2024 COMMUNITY IMPACT REPORT
Table of ContentS
Grow
Cook
Share
Community Engagement
Systems Change
Financials and Supporters
C.J. Sentell, CEO
LETTER FROM THE CEO
Dear friends,
As I reflect on this past year, I am filled with immense gratitude for the vibrant community that sustains and propels the work of The Nashville Food Project. Together, we have overcome challenges, celebrated milestones, and made meaningful strides toward nourishing our neighbors and cultivating community through food.
In 2024, our shared commitment to community food security translated into impactful numbers: hundreds of thousands of nourishing meals prepared and shared, tons of fresh produce grown and distributed, and countless moments of connection fostered across tables, gardens, and kitchen spaces. But beyond the statistics, the true measure of our work lies in the stories of resilience, collaboration, and hope that emerge from every corner of our community.
This year, we deepened our partnerships with local organizations, amplifying the reach and impact of our collective efforts. By working together, we have expanded access to healthy food, supported local growers, and empowered individuals through education and shared resources. These partnerships remind us that we are stronger together, and they inspire us to dream bigger about what we can achieve.
None of this would be possible without you — our volunteers, donors, partners, and advocates. Your unwavering support sustains our work and reminds us that a community nourished in body and spirit is a community capable of transformative change. As we look ahead to 2025, we do so with renewed energy and a steadfast belief in the power of food to bring people together and build a more just and equitable world.
Thank you for being an integral part of this journey. Together, we will continue to plant seeds of hope, nurture connections, and harvest the fruits of a more connected and compassionate Nashville.
With gratitude,
C.J. Sentell
Gardens are the place where food begins. From seeding all the way to harvest, growing our own food connects us more deeply to the land, our food system, and each other. Our gardens are thriving ecosystems of plants and people where community members gather to grow the foods they want and need.
“The community farm creates community by offering a place where gardeners and farmers can grow their own food and engage with each other. It allows us to share growing tips with each other and creates a sense of belonging”
Community Gardens
McGruder Community Garden in North Nashville and the Community Farm at Mill Ridge in Antioch bring people of all ages together to grow fresh, healthy, and culturally meaningful food. Through regenerative agriculture, these spaces nourish both the land and community members who lack reliable access to healthy produce.
2024 Big Wins for Community Gardens
The focus at Mill Ridge and McGruder is expanding land access for community gardeners.
Almost 10,000 sq/ft of space was added and plots will be allocated to the waitlist for 2025.
We were also able to connect a production farmer to land at Mill Ridge.
We plan to expand affordable land access to production gardeners and farmers next year.
At McGruder we added 12 raised beds as part of an ADA compliant expansion by MNPS.
Growing Together
Growing Together is an urban farm where Burmese and Bhutanese farmers, who came to Nashville as immigrants and refugees, transform land into opportunity. In 2024, seven farm families grew fresh, culturally significant produce, selling to restaurants, food access partners, and Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) customers — earning income and building community connections.
2024 Big Wins for Growing Together
Increased CSA sales by 66.8%.
Increased wholesale sales by 48%.
New $7,744 in CSA subsidies from Vanderbilt University Medical Center Growing Good Health partnership.
30 interpreted farmer support sessions held (education workshops, skills development, process improvement, resource distribution sessions, apprentice trainings).
What We Accomplished Together
64
community garden plots occupied at Mill Ridge
36,000
pounds of produce grown and shared from community gardens
$91,955
amount of revenue generated by community garden farmers
30,659
pounds of produce grown by Burmese and Bhutanese farmers
Cooking brings us together to nourish one another. Recipes tell stories that connect us to places and people, and by sharing dishes, we share ourselves. Our kitchens use recovered, donated, and garden-grown food to prepare and cook made-from-scratch meals that nourish our community and create new stories around the table.
“I see my role as a Nashville Food Project volunteer as a critical piece of their offering to the community. The kitchen staff is an amazing team, and we volunteers enable them to serve even more meals to the community.”
Food Recovery
About 40% of food is wasted, yet 1 in 8 Nashville residents lack reliable access to nutritious food. Our food recovery program bridges this gap by rescuing fresh, high-quality excess food from grocers, farms, restaurants, and individuals to create nourishing meals for the community.
2024 Big Wins for Food Recovery
Our food recovery program reached unprecedented heights, not only reducing food waste but also achieving substantial environmental benefits. By rescuing food that would have gone to landfills, we prevented the release of 152 metric tons of CO₂ emissions, conserved 20 million gallons of water, and reduced methane emissions equivalent to taking 25 cars off the road for a year.
The addition of a donated electric van further underscored our commitment to sustainability while expanding our recovery and distribution capacity.
Community Meals
In our kitchens, recovered and donated foods become nourishing meals, crafted with care and fresh ingredients. With help from our dedicated volunteers, we prepare dishes like pastas, casseroles, and salads. These meals are then shared through more than 45 poverty disrupting, community-building organizations across Nashville, ensuring good food reaches those who need it most as part of a broader effort to address systemic challenges.
2024 Big Wins for Community Meals
Food connects us, nourishes us, and strengthens our community. In North Nashville, where access to fresh food is limited, The Nashville Food Project plays a vital role in the Heart of Nashville program to improve health outcomes. Through nutritious, heart-healthy meals and education, we’re addressing issues like uncontrolled hypertension while supporting wraparound care in partnership with NashvilleHealth and Matthew Walker Comprehensive Health Center.
What We Accomplished Together
80%
percentage of meals made from donated and recovered food
333,950
pounds of food recovered
333,950
96
unique farmers and grocers contributed to food recovery
amount of Community Meals cooked and shared
volunteers
Volunteers are the heart of The Nashville Food Project. From tending gardens and caring for bees to baking bread, chopping fresh produce, and packaging meals, our volunteers are integral to everything we do. Their time, skills, and passion help us cultivate not only food, but a more just and sustainable food system for Nashville — one that nourishes our entire community.
1,617
unique volunteers
across all programs
9,298
total volunteer hours contributed
““I am so proud to be a volunteer with The Nashville Food Project.
The shifts are so organized and I feel like my time is well-spent when I volunteer.
I always meet the kindest souls and walk away with a smile on my face.”
Why Food Systems Change?
Nashville residents face all kinds of inequities: limited access to healthy, affordable food; persistent health disparities; the loss of agricultural land; food waste; and environmental degradation. All of these challenges are interrelated, caused by a food system that doesn’t work for farmers, grocers, restaurants, or eaters — which, of course, is all of us.
A systems change approach leverages community engagement and cross-sector collaboration to address these challenges. By integrating this approach to our work, we’ll better understand why food-related challenges persist, and how we can work together to create a food system that actually works for everyone in our city.
Over the next few years, you will see this approach informing our work. From convening key food system stakeholders to hosting neighborhood meetings, we are counting on your engagement to create lasting change in our city.
Together, we can achieve our vision of vibrant community food security, where everyone in Nashville has access to the food they want and need through a just and sustainable food system.
2024 BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Chair: Josh Westerhold, Nissan North America
Treasurer: John Pearce, Ernst & Young (retired)
Secretary: Angie Bergman, Bass, Berry & Sims
Immediate Past Chair: Antonio Carroll, Nashville Electric Service
Young Leaders Council Interns:
Claire Pruitt, Crowe
David Zeitlin, Holland & Knight
Angie Bergman, Bass, Berry & Sims
Ashlee Brooks, Brooks & Associates Tax Consulting
Mary Lea Bryant, Harpeth Hall School
Ann Fundis, Community Volunteer
Katherine Hartle, Hartle Holdings, LLC
Katie Johnson, HCA Healthcare Research Institute
Kim Johnson, Jackson National Life Insurance
Vanessa Lazon, Metro Nashville Public Schools
Christy Moberly, State Farm (retired)
Kristy Offitt, Bridgestone Americas
Dana Patel, HCA Healthcare Foundation
Mark Peter, Indeed
Harsha V Ramayya, Bank of America
Jennifer Rusie, Jackson Lewis
Angie Sessoms, Koya Partners
Marcie Smeck Bryant, YWCA (retired)
Will Smith, AllianceBernstein
Tandy Wilson, City House
THANK YOU TO OUR 2024 SUPPORTERS!
$1 Million
Yield Giving
$100,000+
Dettwiller Foundation
USDA—National Institute of Food and Agriculture
Whole Foods Foundation
$50,000+
Boedecker Foundation
The Healing Trust
The Memorial Foundation
Christy & Michael Moberly
West End Home Foundation
$25,000-$49,999
Anonymous
Andrea Waitt Carlton
Family Foundation
David Belvedere & Olivia Burcel Enterprise Holdings
Fifth Generation, Inc. (Tito’s Handmade Vodka)
The Giving Grove
HCA Foundation
Jackson National Life
Melinda & Jeff Balser
Messer Construction
Nissan North America, Inc
TN Department of Agriculture: Division of Forestry
$10,000 TO $24,999
Dave & Lesley Adams
AllianceBernstein
Apex Moving + Storage
Judith Blondell-Hardy
The Cigna Group
First Horizon Foundation
Frist Foundation
Fund for Food Security
Glen & Dorothy Stillwell Charitable Trust
Golden Tree Asset Management
HCA Healthcare, Inc.
Joe C. Davis Foundation
Kroger
Lawrence Lindsley Davis Trust
Mary Louise Albritton LeBlanc
Theresa & Joe MacCurdy
Marlene and Spencer Hays Foundation
Susan Mezger
Milton and Denice Johnson Family Foundation
Patagonia
Schnabel Foundation
Shoba Foundation
Stanley Steemer of Nashville
Tennessee Public Health Foundation, Inc.
Thomas and Mamie Houser Charitable Foundation
United Way of Greater Nashville
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
David Zeitlin
$5,000 TO $9,999
Aldi, Inc.
Al. Neyer
Susan Barge
Boulevard Bolt
John S. Bryant
Amy Buckner
Mary Lea Bryant
Michael & Jane Ann Cain
The Carolyn Smith Foundation
Sunny & Bryan Cartmell
Caterpillar Financial Services Corporation
C&B Hearn Foundation
Chicago Pizza Festival
Christ Church Cathedral
Bette & Mark Christofersen
City House Group
Laura Copeland
The Dorothy Cate and Thomas F. Frist Foundation
The Elizabeth D. Martin Fund
Community Foundation of the Chattahoochee
Elliott Davis
$2,500 TO $4,999
Patrick Anderson
Anonymous
Isaiah S. Beard
Angie Bergman
Lady & Billy Bird
Mark Blue
BlueCross BlueShield
of Tennessee
Blum Family Foundation
Trey & Lisa Calfee
Trudy & Bill Carpenter
Clayton & Mary Collins
Laurie & Steve Eskind
The Farm and Forest Families of Tennessee, Inc.
Sara J. Finley
Food Lion Feeds
Charitable Foundation
The Gause Foundation
Katherine & Dan Hartle
Jackson Lewis
The Enchiridion Foundation
James R. Meadows, Jr. Foundation
Kim Hawkins
HDR Inc.
Hofseth LLC Corporation
Holland & Knight
Manuel Zeitlin Architects
Martin Construction Company
Nashville Electric Service
Nordstrom Cares
John & Lori Pearce
Mark Peter
Publix Supermarket Charities
The Reynolds Family Foundation
Fran Schell
Grace & Michael Sposato
Toast, Inc.
Jeff & Lynne Warne
Josh Westerhold
Woodmont Christian Church
Whole Cities – Whole Foods Market Foundation
Emily Jones
Terri & Doug King
Mark Manz & Cindy Kershner
Karen Meredith
Emily Murray
Jennifer R. Paisley
Dana Pansa
Paypal Giving Fund
Piedmont Natural Gas
Popeye’s Foundation
Karen Rolling
Will Smith
The Steven and Laurie Eskind Family Foundation
Studio Mama Supper Club
Target Corporation
Jennifer Taylor
Tennessee Titans ONE Community Foundation
Jeremiah & Stephanie Weeden-Wright
Vanderbilt University
Viviendo Foundation
Washington Foundation
Download a PDF copy of the 2024 Community Impact Report for The Nashville Food Project