Kara sees repairing the food system as the most fundamental way to impact some of humanity’s greatest woes. The inability to feed our families well breeds anger. Childhood hunger has ramifications throughout entire lives. Externalized costs of certain industry players ravage our environment and in turn, our health. Chemicals are now regularly present in what we eat. What troubles her further is that food is too often politicized and the deep urgency in our need for action can make those who care deeply too forceful in how they try to enact change. Kara looks to turn the tide with her team at Ruminate.
She brings a decade of experience growing innovative programs from concept to scale to her role as Executive Director. She has worked across several continents, in many fields, breaking down and translating complex information into learnings that are in turn used to educate and inspire action. She believes in educating and building programs that keeps in mind how real humans, with all of our illogical quirks, work and learn. An economist and researcher at heart, she believes in the power of evidence based research while never losing sight of the power of human connection and passionate people. On her days off, Kara enjoys engaging with her local food scene through Slow Food West Michigan and indulging in all of the local, humane, sustainable cuisine she can stroll her daughter to, steps of her home in Grand Rapids, MI.
Kara’s mission @ Ruminate, this year, to engage stakeholders outside of the “good food” world into the food change conversation.