About Us

At the heart of our work is a simple idea

Food is a shared relationship, not just a resource.

The Food Action Network of Northwestern Ontario (FAN-NWO) is a non-profit network that brings people together to grow equitable, sustainable, and resilient food systems – right here in our region.

We connect communities, share knowledge, and support efforts that strengthen our food systems from the ground up. From building capacity for emergency food response to supporting local food production and harvesting, our work is rooted in care for people, the planet, and future generations.

Our Vision

Our vision is of resilient food systems that honour the land, celebrate community leadership, and ensure the right to healthy, culturally grounded food for all. We strive for a future where our food economies are regenerative, our ecosystems are flourishing, and all communities have the power to shape their food futures.

Our Mission

We work to build resilient, just, and thriving food systems across Northwestern Ontario. Guided by the leadership of communities and the interconnectedness of all life, we support food sovereignty, climate resilience, ecological stewardship, and strong local economies—shaping a future where healthy, culturally grounded food is a right for all.

FAN-NWO is a hub for collaboration, learning, and community-led food systems change.

We work across sectors and communities to:

Advance Food Sovereignty & Community Empowerment

We support communities to shape their food systems, centering Indigenous food sovereignty, local knowledge, and equitable access to land and food.

Support Regional Food Security & Circular Economies

We help build stronger regional food systems that keep food moving close to home, support fair livelihoods, and reduce dependency on long supply chains.

Enhance Emergency Preparedness

We work with communities to collaboratively prepare for and respond to food system disruptions, ensuring that everyone has access to the food they need, when they need it.

Strengthen Ecological Resilience

We promote regenerative, climate-smart practices that care for soil, water, and all living beings we share this place with.

How We Work

Our work moves like the cycle of a seed to compost: seasonal, relational, and circular. We believe in starting small, building on what works, and being rooted in place.

We bring together farmers, harvesters, educators, researchers, Indigenous knowledge holders, grassroots organizers, and policy advocates to share knowledge, build trust, and co-create solutions rooted in local realities. 

Food system challenges are complex and interconnected. No one can do this work alone. Every part of the system matters, and every node in the network brings something to share. That’s why we believe in the power of networks and collective leadership to seed lasting change. 

Our theory of change is network-based: we believe every person, community, and place holds unique gifts. Transformation happens when those gifts are woven together into something greater than the sum of its parts.

Why It Matters

Food touches everything. It connects us to culture, to each other, and to the lands and waters that sustain us. 

But today’s dominant food systems prioritize profit over people and planet, and short-term gains over long-term care. Rising costs, climate disruptions, and systemic inequities are exposing just how fragile and unfair these systems can be.

At FAN-NWO, we believe in growing something different: food futures rooted in equity, ecological balance, and community well-being. 

Everyone has a role to play in shaping that future, and the solutions are already alive in our region. Whether you’re growing tomatoes on a balcony, volunteering with a local food initiative, advocating for better food policies, or just curious to learn more – we’re here to support and connect the work already happening across our region. 

7 Pillars of a Healthy, Sustainable Food System

Our work is organized around 7 pillars of a sustainable food system, which were selected by our community at a Food Summit held in March 2013. Our seven pillars are all underpinned by commitments to Indigenous food sovereignty, climate justice, and gender justice. For more details on each pillar, including the data we collect and track over time, see our Community Food System Report Card.

About Us

Our History

Our story began in 1996 and has evolved through decades of community-driven work—starting with the original Food Action Network, which played a key role in developing the Thunder Bay and Area Food Charter in 2008. That Charter continues to guide our shared vision today. Building on this foundation, the network grew into the Thunder Bay + Area Food Strategy (TBAFS), and now continues as the Food Action Network of Northwestern Ontario (FAN-NWO). Through each phase, our commitment has remained the same: to connect food and community, and to build a more just, resilient, and sustainable food system for all communities in Northwestern Ontario.

Milestones

1996: Food Action Network Founded

1996

The Thunder Bay Food Action Network was born out of the Feeding Ourselves Hunger Forum in 1996. It brought together local advocates, service providers, and community members determined to address food insecurity in the Thunder Bay area. Hosted by the Thunder Bay District Health Unit, the Food Action Network quickly became a key space for grassroots collaboration, community dialogue, and food policy development.
A pivotal moment came in 1999 with Putting Food on the Table, a strategic planning process that outlined seven community priorities, including the need for more coordinated emergency food services. These efforts culminated in the development and ratification of the Thunder Bay Food Charter in 2008, a landmark policy endorsed by the City of Thunder Bay, the District of Thunder Bay Social Services Administration Board, and over 30 regional municipalities, school boards, and organizations. The Charter embedded food security into local governance and created a shared vision for a just and sustainable food system.
In 2005, members of the Food Action Network came together to launch the Thunder Bay Good Food Box program, one of the first participatory food security initiatives in the City.
In 2012, a regional Food Summit reaffirmed the need to translate the Charter’s vision into action. The following year, at a Food Summit in 2013, participants identified seven key areas for strategic focus - laying the groundwork for a more formalized, regional food strategy.
In 2014, the Thunder Bay + Area Food Strategy (TBAFS) was formally endorsed by the Councils of Thunder Bay, Conmee, Gillies, Neebing, Oliver Paipoonge, O’Connor, and Shuniah. This marked a significant milestone in the region’s commitment to food systems change and turning vision into action. Shaped through extensive consultation with community members and food system stakeholders, the strategy, titled Connecting Food and Community, set out a bold vision: to create a more equitable, sustainable, and self-reliant food system rooted in regional strengths and community priorities. Over the next decade, TBAFS led and supported a wide range of initiatives rooted in the seven pillars of our community food system.
To measure progress and guide future action, we published the first Community Food System Report Card in 2015. Drawing on community knowledge and regional data, it established a baseline food systems indicators across seven strategic pillars. A second report card followed in 2023, offering updated insights and guidance for continued systems change. Held up as a national model for community-led food systems planning, the Report Cards have been widely shared through publications and presentations across Canada.
In support of a more resilient regional food economy, TBAFS commissioned the Thunder Bay Food & Agriculture Market Study in 2017 and, in 2018, partnered with the Greenbelt Foundation on Food Forward Contracts in Thunder Bay - a case study exploring innovative local procurement models. Both studies highlighted opportunities for strengthening the local food economy. This work helped shape our regional procurement initiatives, including the launch of tbayinseason.ca in 2021 - a local food portal connecting over 90 producers to buyers - and a multi-year procurement project in partnership with four other Northern Ontario regions. This work was recognized in the 2023 Ontario Local Food Report as a provincial success story in building sustainable local food systems.
Recognizing the importance of Indigenous leadership in food systems, TBAFS supported the formation of the Indigenous Food Circle in 2018. The Circle is an Indigenous-led initiative that advances Indigenous food sovereignty through culturally grounded, land-based programming and Indigenous-settler collaboration.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, TBAFS took on the coordination of the Food Access Coalition (FAC), a network of over 50 local organizations working collaboratively to promote dignified, inclusive food access across the region. This group continues to meet regularly, fostering deeper partnerships and shared advocacy. Out of this table came our 2020 report, Learning from Emergency Food Response During COVID-19, which informed the development of Canada’s first community-generated Emergency Food Plan (EFP).
Ratified in 2022, the EFP is a collaborative, civil-society strategy that complements existing municipal emergency response plans to support food system coordination in times of crisis.The EFP was recognized as a Best Community Practice in the 2023 Annual Report of Ontario’s Ministry of Emergency Management.
In April 2025, the Thunder Bay + Area Food Strategy formally incorporated as the Food Action Network of Northwestern Ontario (FAN-NWO). This evolution reflects our growing regional mandate and our commitment to long-term systems change. As we step into this next chapter, we carry forward the legacy of the Food Charter and the strategic vision of TBAFS. FAN-NWO is committed to advancing food sovereignty, ecological stewardship, and regional well-being - ensuring that communities across Northwestern Ontario have the power and resources to shape their own food futures.

Explore our past projects and publications

Our Team

The Food Action Network of Northwestern Ontario is powered by people who care deeply about building equitable and resilient food systems. Whether working behind the scenes or guiding our vision forward, our team brings diverse knowledge, lived experience, and a shared commitment to community-led change.

Board of Directors

Our Board of Directors provides governance and strategic guidance to steward our mission and values. As a working board, members bring their time, energy, and networks to support food systems change across Northwestern Ontario. We’re committed to growing a diverse and representative board of up to 13 members. We seek voices from across the region and sectors, centering equity, lived experience, and local leadership.

Context of our work

Curious about community food systems? You’re in the right place. Whether you’re new to these ideas or already deep into food systems work, we’re offering a bite-sized (but nourishing!) overview of the ideas that shape our collective efforts. Explore how food systems work, why they matter, and how communities are cultivating change from the ground up.

Food sovereignty is for all of us. Whether you’re a grower, a gatherer, a cook, a volunteer, a student, or an organizer—your voice matters in the global food sovereignty movement.

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