar power a mainstream energy solution across the Northeast by lowering its cost and increasing accessibility. In the short term the goals are to establish favorable shared solar and net metering rules in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont; and…
To strategically apply tools and tactics to increase the amount of local food served at the regions more than 370 two- and four-year colleges and universities.
To maintain New England’s national leadership in adopting and implementing robust state policies that achieve the full potential of all cost-effective energy efficiency.
To steadily drive down use and production of 100 priority chemicals (the Hazardous Hundred) in consumer products in favor of truly safer alternatives, and promote other organizations’ participation in that effort.
To provide key administrative and coordinating functions for the New Hampshire food strategy design and planning teams, including: facilitating communication among state and regional food planning networks; planning, convening, and facilitating meetings to advance network goals; researching, analyzing, and distributing…
To continue the Solarize program in the Upper Valley.
To create an open source data system that is useful to a wide range of food system stakeholders while building human and organizational capacity to actively use, contribute to, and shape it.