Ed Whitfield | Community-Wealth.org

This is a great in-depth interview on grassroots organizing, the growing resistance movement, the importance of policy work (which I think too many market leaders avoid) and most importantly, economic democracy. Ed’s work is so expansive that to talk of only one campaign would be too limited, but in does include food system work which is partly why it is posted here.

Our recent work has been around economic democracy. In 2010 and 2011, we asked ourselves how is it that we can focus our work more sharply? We wanted to know how to help people have opportunities to be productive for themselves and their community. We ended up pretty quickly deciding that cooperative solutions would be among the best solutions to those economic questions. They are rooted in that spirit of self-reliance. It wasn’t honest for us to say that if you have a giant jobs march that the federal government will do something good. We wanted to be as up front and honest as possible. We talked about the fact that, yes, there is resistance work that is needed. There are powerful people, places and forces where you can be crushed if you don’t. Advocacy is needed because you need to steer resources. But in the final analysis, you need to build community power so communities can be self-reliant and do things for themselves. That is the fundamental insight.

Source: Ed Whitfield | Community-Wealth.org

Slow Food Int’l Food Sovereignty Tour with Eddie Mukiibi

274

Where & When

will visit five American cities where disparities in power and wealth trigger an inspired use of food to grow leadership, self-reliance and cooperation. Stops on the tour include universities, schools and school gardens, and urban farms.

November 5-18, 2015: New York City, Detroit, New Orleans, Petal, and Sacramento. Learn more about the public events listed below on theNational Slow Food Calendar:

  • November 5-7 in New York City
    • Thursday, November 5: Kelso Beer Tap Takeover at the Berg’n Beer Hall (6-8pm)
    • Friday, November 6: A global discussion at NYU followed by light refreshments and Ferrari sparkling wines (5-7pm)
  • November 7-10 in Detroit, MI
    • Sunday, November 8: A discussion at the Spirit of Hope Church about youth and food with Detroit youth activist Kadiri Sennefer followed by soup and bread (6-8pm)
  • November 11-14 in New Orleans, LA
    • Wednesday, November 11: Slow Food New Orleans Happy Hour at Café Carmo (6-8pm) featuring under-utilized seafood species
    • Saturday, November 14: Ring the opening bell at the Crescent City Farmers Market (8am-12pm)
  • November 13 in Petal (Hattiesburg), MS: Invitation-only event
  • November 15-18 in Sacramento, CA
    • Monday, November 16: A Slow Food Fall Mixer to draw solidarity between African and American garden projects (6-8pm)
      More information here

Welcome Janie Maxwell to the market world

Although I will miss working regularly with my funny, indefatigable and razor-sharp pal Pat Stieran, I know some of the IFMA board well enough to know that they picked a worthy successor to her. Looking forward to working with Janie and seeing this great association continue to grow.

The Illinois Farmers Market Association Board of Directors is pleased to announce Jane Maxwell, as its new executive director.  Janie, as she prefers to be called, started on October 26 and is excited to be a part of the IFMA. She is very passionate about expanding local food opportunities and promoting Illinois farmers markets.

As a Registered Dietitian Janie believes strongly in the health value of local food and advocates for local food by building systems that highlight the economic value of markets to communities and farmers.

In her most recent work with Making Kane County Fit for Kids, as a part of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, Healthy Kids Healthy Communities Grant, Fit for Kids became a nationally recognized leader in creating a culture of health in part by improving access to healthy food.

Janie brings a background in managing grants and in nonprofit management having managed non-profit initiatives and programs.  She is also a nutrition instructor at Northern Illinois University, Department of Family, Consumer and Nutrition Sciences.

Board President Natalie Kenny-Marquez stated “We are so excited to have Janie at the helm, she is hard at work already with her grant management skills due to the USDA grants that IFMA recently received.” Please join me in welcoming Janie and you can contact her atjmaxwell.ifma@gmail.com.

3 Reasons Why Foodborne Illness Outbreaks Are Getting Bigger And Deadlier Than Ever

  (maybe not so odd to those of us working in community agriculture)

Major outbreaks linked to contaminated meat, produce, or other food products have now become terrifyingly commonplace.

As these numbers grow, so do the scientific and industrial advances. So why have these outbreaks continued to accelerate?
Oddly enough, these answers seem to lie in the advances themselves.

        Industrial Agriculture, Top-Notch Technology, Global Commerce

Source: Read the story here

Kairos

Recently, I had the opportunity to talk at length with a few market network leaders who are thinking deeply about potential issues for markets they expect over the next few years. It is important to note that all are doing excellent work either overseeing multiple markets or managing partnerships on behalf of markets, and that they remain hopeful about the great possibilities of the work they do. And they know everyone is doing their best to create the right programs, based on what they know about market culture.
And yet, they are thinking about difficult decisions.

What made these market leaders feel this way?
They are all receiving a great deal of support to grow one part of the customer base-namely, attracting benefit program users either by adding technology or incentives to existing markets or through adding more points of sale/outlets in underserved areas. There is no doubt that those markets and networks are grateful for that support, believe in the need to do it and are pleased that markets are seen once again as for all people (as they were before 1995), but that they also see the beginning of a few lopsided effects and unintended consequences to these efforts. Here are some:

That added support is not based on any regularly used capacity benchmarks (i.e. markets with the financial or management systems able to manage back office systems or those with significant data collection capabilities), nor on any uniform measure designed in partnership with the markets (i.e. # of vendors enrolled in FMNP or availability of SNAP-eligible goods versus sales) but primarily on geography and the willingness to participate.

  • In many cases, new markets or struggling markets are the first to raise their hand to add these programs, and yet these leaders know that accurate timing in a market’s growth cycle is essential to a successful rollout. Unfortunately, they know this through personal experience and anecdotal evidence of past failures and standout successes, and not from any comprehensive analysis of these systems. And since the level of participation in these programs must remain at a certain level, they cannot turn away those who they suspect are not ready for the added programming.
  • Since the key success indicators are often preordained and limited to increases in sales, most markets do not measure that which is more useful for their community goals, such as is developing a new trusting relationship with a community support agency, reaching the level where a significant number of the products necessary to offer a healthy family meal are regularly available or students learning about regional food production firsthand.
  • The systems are usually designed to expand into a very specific type of market; typically, one with a dozen or more producers participating, with significant F&V items available and paid staff with skills for implementing these projects. Yet, even among those that share those characteristics, other factors may be present to severely reduce the ability to successfully open or implement more than a season of this type of programming.

Secondly, assistance for incentivizing “middle-class” shopper participation and farmer participation is not available.

  • As had been said many times by smarter people than me, successful markets rely on multiple cycles of participation that best represent the community’s evolving demographics. In many cases, markets are using either a deep but limited or a wide, shallow approach to community engagement which may not create MORE shoppers or farmers, but just replace the existing with others or adds new ones at the wrong time, or asks existing farmers to anchor a number of outlets far beyond their comfort level.

Thirdly, the data that markets are gathering on those programs is not always contextualized to their system, is not shared back with analysis useful for their continued participation in these programs and in many cases, the actual data collection and entry is overwhelming those markets.

  • I’ll take this a step further; in almost no system that I have spent time listening to or working with, have I found robust data that the grassroots leaders developed themselves and then shared with their partners, or many that were able to participate deeply in the analysis. Therefore, the strategy for creating any new program is haphazard and built from the outside in rather than the way we all want it to be designed.

I’ll keep it to those points for now: So in a nutshell, they see that many of the interventions markets and their partners make – and the policies and systems built from those interventions – are often out of scale and lack credible data. And that they believe this is the market field’s responsibility to fix.

Why now?
What those leaders seem to be sensing is there is enough now enough activity and history in the farmers market field to make possible and necessary finding the appropriate tools for our work. And that using any other sector’s system of interventions without closely adapting them to our scale is no longer appropriate. That we are big enough and yet small enough to be able to decide what we need and to do so with deep deference to the resources that we are honor bound to steward and the people that we rely on for that system, the producers.

As any student of food or civic systems knows, people like Jane Jacobs, E.F. Schumacher and Wendell Berry have brilliantly offered these ideas in terms of the systems that each participated in and wrote about, such as political engagement, economic activity and resource husbandry. All three wrote about being smart about scale and about honoring local decision-making constantly and warned us of the outcomes if those things were not taken into account when working, advocating or protesting.
The ancient Greeks had a term to describe a mode of communication that truly reflects the present conditions: kairos.. Kairos can also describe a decisive moment and the right intervention for it.

Seems like we are there now, in the moment were we need to not only continue the necessary work to expand our programs to more community members, but to also simultaneously build and share the appropriate tools and interventions at the most opportune times.
Along those lines, it is time to be careful of just using “more” as a success measure or in only thinking of our community in terms of those who shop. And to expect that every market should share their particular context when designing any future interventions. And that any tool or intervention that is used has transparency with data to be shared, including any unintended consequences.

As you can imagine, this subject is just beginning, and I look forward to more conversations through email and chatting in person as I travel to winter/spring conferences.

Pawpaw: In Search of America’s Forgotten Fruit

Check out a new book about one of the old fruits, the pawpaw. I grew up in Ohio hearing about pawpaws but only seeing them in fruit butter form. Sightings of fruit was and still is rare, except at farmers markets and festivals in places like Southern Ohio. The pawpaw was once grown in 26 states and so one can hope for an expansion of the fruit’s availability down here in Louisiana.

Pawpaw fruits often occur as clusters of up to nine individual fruits. The ripe fruit is soft and thin skinned. When ripe, it is soft and yields easily to a gentle squeeze, and has a pronounced perfumed fragrance. The skin of the green fruit usually lightens in color as it ripens and often develops blackish splotches which do not affect the flavor or edibility. The yellow flesh is custard like and highly nutritious. The best fruit has a complex, tropical flavor unlike any other temperate zone fruit. At present, the primary use of pawpaws is for fresh eating out of hand. The ripe fruit is very perishable with a shelf life of 2 or 3 days, but will keep up to 3 weeks if it is refrigerated at 40° – 45° F.

Back in 2009, I even picked up a super cool postcard for that year’s festival that still hangs on my desk.

IMG_20151026_165237The festival has been going on since the late 1990s and is an equal parts camping, music and educational rural Ohio festivity.

Researchers at OSU are working to find out more about its health benefits and possible marketing potential. And now, Andy Moore has finished this lovely book , having raised money through Kickstarter. It is my evening reading this month and then I’ll be sharing it with other pals of mine who are also interested in reviving old traditions. Ask for it in bookstores near you.

25570982

Locally grown coffee

In the years since I joined the farmers market community, many things have changed about my life because of that connection. One of those changes is how I get my news and what kind of news that I now find interesting. An example of this is RFD-TV, which I often catch on a sleepy Sunday morning as I cook up items from my Saturday market. RFD-TV is full of state agricultural updates, national farm reports and even some old-timey music shows like the Porter Wagoner Show. Exciting right?

This week the California Bountiful show featured a farmers market grower from the Santa Barbara area, Jay Ruskey of Good Land Organics and the locally grown coffee beans he is selling at farmers markets. Yes, that’s right – coffee beans. This farmer has also experimented with other unusual crops like the caviar lime and the cherimoya; his never-ending enthusiasm for new trials and offering those products to his shoppers is a great example of how innovation and farmers markets are intrinsically connected.

If your market has a vendor who regularly offers new varieties or talks about his or her dreams of adding crops currently unavailable in your region, it may be worthwhile for the market organization to seek funding in partnership with that farmer and local Extension in order to get that item in full production and to promote it once available. It’s important that Extension or an agricultural advocate is involved to ensure that the production snafus that are inevitable to this type of project can be addressed. One of my favorite examples of this work was done in Toronto for their World Crops Project which I wrote about a few years back for Growing For Markets. What was so impressive were the depth of the partnerships assisting in every step of the process and that they focused on involving new citizens who had some experience as farmers in other world regions to introduce culturally appropriate products to Ontario.

Also, I always recommend that markets keep an ongoing list of crops that they’d like to see added to their market and to circulate that list every once in a while to the vendors. Who knows…you might just spark an idea…

http://www.californiabountiful.com

October Newsletter from Center for Agriculture and Food Systems (CAFS)

I am a huge fan of the Center for Agriculture and Food Systems at the Vermont Law School. This activist center has already added a great deal of thoughtful research to the field of community food and their impact continues to grow exponentially. It is my honor to be working on one of their projects, a legal toolkit for farmers markets, along with the good folks at NOFA-VT.

OCTOBER 2015

  Like us on Facebook    Follow us on Twitter    View our profile on LinkedIn

GREETINGS
As I write this, the harvest is in and the farmers markets are in their final weeks. At CAFS, we have also had a bountiful season, presenting at conferences on each coast (the University of Oregon and Harvard University), teaching a wonderful class of food and agriculture law and policy students, and continuing our project work for food and agriculture producers and entrepreneurs. We are thrilled to report the award of additional funds through the National Agriculture Library, expanding that partnership through our innovative collaboration with William Mitchell Public Health Law Center and the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at the University of Connecticut. We are also pleased to announce the expansion of our staff with one of our own graduates, Sarah Danly, who is spearheading our leading-edge use of design, technology and the law to produce relevant and powerful legal tools. These are just a few highlights of what you will read below.
I hope you enjoy the fall issue.
Eat well, be well,
Laurie Ristino
Director, Center for Agriculture and Food Systems
Banner image courtesy of Brooklyn Grange

PROJECTS & RESOURCES
USDA National Agricultural Library
Awards CAFS $728,273 Grant
In September, CAFS received a $728,273 grant from the USDA National Agricultural Library. The grant will support three new projects; the largest — the Community FoodWorks project — is a collaboration with the Public Health Law Center at William Mitchell College of Law and the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity at the University of Connecticut. The two additional projects, How to Use a Lawyer and Farmland Access Lease Assistant, will be designed to help farmers find and utilize legal resources.

STAFF SPOTLIGHT
Sarah Danly
Program Officer for Legal Design
Sarah recently earned her MELP (Master of Environmental Law and Policy) from Vermont Law School. She also holds a BA in Architectural Studies and Community Health from Tufts University, as well as a BFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, where she focused on sculpture, drawing, design, and digital skills.
   Sarah will work with students in the Food & Agriculture Clinic on designing accessible online legal tools and information, which include the animated clip, “What Does the Food and Ag Clinic Do?” Prior to coming to CAFS, Sarah conducted outreach for Next Step Living, a Boston-based home energy efficiency company, and worked at farmers markets as a vendor and assistant manager.

FACULTY SPOTLIGHT

CAFS Welcomes Practicing
Faculty Members Beth Boepple
and Amy Manzelli
Beth Boepple (right) is developing the fourth food and agriculture distance-learning course for CAFS, drawing on her rich experience practicing food and farm law. A VLS alum, Beth is a shareholder and attorney with Lambert Coffin in Portland, Maine, specializing in corporate, commercial and banking law; farm and food production law; and real-estate and land-use law.
    In addition, Beth will be co-teaching Agriculture and Food Entrepreneur Lawyering Skills with Amy Manzelli (left) in the spring. Amy currently collaborates with CAFS on two USDA-funded projects. She is a partner at BCM Environmental & Land Law, PLLC in Concord, New Hampshire, specializing in environmental, conservation, and land law.

NEWS & EVENTS
Director Laurie Ristino Presents at Harvard Law and the University of Oregon School of Law
On September 25, 2015, Ristino gave the presentation “Food, Agriculture, and Drought: Implications of Water Supply Scarcity on Food Production and Policy Solutions at the Federal, State, and Local Levels” at the Drought in the American West Symposium at the University of Oregon School of Law in Eugene. On October 3, she also gave a seminar at Harvard’s Food Law Student Leadership Summit entitled “No Food Without Nature.”
Associate Director Laurie Beyranevand Contributes to Recently Published Books
Beyranevand wrote the chapters “Breaking Down Barriers to Local Food Distribution in Urban Centers” from Urban Agriculture: Policy, Law, Strategy, and Implementation, and “Agricultural Biotechnology and NAFTA: Analyzing the Impacts of U.S. and Canadian Policies on Mexico’s Environment and Agriculture,” from NAFTA and Sustainable Development: The History, Experience, and Prospects for Reform.
People at CAFS
* Associate Director Laurie Beyranevand was interviewed October 1, 2015 on Heritage Radio Network’s Eating Matters podcast about food labels and CAFS’ food labeling site Labels Unwrapped. She was also quoted in Mother Jones‘ article, “Chipotle Says it Dropped GMOs. Now a Court Will Decide if That’s Bulls-t;” in ClimateWire‘s “Businesses learn there are tax incentives and laws to help them recycle mountains of food;” in the Valley News‘ article “Food Notes: A Modern Take on an Old-Time Product;” and in the Health Affairs Blog article “The FDA’s Determination on Artificial Trans Fat: A Long Time Coming.”
* Director Laurie Ristino was quoted in the Law360 article “9th Circ. Pesticide Ruling Holds EPA to High Standards,” commenting on the 9th Circuit Court’s decision to vacate several EPA registrations of bee-killing pesticides.

* Research Fellow Amber Leasure-Earnhardt(right) attended the Closing the Hunger Gap: Cultivating Food Justice conference in Portland, Oregon, in September. She met with food bank representatives, farmers, and advocates to discuss the role of CAFS’ gleaning research in furthering food justice.
* LLM Fellow Carrie Scrufari will be presenting her paper “Generally Recognized as Safe-Until They’re Not: Why the FDA Never Subtracts Food Additive From GRAS” at the Yale Food Systems Symposiumon October 30-31, 2015. She workshopped the paper in September at Pace Law School’s 2nd Annual Future Environmental Law Professors Workshop.
 

Farmers Market Metrics site updated

We are pleased to present an updated version of Farmers Market Coalition’s Farmers Market Metrics (FMM) website. We have streamlined and organized information about the current efforts, and will use this site to offer background information and project updates on all of the components of FMM that are underway. The final set of resources and tools will be available on a separate portal in development, expected in 2016.
Some highlights include:
Unique pages for current and past projects
Information on our project partnerships and funding sources
Examples of some of the resources being developed (currently in draft phase)
We hope you will take some time visiting and exploring our new pages. Please contact me with any questions.
Thank you for your ongoing support and enthusiasm for Farmers Market Metrics and the Indicators for Impact project.
Sara

Sara Padilla, FMC Project Manager

Joanne Clevenger: A Girl Scout with Gumption

One of the great restauranteurs of our age, and found right here in New Orleans. She speaks of her work with such love and respect, yet clearly suffers no fools. And yes, she is a supporter of local farmers and fishers with countless sightings at area farmers markets to her credit.

The Gift of Food: What to Give to Those Who Have Lost

I absolutely love this reminder of gifts of food as a source of comfort to those grieving or healing. I remember well how my pals put together a schedule of healthy food after I had surgery a few years back, as well as food being dropped off by my friends and work colleagues when family members passed in the last few years, and how much those very special gifts from all of those busy people meant to me and to my family.

I wonder if markets could assist their customers (and make some income too) by stretching this idea with “winter cold” baskets, full of greens, carrots, garlic and chicken or a “welcome to summer” baskets with flowers, fruits and light foods or by printing cards with room for a note and a list of what is being dropped off for the basket?

Source: The Gift of Food: What to Give to Those Who Have Lost | Cooking Light

Self-administered survey-New Orleans Market Match user

This is (basically) the same system that Crescent City Farmers Market (CCFM) in New Orleans has used to gather data from incentive users (incentiv-ers?) since they began doing them some years back. They call their incentive Market Match.

As one of the staff who was responsible for doing it when it began and was part of the discussion about it, I really liked it. It is on a pad that is pulled off to have the person fill out and then each slip is added to the clipboard (or put in a container) to be entered into spreadsheets at a later time. The darker grey is filled out by the market staff person after the other part is completed by the shopper. What I know is that the system was designed with both the shopper and the market staff needs in minds, which as we all know is important and yet not always done. I’d like them to be numbered chronologically so as to know that none were lost. Maybe they are numbered, I’ll check to see.

Sorry for the wrinkles- it ended up in my market bag under the citrus. I’ll get some more pics of their system-including a better version of this and maybe the other collection forms if they will allow me to continue to peek over their shoulder.

MMtracking form_CCFM

New state laws boost farm to school in Louisiana

The first is Senate Bill 184 – the “Small Purchase Threshold” bill. Up until now, any food purchase a school made larger than $30,000 was subject to a complicated bidding process, known as a “formal bid.” This made it difficult for schools to get seasonal and local foods because the process is often challenging for smaller-scale, local farmers. The passage of SB 184 increased the small purchase threshold to meet the federal standard of $150,000, enabling schools to work more closely with small-scale farmers to serve local food to Louisiana children.

The second is House Bill 761 – the “Urban Ag Incentive Zone” bill. This bill creates urban agriculture incentive areas and reduces taxes on land used for urban farming. It greatly reduces expenses associated with acquiring urban agricultural land, and in turn encourages Louisianans to grow more local food.

Source: New state laws boost farm to school in Louisiana

From WWII to Syria, How Seed Vaults Weather Wars 

But though the need for seed banks is often associated with more stereotypically environmental, even futuristic, cataclysms (climate change; disease; pesticide-resistant insects) their history is inextricably tied up with something more banal and present-day—war.

…virtually no conflict has gone by without a devastating loss of seeds, often mitigated by a heroic rescue or underscored by a tragic attempt. Afghani mujahideen destroyed Kabul’s national seed collection in 1992. (Local scientists managed to smuggle some seeds into the basement of a few city houses, but by the time they returned to check on them a decade later, looters had dumped them on the floor in order to steal the storage jars.) During the Georgian civil unrest of 1993, just before the country’s Sukhumi Seed Station was destroyed, an 83-year-old botanist named Alexey Fogel escaped into the Caucasus Mountains with its entire lemon collection. Scientist Alexis Rumaziminsi, now known as the “bean boffin of Rwanda,” protected the many varieties of beans in his research plots during 1994’s civil war and genocide. The US-led invasion of Iraq resulted in the razing of the country’s national seed bank in Abu Ghraib—not to mention the implementation of American-style seed laws, which mean that if Iraqis want to buy new seeds, they will have to pay for yearly usage licenses.

Source: From WWII to Syria, How Seed Vaults Weather Wars | Atlas Obscura