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Bates Dining Services
October 13, 2009 | Posted by:
Bryan McNulty
The Fellows with the Hobart Center for Foodservice Sustainability have announced a $5,000 grant to Bates College Dining Services for its comprehensive approach to food service sustainability, and have named Director of Dining Services Christine Schwartz as an HCFS Fellow.
Bates was judged as having the best sustainability program from among 13 entrants nationwide, which included K-12 schools and higher educational institutions, health care and hospitality facilities.
“Every year the level of participation and interest in sharing sustainable practices continues to expand,” says Rick Cartwright, vice president, ITW Food Equipment Group, and HCFS Fellow. Cartwright said that “Bates College stood out as a best-practice example showing a broad level of impact across many aspects of sustainability.”
Prompted by a generous gift from an anonymous donor, the opening of a new dining facility and the passion on the part of students to know more about the foods they were eating, Bates College undertook a yearlong initiative to explore connections between the dining program, food and the educational mission of the college itself. “Nourishing Body and Mind: Bates Contemplates Food” was launched in September 2008. Overall, Bates College decreased energy consumption and water use, reduced solid waste, and implemented a Farm-to-Fork program, expanding the purchasing of local, sustainable foods. From these initiatives, Bates College realized an annual saving totaling more than $80,000.
“Bates, like many colleges, believes that the environment must be taken into consideration when purchasing, creating, delivering and serving food products. And our dining program has integrated environmental stewardship into every decision regarding dining and food services,” says Schwartz, who will help select future operations for grant recognition while serving as an HCFS Fellow. “We are committed to continuing to develop the Bates Contemplates Food initiative and are grateful for the funds from the HCFS to assist us in doing so.”
Bates is the third recipient of the annual award. The winners in previous years were the University of California, Santa Cruz and Dickinson College.
October 1, 2009 | Posted by:
Bryan McNulty
The new dining Commons at Bates was built equivalent to LEED Silver standards and uses reclaimed wood for its ceiling. It also has no dumpster; 82 percent of waste is diverted from the waste stream: sent to a pig farmer, composted or recycled.
University Business magazine has awarded Bates a "Dining Hall of Distinction" award for having the country's best "self-operated dining program."
Judges were particularly impressed with Bates initiatives in environmental sustainability, according to Melissa Ezarik, managing editor of University Business, a national business magazine for higher education based in Norwalk, Conn.
"With a full 82 percent of waste diverted from the waste stream through composting, recycling, or a program where waste is sent to a local pig farmer, the building doesn’t even have enough waste to fill a dumpster," Ezarik said. "So there isn’t one. And nearly one-third of the food budget is spent locally." (more...)
September 29, 2009 | Posted by:
Bates Views
A Bates College screening of the food-industry exposé Food, Inc. will be followed by a question-and-answer session with the director of Bates Dining Services and with Gary Hirshberg P'13, head of organic yogurt producer Stonyfield Farm.
Gary Hirschberg is head of the organic yogurt producer Stonyfield Farm.
The screening begins at 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 3, in Olin Arts Concert Hall, 75 Russell St. The film is 90 minutes long.
Hirshberg appears in the film, which scrutinizes the food we eat and how it is produced. He'll be joined in the Bates event by college Dining Services Director Christine Schwartz. The event is open to the public at no cost. For more information, please call 207-786-6476. (more...)
May 22, 2009 | Posted by:
Doug Hubley
Molly Mylius '11 has spent Short Term 2009 helping build a Bates herb garden.
For the first time since the mid-1990s, Bates' lush summer plantings will include a garden dedicated solely to providing food for Dining Services.
A raised bed on the lawn between Commons and Central Avenue will supply herbs to season Dining Services' offerings. The project is the result of a Short Term collaboration between Bill Bergevin, the college's longtime landscape coordinator, and Molly Mylius '11, who helped Bergevin build the herb garden as part of her environmental studies internship. (more...)
March 31, 2009 | Posted by:
Doug Hubley
Assistant chef Thoune Thongsavanh works at the vegetarian-vegan station in Commons.
Known for its progressive food-service practices, Bates has announced a pioneering partnership with the highly regarded nutrition navigation system Guiding Stars. First implemented in 2006 and now used in some 1,400 grocery stores, the science-based Guiding Stars system rates foods with zero to three stars highlighting items according to good, better or best nutritional value, respectively. The Bates partnership is Guiding Stars Licensing Company's first with a college. (more...)
February 16, 2009 | Posted by:
Phyllis Graber Jensen
Bates Dining pizza chef Tina Vallerand makes pizza at the brick oven in the new Bates Dining Commons.
Bates Dining pizza chef Tina Vallerand performs her wizardry at the brick oven in the new Bates Dining Commons. A favorite of Bates students, Commons pizza is one of many popular choices that appears regularly on the Bates Dining menu. [More...]
January 16, 2009 | Posted by:
Bates Web

All-American Nordic skier Sylvan Ellefson '09 wears a St. Christopher medal for a bit of good luck to complement a rigorous training regimen.
While Sylvan Ellefson ’09 hasn’t banished sweets or Commons crispitos from his diet, he’s honed an understanding of what his body needs to perform at peak level.
(more...)
November 19, 2008 | Posted by:
Doug Hubley
Bates Dining Services has received a statewide award honoring commitment to the employment of people with disabilities.
At an Oct. 30 symposium in Freeport, Working Together, a partnership of Maine businesses striving to advance the employment of people with disabilities, presented Bates with the annual Workforce Achievement Award.
Christine Schwartz, Dining Services director, accepted the award for Bates.
Also known as the "Just Do It" award, the Workforce Achievement Award recognizes Maine businesses that are especially dedicated to and effective in this important cause. (more...)
November 1, 2008 | Posted by:
Bates Web

All-American Nordic skier Sylvan Ellefson '09 wears a St. Christopher medal for a bit of good luck to complement a rigorous training regimen.
While Sylvan Ellefson ’09 hasn’t banished sweets or Commons crispitos from his diet, he’s honed an understanding of what his body needs to perform at peak level.
"I was definitely not conscious of eating a balanced diet my first year here," says Ellefson, a Nordic skier from Vail, Colo., who won All-America honors at last year’s NCAA Skiing Championships. "But in the past two years I’ve really realized what it means."
Now, he and his teammates consider Bates Dining Services to be part of their team. "Commons does a great job of providing us with the food we need for how we train," Ellefson says. (more...)
April 9, 2008 | Posted by:
Bates Web
Students begin to make the new dining Commons their own
Spring's happy arrival after a long winter manifests itself in myriad ways, which is one way to explain the giddy reactions to the new dining Commons, open since Feb. 24. As one smitten student blogger noted, "If it were legal to marry an inanimate object I clearly would have tied the knot by now."
"Students have been blown away by the vast improvement in our offerings," Christine Schwartz, director of Dining Services, told the trade publication Food Service Director. "This is directly related to the fact that we are cooking to order instead of in large batches."
The blogger had just one worry about his new relationship — the apparent randomness of diner traffic through the open, marketplace-style servery. But putting on our institutional hat (chef's?), we can explain that any randomness is purposeful: to slow the dining experience, to give students a chance to view their food being prepared (often to order) and to increase the casual interaction between and among students and Dining Services staff.

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