Mama’s Kitchen CEO Alberto Cortés announces retirement

From left, Alberto Cortés with Representative Juan Vargas (CA-52) Photo courtesy of Mama’s Kitchen

By SDCN Editor

San Diego, CA–Alberto Cortés, who served as Chief Executive Officer of Mama’s Kitchen for 21 years has announced his retirement.

Cortés is set to retire in January 2024 after successfully building the organization into the largest nonprofit provider of home-delivered meals in San Diego County.

“Making the decision to retire from this impactful organization that I’ve helped develop alongside our amazing staff, generous donors, dedicated volunteers, committed board, and devoted community members required thought, consideration, and care. Mama’s Kitchen will continue to thrive and care for our community’s most vulnerable individuals,” Cortés said.

Mama’s Kitchen board of directors says Cortés’ leadership puts the organization in a place of strength and stability, allowing for continued growth and the ability to evolve in response to the nutritional needs of a changing community. 

“Of course, we are sad to see Alberto retire, but we are immensely grateful for the hard work, time, and passion with which he has served Mama’s Kitchen and the San Diego community for over two decades,” says Mama’s Kitchen Board President, Caron Calabrese, Esq. “He has truly led this organization to new heights and made it a leading authority on solutions to nutrition insecurity and medically tailored meals in San Diego and beyond. Alberto has been the heart of Mama’s Kitchen and we’re excited to see him enter this new chapter. For someone who has made it his mission to care for others, we are happy for him to make time for himself.”

Cortés first joined Mama’s Kitchen’s board of directors in 1999. After several years of service in local public health initiatives, he was hired to lead the nonprofit organization as executive director on July 8, 2002. Under his leadership, Mama’s Kitchen has grown from a $1.7 million to a $5.5 million nonprofit agency, making it a leader in the sector. During Cortes’ tenure, the organization has delivered about 8.75 million meals. Today, Mama’s Kitchen is the largest nonprofit provider of home-delivered meals in San Diego and the sole provider of medically tailored meals, delivering more than 75,000 each month to critically ill individuals and children.

In 2006, Cortés guided one of the most significant decisions of Mama’s Kitchen’s history to expand the organization’s HIV-focused mission to serve San Diegans with other critical illnesses. 

As the organization’s capacity increased over time, health conditions that can be improved with proper nutrition have been added, including cancer in 2006, type 2 diabetes and congestive heart failure in 2018, and most recently, chronic kidney disease in 2020. Since the founding of the organization, its commitment to HIV has never ceased.

Cortés hired Mama’s Kitchen’s first registered dietitian in 2013 and established the organization’s Nutrition Education Program to teach critically ill individuals how to manage their health through proper nutrition as a supplement to medically tailored meals. He managed the launch of Mama’s Pantry in 2004, a service provided for over 16 years. He introduced the Emergency Food Assistance Program and a Medical Nutrition Therapy program in 2016. 

In 2020, Cortés secured the first managed care plan contract, allowing services to reach an even greater number of vulnerable people through Medi-Cal’s CalAIM initiative. With his persistence and determination, Mama’s Kitchen works with more than 350 healthcare providers throughout San Diego County to serve and educate San Diegans with critical illnesses and further the organization’s trusted belief that everyone is entitled to the basic necessity of life – nutritious food.

When Covid-19 hit, operations were almost jeopardized due to an immediate and drastic increase in demand for meal delivery by more than 50 percent, while simultaneously challenged by an inability to have in-facility volunteers to prepare the meals, and a shortage of volunteer drivers to deliver them. Cortés led the nonprofit through the pandemic and ensured the safety of clients, volunteers, and employees, allowing the organization to increase capacity, all while never turning away an eligible client, never putting a client on a waiting list, and never charging a client for their services.

Mama’s Kitchen’s much-anticipated annual fundraisers of Mama’s Day and Mama’s Pies Thanksgiving Bake Sale have grown under Cortés’ stewardship to raise hundreds of thousands of dollars in donations each year to support the organization’s nutrition programs. 

Cortés has shepherded the transition of Mama’s Kitchen from working out of a church basement to its current, fully-owned facility on Home Avenue, where operations continue to grow. He helped lay the groundwork for the next generation of food as medicine for the San Diego community, and the organization will continue down the path that has been paved by Cortés.

In addition to the expansion of nutrition programs and services, Cortés also helped guide the organization’s shift to function under the paradigm of Food is Medicine. Over the past ten years, Mama’s Kitchen progressed from simply the provision of food to providing complex medically tailored nutrition. He has collaborated with other nutrition delivery nonprofits across the country, positioning Mama’s Kitchen to become a founding member of the National Food is Medicine Coalition and California Food is Medicine Coalition. The medically tailored nutrition programming has been recognized by healthcare providers around the nation for its ability to improve the health and well-being of critically ill clients, while simultaneously reducing healthcare costs.

During Cortés’ time with Mama’s Kitchen, he and the organization have received multiple awards of recognition including one of the “50 People to Watch” by San Diego Magazine, a Congressional Record Recognition from Congresswoman Susan Davis, a recipient of “The Jess Jessop Founders Award” from The San Diego LGBT Community Center, received a Resolution from Christine Kehoe, 39th Senatorial District, State of California, and another Resolution from the City of San Diego. In 2005, the organization received a Commendation from then-CA Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante, and received the Local Hero of the Year Award during Hispanic Heritage Month from KPBS and Union Bank of California.

“My time with Mama’s Kitchen was only one chapter of a 36-year career in the nonprofit sector that started in response to the AIDS epidemic – an epidemic that impacted my life, while also providing a clear sense of purpose. I am grateful for the opportunity to serve San Diego. I look forward to witnessing Mama’s Kitchen’s continued growth, evolution, and success serving the ever-changing and challenging nutritional needs of our communities,” reflects Cortés.

“The timing is right for Alberto to begin his well-earned retirement in January 2024, with strong leadership and staff in place across the board at Mama’s Kitchen. The board of directors is confident that there will be continued growth and fulfillment of the mission as the staff welcomes a new CEO to the management team next year,” Calabrese adds.

Mama’s Kitchen has formed a search committee to identify and select Cortés’ successor. 

The organization says it plans to recognize Cortés and his achievements in the near future including a campaign that will be enacted in his name to continue his legacy of caring for the community. 

Mama’s Kitchen was established in 1990 by a San Diego caregiver who enlisted volunteers to prepare and deliver free meals to neighbors who were sick with HIV/AIDS and unable to cook for themselves. The organization realized that a reliable home meal delivery service was needed to ensure that these individuals would continue to receive nutritious, life-sustaining food. In 2004, Mama’s Pantry was launched to serve HIV-positive San Diegans who were healthy enough to cook but unable to purchase nutritious food due to extremely low income. 

Since then, the organization has expanded its Medically Tailored Meal Service program to other at-risk populations including those battling cancer, individuals with heart failure, diabetes, and chronic kidney disease. Beyond medically tailored meals, clients also receive nutritional counseling from registered dietitians. In 2022, the organization delivered its 11 millionth meal. 

For 33 years, Mama’s Kitchen has never turned away a client who qualified for its services. During the COVID-19 pandemic, the organization responded to an overall 50 percent increase in demand. Mama’s Kitchen continues to provide emergency response efforts, nutrition education services, and more than 816,000 home-delivered medically tailored meals to more than 2,600 individuals and families in San Diego County annually. 

For more information about Mama’s Kitchen, visit www.mamaskitchen.org. 

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