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N.S. government's Buy Local campaign takes its first small step

The Nova Scotia government is helping the province's largest continuing complex with its grocery bill. But to get the money, Northwood will have to buy more of its food from local sources.

Northwood Halifax will receive $25K incentive to buy local food

Agriculture Minister Greg Morrow, centre, is seen with Northwood CEO Janet Simm, left, and Letitia Rowley of Gordon Food Services, Northwood's food supplier, at the announcement Friday. (Robert Short/CBC)

The almost 400 residents who live at Northwood's long-term care home inHalifax may not have noticed a difference, but this month more of the food they're eating is coming from local producers.

Since the beginning of December, the downtown care facility has been receiving more meat, vegetables and fruit from farms and producers in the province, thanks to a $25,000 incentive from the Nova Scotia government.

Stephanie Hefford, Northwood'smanager of food production, saidthe incentive is helping to offset the bigger billthat comes with buying local.

"It will help because buying local, as you know yourself in grocery stores, it's not cheap," Hefford told reporters at an event sponsored by the province to mark the start ofthis pilot project."It is more expensive."

A worker is seen preparing food in the Northwood Halifax care facility. (Robert Short/CBC)

The three-month trial willdetermine whether the government incentive is enough to justify changing buying habits at Northwood.

Agriculture Minister Greg Morrow described the project asthe first step in acampaign to encourage Nova Scotians to buy at least 20 per cent of their food locally by 2030.

"This is a pilot project, but if it's working for everyone, we keep growing," he said. "We're looking at hospitals, schools. universities, correctional facilities.

"For me, it's simple. Big kitchens, big impact."

Northwood serves roughly 1,200 meals a day to the residents at its Halifax campus. The annual grocery bill is$2 million,Hefford said.

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