Request for Proposals for Edible Food Recovery Services to Commercial Edible Food Generators - Round 2

Location: California
Posted: Dec 18, 2025
Due: Jan 5, 2026
Agency: Zero Waste Sonoma
Type of Government: State & Local
Category:
  • J - Maintenance, Repair, and Rebuilding of Equipment
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Request for Proposals for Edible Food Recovery Services to Commercial Edible Food Generators - Round 2


December 18, 2025

Zero Waste Sonoma (ZWS) is seeking proposals for services to provide edible food recovery services to Commercial Edible Food Generators, as required by the regulations the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) adopted in response to Senate Bill (SB) 1383 (Chapter 395, Statutes of 2016) (the regulations are hereinafter referred to as “SB 1383 Regulations”). All work will be completed in collaboration with ZWS staff and in compliance with SB 1383 Regulations (Chapter 12 of Division 7 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations (CCR). The below scope of work has been prepared to assist you in providing a written submission.


According to CalRecycle, Californians send 2.5 billion meals worth of still-fresh, unsold food to landfills each year, even as 1 in 5 Californians face food insecurity. The goal of SB 1383 is to reduce food waste and address food insecurity by diverting surplus edible food from the garbage and compost bins to food banks, soup kitchens, and other food recovery organizations and services that help feed our neighbors. By diverting food waste away from the landfill, California can lower methane climate pollution emissions and save landfill space.

SB 1383 requires that by 2025, California will recover 20% of edible food that would otherwise be sent to landfills, to feed people in need. The law requires the following:


• Jurisdictions must establish food recovery programs and strengthen their existing food recovery
networks
• Food donors must arrange to recover the maximum amount of their excess, edible food
• Food recovery organizations and services that participate in SB 1383 must maintain record


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Attachment Preview

REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS
REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS FOR EDIBLE FOOD RECOVERY
SERVICES FROM COMMERCIAL EDIBLE FOOD GENERATORS
PROPOSALS DUE: 5:00 P.M. on Monday, January 5, 2026
Submit proposal to:
Kristen Sales, Program Coordinator
Zero Waste Sonoma
Kristen.Sales@Sonoma-County.org
2300 County Center Dr, Suite B240
Santa Rosa, CA 95403
1
Background
Zero Waste Sonoma (ZWS) is seeking proposals for services to provide edible food recovery services to
Commercial Edible Food Generators, as required by the regulations the California Department of
Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) adopted in response to Senate Bill (SB) 1383 (Chapter
395, Statutes of 2016) (the regulations are hereinafter referred to as “SB 1383 Regulations”). All work
will be completed in collaboration with ZWS staff and in compliance with SB 1383 Regulations (Chapter
12 of Division 7 of Title 14 of the California Code of Regulations (CCR). The below scope of work has been
prepared to assist you in providing a written submission.
According to CalRecycle, Californians send 2.5 billion meals worth of still-fresh, unsold food to landfills
each year, even as 1 in 5 Californians face food insecurity. The goal of SB 1383 is to reduce food waste
and address food insecurity by diverting surplus edible food from the garbage and compost bins to food
banks, soup kitchens, and other food recovery organizations and services that help feed our neighbors.
By diverting food waste away from the landfill, California can lower methane climate pollution
emissions and save landfill space.
SB 1383 requires that by 2025, California will recover 20% of edible food that would otherwise be sent
to landfills, to feed people in need. The law requires the following:
Jurisdictions must establish food recovery programs and strengthen their existing food recovery
networks
Food donors must arrange to recover the maximum amount of their excess, edible food
Food recovery organizations and services that participate in SB 1383 must maintain records
What is Edible Food?
Edible food means food intended for people to eat, including food not sold because of appearance, age,
freshness, grade, size or surplus. Edible food includes, but is not limited to prepared foods, packaged
foods, and produce.
CEFGS, FRO and FRS
“Commercial Edible Food Generator” or “CEFG” are specified businesses that create edible food.
Examples include supermarkets, grocery stores, restaurants and hotels. (See 2 CCR § 18982(a)(7) for
the full definition.) There are two tiers of CEFGs – Tier 1 and Tier 2 – as described below. (See 2 CCR §
18982(a)(74)-(75) for definitions.)
“Food Recovery Organization”, or “FRO” means an entity that engages in the collection or receipt of
edible food from Commercial Edible Food Generators. They then distribute the food to people in need
directly or through other food distribution entities, such as food banks or other nonprofit charitable
organizations and temporary food facilities. (See 2 CCR § 18982(a)(25) for the full definition.)
“Food Recovery Service” or “FRS” means a person or entity that collects and transports edible food from
a Commercial Edible Food Generator to a Food Recovery Organization or other food distribution entity
for feeding people. (See 2 CCR § 18982(a)(26) for the full definition.)
Per the SB 1383 Regulations, Commercial Edible Food Generators are required to donate their excess
edible food. To ensure that the maximum amount of edible food is recovered, SB 1383 Regulations
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require that Commercial Edible Food Generators establish contracts or written agreement with a FRO or
FRS.
Budget
To help implement the edible food recovery requirements of SB 1383 Regulations, Zero Waste Sonoma is
allocating $80,000 in State grant funding for this program. ZWS will award four (4) applicants with
$20,000 in grant funds each. Awarded applicants will enter into a professional services agreement
(Attachment A) with ZWS for $20,000 to execute the proposed edible food recovery services. Each
service agreement will consist of a 6-month term.
Submission
Applicant response must include the following sections:
1. Cover Letter - contact information and brief description of the organization and type of service
offered; cover letter should be signed by authorized representative of applicant organization.
2. Project Team & Qualifications - Provide a short profile of the team members to be assigned to
proposed grant project, including each team member’s skills and experience in food recovery
and their project role
3. Scope of Work - Provide a brief description of applicant's proposed food recovery services (i.e.,
how applicant would spend grant funds). Please limit to 800 words or less.
4. Cost Proposal - Provide itemized breakdown of grant costs, including personnel hours, if
applicable (i.e., 100 personnel hours @ $45/hr or $5,000 to purchase a blast chiller)
3
Evaluation Process
ZWS shall evaluate each submission received. All determinations regarding the evaluation of submission
will be at the sole discretion of ZWS. Each submission shall first be evaluated for completeness and for
compliance with the requirements of this RFP. ZWS will evaluate the submission’s team qualifications,
scope of work, deliverable timeline, references, and cost proposal.
Projects and organizations that will receive priority consideration include
Criteria
Description
Increase Edible Food
Recovery Capacity
Proposals aimed at scaling food recovery efforts through increased
capacity to efficiently increase recovery and redistribute of surplus
edible food and supporting the goals of SB 1383 Regulations.
Recover and Redistribute Projects focused on recovering and redistributing hot or cold,
Prepared Foods
prepared food from Tier 2 CEFGs, such as restaurants,
hospitals, and schools.
Distribution model that Organizations that prioritize culturally appropriate food distribution
utilizes Client Choice
with dignity and client choice to select preferred food items.
Demonstrate Community
Partnerships, Shared
Resources and Support
Cooperative projects rooted in the communities they serve that
empower, elevate, and strengthen communities through intentional
collaborations, shared equipment and mutual use of equipment and
other shared resources.
New Grantee Recipients
Organizations who have been awarded this grant previously are not
eligible to receive a second grant. Priority will be given to new
applicants ensuring that resources are expanded to support a broader
range of organizations.
Replacing Aging
Equipment to Maintain
Capacity
Projects focused on replacing outdated or aging equipment
essential for maintaining current edible food recovery and
distribution capabilities.
Underserved Areas
Projects that serve historically underserved areas and
populations of Sonoma County, including West County, tribal
lands, and Census tracks designated as Disadvantaged
Communities (DACs).
Eligible food recovery-related costs could encompass any of the following activities and/or
expenditures:
Personnel
Consultants
Safety equipment / PPE
Mobile pantries
4
Signage
Recordkeeping or tracking software, including software to match donors with food
bank, recordkeeping/reporting software, procurement tracking software, apps for
food recovery, and mobile app development
Training
Equipment, including food dehydrators, refrigerators, coolers, packaging and
storage materials
Food safety certification
Food waste prevention projects
Examples of eligible food recovery projects may include:
Paying for personnel costs (staff time) to complete monthly reporting and use food
donation app/software
Paying for personnel costs (staff time) for a food recovery driver to deliver rescued food
Paying a stipend to volunteers who conduct edible food recovery
Rental of a vehicle for use in food recovery services
Purchase of kitchen equipment to improve recovery of prepared foods (i.e., blast
chillers, reusable containers)
Rental of kitchen facility to prepare and store meals made from donated excess edible
food
Energy costs for solar-powered (off grid) cold storage
Any costs not directly related to the recovery of excess, edible food are ineligible for
reimbursement. Ineligible costs include:
purchase of promotional give-away items (SWAG)
purchase or lease of land or buildings
food liquefiers
disposal costs
costs related to website host and web page domain
food or beverages (as part of meetings, workshops, events, etc.)
travel costs, including mileage
Eligible projects include funding on-going food recovery activities, as well as onboarding new
Tier 1 and Tier 2 donors.
Zero Waste Sonoma will provide applicants with the following technical assistance materials:
1. List of all regulated Tier 1 and Tier 2 Generators
2. Free account for CareIt.com food donation software
3. Safe Surplus Food Donation Toolkit
4. "How to Safely Recover Food" best practice one-sheets
5. Model Food Recovery Agreement
6. Model Recordkeeping Tool
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This is the opportunity summary page. It provides an overview of this opportunity and a preview of the attached documentation.
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