Cederberg Curb Story

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Front of house Dane County food workers change industry together By: Nicole Cederberg Wander into Short Stack Eatery just off Madison’s State Street, and you’ll find friends hunched over plates of pancakes, servers bustling to tables with eggs and coffee, and bussers whisking away the remains. But what patrons don’t see is the sometimes darker side of the food industry — one where workers routinely experience burnout, struggle with their mental health or battle substance abuse issues. The food service industry has the most substance use disorders in full-time working adults ages 18-64, according to the Center for Behavioral Health Statistics. In an industry centered around the importance of coming together to bond over food, there is a lack of workers doing the same. Alex Lindenmeyer, co-owner of Short Stack Eatery, saw her workers struggling firsthand. She explains that although Short Stack may not have the bar culture, other restaurants in the Madison food industry have a long-standing mentality that the only way to bond after a shift is by getting post-work drinks and then going out. This creates a cycle of working, getting drunk and doing it again. “As a culture, we've built this culture around drugs and alcohol. And I think that was a big showstopper in terms of ‘Hey, let's get together and talk about this,’” Lindenmeyer says. And that's exactly what they did. The industry had many conversations about what was going on and in 2022 Chef Evan Dannells invited a group of leaders in the food industry to come together and have conversations as a community rather than as individuals or restaurants. The group realized their experiences weren’t happening in a vacuum, and many establishments needed a place to come together. Among the group invited was Noah Bloedorn. While completing his graduate degree in urban planning at UW–Madison, he was inspired and energized to organize more meetings to talk about what was happening in the food industry in Madison as a part of his graduate project. “The big takeaway from the meeting was that we need to be organized,” Bloedorn says. “We need to be working together to have a political voice and start making that change that we want to see in this community.” Dannells got the group together and with Bloedorn’s help they gave it a name: The Dane County Food Collective. Since 2022, this group has changed the way their restaurants in the Madison community operate. It started with a few leaders like Lindenmeyer and Bloedorn and stemmed into an organization that wants everyone in the community to come and learn how to change their own restaurants and hopefully the Madison food industry as a whole. The collective opens itself to anyone in the food industry, including chefs, farmers, servers, restaurant owners, food businesses, and anyone else who has a tie to the industry. The group sees everyone in the


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