new frontiers: applying research to achieve our vision
exam in 2013. After doing community organizing for the Fair Food Network, Bynum went on to manage youth and nutrition programs for Gleaners Community Food Bank of Southeast- ern Michigan. She studied public health at Emory University. In 2015, she joined the Detroit Food Policy Council (DFPC) as its executive director. The DFPC is an education, advocacy, and policy organi-
zation that is one of the more than 300 food policy councils connected through the Johns Hopkins Center for a Livable Future. Unlike most food councils, which come out of gov- ernment, the DFPC is the result of grassroots community action. It is a free-standing, 23-member, nonprofit advisory board that includes representatives from various sectors of the food system, at-large representatives, a youth represen- tative, and government representatives from the mayor’s office, city council, and health department. “Board mem- bers work together to try to better understand the needs of each sector with the aim of creating a sustainable and equi- table food system that serves everyone in the community,” Bynum notes. “What’s good for one group isn’t necessarily good for all.” Bynum, the 2021–2022 chair of the Academy of Nutrition
and Dietetics National Organization of Blacks in Dietetics and Nutrition (NOBIDAN), says that her experience in business has been very helpful to her as the DFPC’s executive director. That, plus the fact that she is perhaps the only US dietitian in such a position, makes Bynum a pioneer and a model of what can be done at the intersection of public health and food sys- tems. When students reach out to her, Bynum encourages them to use their knowledge to elevate the profession and educate others on the power of food.
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