Beyond The Plate: Ep. 26 - FFTP Responds: CEO Ed Raine on Hurricane Melissa
In this episode, host Andrew “Kappy” Kaplan sits down with CEO Ed Raine to take a candid look at the mission, challenges and impact of FFTP. They cover how the organization responds in times of crisis, the logistical realities of rebuilding and supporting communities, and the “why” behind the work: restoring dignity and hope through food-systems intervention.
Ed opens up about the recent major disaster (the Category 5 storm that struck Jamaica) and the magnitude of the recovery effort. They walk through how FFTP mobilizes relief, partners locally, coordinates rebuild efforts, and uses food as a pathway to restore community and economic vitality.
Highlights include:
- A deep dive into the “respond and rebuild” model: immediate relief (meals, safe cooking environments) followed by mid- and long-term food-system rebuilding.
- The importance of local partnerships and community leadership in disaster recovery, rather than top-down solutions.
- Real-world stories of individuals and families whose lives were turned upside-down by the storm — and how food access, skill-building, and infrastructure support are central to regaining stability.
- Transparent discussion of the organizational and logistical complexities: supply-chain challenges, funding gaps, infrastructure barriers, and staffing in high-stress recovery zones.
- A forward-looking conversation: what does resilience look like? How does FFTP plan to build stronger local food systems so that next time — the community is less vulnerable and more self-sustaining.
Listeners leave with a clearer understanding of how food-security and disaster-recovery intersect, and how FFTP’s approach doesn’t stop at the plate — it carries into empowerment, rebuilding, and long-term community health.





























