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It’s one of the hottest topics in our field right now. How do we get more local food into the schools and institutions that surround us? This isn’t anything new to The Food Project, though.
In 2006 The Food Project (TFP) began conversations with the Director of Food
and Nutrition Services (FNS) for the Boston Public Schools (BPS), Helen Mont-Ferguson, to discuss the possibility of incorporating fresh, locally grown fruits and vegetables into meals served in the BPS.
These conversations illuminated a number of barriers that currently discourage procurement of locally grown fruits, vegetables and other healthy food products by FNS. However, what also emerged in these discussions was a strong interest and enthusiasm by food service staff and leadership for such a change to food service operations in the BPS. This interest and enthusiasm for increasing the availability of fresh, locally grown fruits and vegetables for students in the BPS propelled The Food Project to research the feasibility of bringing fresh, local produce into the Boston Public Schools.
To learn more, check out the full report here:
http://www.thefoodproject.org/uploadedfiles/TheFoodProject_Farm2SchoolReport.pdf
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The Food Project is excited to announce its new consulting services.
If your organization is ready to invest in its growth and development, consider hiring The Food Project for a customized consulting session.
We can help you:
Build Youth Programs
Design and Run a Youth Conference
Bridge Diverse Communities of Youth and Adults
Design Agriculture and Food Systems Curriculum
Use Youth and Adult Volunteers in Sustainable Agriculture
Run a Healthy, Mission-Based Organization
Develop Leadership and Public Speaking Skills in Youth
Please contact us to request more information, or to arrange a free intial consultation to determine whether The Food Project’s services are right for you.
E-mail Greg Gale, Director of Training and Diversity, at ggale@thefoodproject.org.
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Anim Steel, Director of National Programs, recently spoke at the Real Food Summit at Yale University. The Real Food Summit focuses its energy on bringing local food to college and university campuses through changing the way the dining services administrations purchase their food. This meeting was the first one in the Northeast and it was sponsored by The Food Project, Yale Sustainable Food Project and Brown’s Sustainable Food Initiative.
This speech was a keynote address at the November conference.
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“Three Doors”
My main job is to talk about The Real Food Challenge, the national campaign that this conference is associated with…and I’m going to do that.
But I want to start by putting it in context…to share with you what I think the deep meaning of it and of our gathering is. [why I am so motivated] I want to build on what Josh has already done and try to situate us historically—how what we are doing fits into a long view of the past and future.
What came to mind when I thought about how to do this was a mental journey—a journey that would take us through three doors…three doors separated by time and space. Each of these three doors represents a different insight into our work.
I ‘ll admit up front that I am going to be making some links that are new for me…that are pushing the envelope of my own thoughts and maybe yours as well. I hope you will receive it in the spirit of pushing the kind of conversation and debate that Josh called for.
First door
For the first door, I am going to try to describe it in a way that will allow you to really picture it…to feel, as much as possible, like you are standing right in front of it. So feel free to close your eyes.
Imagine that you are in room. It’s about 30 x 30 feet. The floor is stone; the walls and ceiling are a mix of stone and cement and they are a little damp, although it is hard to see any of that because the room is absolutely dark…pitch black except for the light that comes in from a low arched doorway in one wall…in whose frame is silhouetted an iron gate.
If you face the doorway long enough and your eyes adjust, you can see a narrow stretch of beach and the blue and grey of the ocean beyond.
This is the Door of No Return. It is the last part of Africa you would pass through if you were a slave being led from the Elmina Fort [in modern Ghana] to a waiting ship.
I stood in front of this door last summer when I was visiting my family in Ghana. It was the second time I was there. The first time I visited it, more than 10 years ago, I remember being filled—haunted, really–with the awareness of suffering. Millions of human beings passed through that doorway on their way to either a wretched death or a brutal life in the New World.
This last time, back in July, I still felt heavy with the presence of suffering. But I had another feeling—another awareness, shaped by my experience at The Food Project. It was the recognition that the engine behind this suffering was agriculture. Or to be more specific– a particular kind of agriculture; not the agriculture you practice on your college farm or what we do at The Food Project. This is the agriculture of greed on a global scale: slaves passing through this door were headed for plantations stretching from Buenos Aires to Baltimore. where they harvested vast mono-crops of sugar for British tea, rice for the West Indies, and cotton for the textile mills right here in New England.
We know, as Josh said, that our modern food system was born in the last 60 years or so, when we get chemical pesticides and refrigerated trucks, etc. But if you want to point to the place where our modern food system was conceived, you might just point to this very spot, this door. Because in this spot, you have the purest expression of the worst values that underpin our system. It’s a value system which:
- Which holds profit above people
- Which separates food from community; and makes it a commodity
- Which treats land as just another lever in a machine to make money
I should be clear: the modern food system may also have some values which we might embrace: a premium on abundance, for instance. Human beings have worked hard to create abundance for as long as we have practiced agriculture. But there’s no denying—especially in light of today’s panel when the “bottom line” came up so frequently—that the three values I mentioned, along with their negative impacts, are core to our system.
So when we look through this Door, we are not looking out at the story of one people—the African Diaspora—we’re looking out at all of our stories…at how the world as we know it came to be. This door represents what’s we’re up against: a massive food system and global economy 500 years in the making—with all that it has given us and all that, tragically, it has taken away.
The Second Door
The second door is a wooden door outside a printer’s shop in London. It’s also a real door: at 2 George Yard. If you were standing outside of it in one morning in 1787, you would have seen 12 men, mostly Quakers, go inside for a meeting. That meeting was the beginning of the British Anti-Slavery Society, and the very first citizen’s campaign of its kind. In about 40 years this movement managed to do what would have been unthinkable to most people at the time: abolish slavery in all of the British Empire.
I won’t say much more about it, because there’s an excellent book on the subject that I recommend to everyone: Bury the Chains: Prophets and Rebels in the Fight to Free an Empires Slaves by Adam Hochshild. [One of the many great things about it is that it tells the story not just from the point of view of British abolitionists but also of the slaves themselves who fought for their own freedom.]So just two points:
First: In light of CIW presentation tomorrow, it is interesting to note that the first human rights movement in history was also a food campaign (with the boycott of slave-produced sugar). And, as I imagine we will hear more about tomorrow, the current food movement is also a human rights campaign.
Second: There is nothing purely new. This anti-slavery campaign set the model for what we are attempting to do. All of the techniques of modern campaigns (petitions, book tours, boycotts, etc) were invented here. We all drink from wells we didn’t dig and walk on roads that others have paved. This summit itself is built on the work that many other people and organizations, such as Equal Exchange and Slow Food, have done.
This second door represents [something that could be cliché if it weren’t so demonstrably true:] [the incredible, hopeful, and demonstrable truth] the possibility that a small group of committed people can, in fact, change the world.
The Third Door
The third door is the one that all of us passed through this evening to come into this room. This door represents the possibility that this very group of people here in this room can, in fact, change the world.
How can we say that?
• We can start with our spending power—or the spending power of the institutions that we represent. Add up all of the food budgets at our schools, then add in the budgets of all the other colleges and universities in the country. That’s over $4 billion. What if we could direct all of that toward small, local farmers, to organic food, to fairly traded products and humanely raised meat?
• Let’s answer the question by looking at just one of the thousand+ plus food items a school has to purchase: coffee. [Something very few of you consume, but still…] There are 25 million coffee farmers in the world, most in Latin America, Asia, and Africa, mostly poor, small scale farmers. If 25 million coffee producers received a fair enough price for their goods that they could afford to send their children to school…or build clinics in their towns.
• So there’s lots of ways to think about potential. I’ll name just one more: 17 million people are enrolled in higher education in the U.S. What if all of those people–future parents, doctors, teachers, CEOs, Navy officers, filmmakers, voters—had the chance to work on a college farm? Or simply graduated knowing that eating is an agricultural act..that their food choices matter….to farmers, to the climate, to the soil?
When you think about these possibilities, it’s hard NOT to come to the conclusion that students are uniquely positioned to affect change—both in terms of dollars and in terms of the consciousness of the nation.
So there’s not much question about potential. The real question is, how do we actually live up to that potential. How do we go from the incredible, pioneering work that you all are doing to large-scale change? Exactly how is it that we can become more than the sum of our parts? What will it take?
That’s the question behind the creation of Real Food Challenge. What will it take?
We’ve mentioned many things already: gatherings like this, sharing resources and strategies, debate. So I won’t go into those. But I will mention a couple other things.
Systems thinking and clear goals…
1. System-thinking. If we take a 30,000 foot view of college food—looking at all the cafeterias—we can see that students are the only group that isn’t organized at a systems level. Everyone else is. The food service companies certainly are: Sodexho, Aramark, Bon Appetit and anyone else that supplies food to campuses think about it as one market or industry. College presidents and administrators regularly talk to their peers and compare themselves to other institutions. Dining services directors belong to a trade association. [I used to work in college admissions…you might be surprised to learn how much we collaborated with other schools] Students—for understandable reasons—tend to focus just on their campus, their particular issue, and their relatively short time frame. But if students really want their interests represented, we’ve got to develop a systems consciousness. And I think that’s starting with this gathering.
2. Clear Goals: Along with that, I submit to you that it will take clearer goals—in specific, a well-articulated collective goal. To make change over the long term, it helps to have a target. To keep our eyes on the prize, we’ve actually got to know what the prize is. I think the people at the Campus Climate Challenge have already figured this out. Let me offer one way we can think about that:
Take the $4 billion system we are a part of. In a given time period, say 10 years, how much of that $4 billion do you think we could shift away from the mainstream system toward local, organic, fair? Towards real food? 10 percent? 20 percent? 25? 25% would be $1 billion. I don’t know myself, but that is one of the things we need to figure out. For the time being, in the grant proposals we are writing, we are choosing to describe our 10 year goal as 20 percent of the total budget. Why 20 percent? There’s a number of reasons, but one is that 20 percent represents a point at which you have gotten beyond the early adopters (in marketing terms)…you need to get to 20 percent if you are hoping to ever get to a tipping point.
So far this is conversation has been among a group of people who have happened to see each other often at conferences and other gatherings. In April, we formed a Design Team. That group includes: The Food Project, CSSC, Slow Food, CFSC, ISU, USFT. Brown, Yale. John Turenne. UNH. Many people are here and you should know who they are so that you can ask questions. [Please raise your hands]
I’ve told you where the conversation started, but probably the most important thing I should say is that it shouldn’t end there. That’s not enough. Because if it is to succeed, it has to be co-created by all of us. There is no other way. In the Northeast, we have a special opportunity to lead the way. There is no other region besides California that is meeting in this way.
Last thing I was to say about Real Food Challenge is about meaning of words “real food.” It was chosen for a reason. There is a reason that it’s not called the Local Food Challenge or the Fair Food Challenge or even the Slow Food Challenge. Real Food, like the real food challenge itself, is not meant to replace all the efforts that already exist. It’s meant to provide them—us—a common ground for dialogue and collective action.
To conclude, I want to re-visit something I said earlier and close the loop. I claimed the we here in this room have the potential to change the world. To make plain the logic behind this: students are uniquely positioned to affect the food system, which itself affects so much in this world. I see this campaign as part of a generational battle to take the best of what we’ve inherited and to change the worst.
Through our efforts, I believe we are creating a world which balances:
It’s a world that balances:
-profit and people
-local and global
-progress and tradition.
What’s more, we will foster a social culture that reflects our agriculture:
-where diversity is strength
-where young and old work together
-where both interdependence and self-reliance are valued
At heart, these are the things we stand for. It’s helpful to know that while our movement is young, its roots are old—they stem from the deepest truths of nature and the best aspects of human nature.
I’ve talked a lot about doors. It’s my belief that if we take up the challenge in front of us, and are creative and committed enough in working together…Someday, 10 years from now…20 years, perhaps 50 or even 500 years from now, other people will point to that door and say that what those people did—then and there—what they did mattered.
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Earlier this year TFP sent an electronic survey to 150 organizations that work with youth to build local food systems in the US, Canada and Puerto Rico. We wanted to see who was out there, what they were doing, what motivated them, what were their biggest strengths and challenges, and what type of impact they were having both individually and collectively. In short, we wanted to find out what the field looked like and how much it has grown in the 17 years since Ward Cheney came up with the idea to bring urban and suburban youth together on a piece of land to grow food for hungry people.
Forty organizations responded to our inquiry. From the data they supplied, we have created a report that is freely available entitled State of the Field: Youth in Sustainable Food Systems 2007 (PDF).
Findings show that organizations are largely focused on urban areas, their strengths lie in their programs, and their biggest challenges lie in management, strategic planning and staff retention. The Food Project has been an inspiration to many of them over the years, and connections with us and other organizations within the field continue to be important. As individual organizations each is a positive force of change in their communities. Across the field the impact is even more impressive. If the trends observed in this survey sample are applied to the 150 organizations in the field of youth in sustainable food systems in North America that were identified for this study, we would expect to see the following impact on youth and the food system:
• Over 380,000 people interacting with youth in sustainable agriculture organizations
• 230,000 individuals experiencing garden and farm work, most of it in urban areas
• 38,000 participants in nutrition education programs
• 14,500 youth and young adults working with sustainable food systems
• 258,000 customers and hunger relief clients receiving produce
• 300 acres in production
• 1,150 employees
• $21.7 million in program budgets
We hope that this report can be used by used by organizations and funders alike to strengthen connections within the field, set priorities, gain support for non-programmatic components and gain legitimacy for a field that until now has been largely unrecognized. There is a lot of great work happening out there!
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A few days ago there was an article in Boston Globe about local eating in Roxbury that mentions The Food Project. Well worth the short read!
Pitchfork School Garden Design came to visit our farms in Lincoln and Dorchester and wrote a couple blogs about their experiences, complete with pictures. You can find them here and here.
Finally, Joe over at Food in Boston has a writeup of last weeks local food forum here in Boston.
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The 2nd Annual Tour De Farms is August 11th! There may be no better way to spend a warm August Saturday than on a bike visiting local farms and sampling their freshest tomatoes, pesto and other farm fresh delights. The Food Project West Cottage urban farm is just one of many stops along the ride.
Pre-registration is required. For more information about the Tour de Farm and to pre-register, contact Mark Smith at Farm Aid, 617-354-2922, or via email to mark@farmaid.org
Also check out the Food in Boston Tour de Farms blog post for more information.
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Adam Reeve is an Urban Education & Outreach Intern.
Last Monday the Farmer’s Market and Urban Education and Outreach interns went to the state house. The purpose to our visit was to discuss several bills that tie in closely with the mission of The Food Project with our representatives. We spent the morning in a business building nearby, rehearsing what to say to the congressmen. Mid-morning, we set off for the statehouse and quickly started on a tour of the building. Maureen Ferris, who is familiar with the Food Project and delighted in seeing us, gave the tour. Over the course of the tour we learned all sorts of facts about the state house, saw members of the senate in action, and were given some tips if we ever wanted to get into politics.
After breaking for a quick lunch, we set off in twos and threes to meet our representatives. Since many of our representatives were busy at the moment, most of us met with their aids instead. These aids were, Maureen had told us, the people who really get the work done around the state house—although their jobs are far from glamorous, without them nothing would ever happen. We talked with the representatives and their aids about two bills that are passing through the house; both involving Food Policy Councils. A Food Policy Council (FPC) is a forum in which people from all across the food system can come together to discuss how to make improvements to the food system. One of these bills hopes to create statewide FPC, which would promote local and organic produce, farmer’s markets, and healthy eating for everyone. This is similar to a bill the Connecticut state legislature passed 10 years ago. The second bill that we were advocating for hopes to create a similar FPC, but focused specifically upon food in the public schools. We pointed to several statistics about rising obesity and diabetes in Massachusetts’s (and America’s) youth as a clear sign for a change in school food.
Some facts we used include:
* Nearly 1/3 of children in MA are obese.
* Heart disease is the underlying cause of death in about 1/3 of Americans.
* 55% of adults from MA are overweight.
These facts created a strong statistical argument, and coupled with the principles guiding The Food Project I think that we left a powerful impression on the representatives. Most of them were very enthusiastic about the bill, and even more interested in The Food Project.
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Hi! I’m Addie, an Urban Education and Outreach Intern. Here in Roxbury we’re all very excited that today kicked of the first day of our 3rd annual Eat In, Act Out week. While the main event of the week is our 7th annual Day of Action, this whole week is full of events we’d love for you to check out!
In case you’ve never heard of Eat In, Act Out week or the Day of Action, I’ll let you in on the details. The BLAST interns started the Day of Action 7 years ago. They decided that the best way to “Act Out” about local food was to take it to the streets… and bring carrots with them. So for the last 7 years we’ve been heading to Copley Square on the first Wednesday of August to hand out carrots and talk to people about eating local. We also have taste-testing and a display of what grows in Boston.
3 years ago the day went national and became a whole week, Eat In, Act Out week. Now every year organizations around the country host their own events encouraging people from their community to go loco for local. San Diego Food Not Lawns is hosting a week of workshops, an edible bike tour, a tomato test at their city hall and a community dinner. Evergreen Community Gardens in Seattle is having a celebration of local food and art. Growing Green Youth in Buffalo is hosting a barbeque complete with skits on local food and youth-led tours. These are just a few of the many events that members of our national community are hosting. To see all the events check out this handy map with all the details.
That brings us up to this year, our first year hosting the week as Urban Education and Outreach interns (a merger between BLAST and Urban Education Internships). This year not only will we return to Copley Square but we will also be working with North Shore interns to have Lynn’s first ever Day of Action. Whether in Boston or Lynn we are all pumped to talk with members of community and spread the word about local food. Other events we are hosting include one time guerilla farmer’s markets at Boston Medical Center and the Bowdoin and Geneva neighborhood in Dorchester as well as a potluck dinner on our Urban Learning Farm.
If you can’t make it to any events, or even if you can, you can always be a part of the week by Eating In. Here at The Food Project we’re keeping logs and having a competition to see who can eat the most local food. We encourage everyone to have their own contest, between your family, your friends, your co-workers or anyone else who’s interested. In addition we encourage you to post a pledge here as a comment saying how much you can spend on local food this August. Last year, with the help of multiple organizations, farmers markets and of course lots of individuals, we recorded a total of $24,070 pledged to be spent on local food in August. It doesn’t have to be enough, all we ask for is some commitment to eating local. With your help maybe we can raise even more this year!
Even if you just buy one local apple, you’re eating in. Even if you just tell one friend, you’re acting out. So please this week, this month, this year find every opportunity to Eat In and Act Out.
And remember to check out the map for events near you.
Have great day!
Addie
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The Farm Bill is a major US act that is reauthorized every five years. The 2002 farm bill is set to expire in September of 2007 and so Congress is currently debating the new 2007 Farm Bill.
This huge piece of legislation determines what we eat, who grows it, how they grow it, and even how much we pay for the food we eat. The Farm Bill deals with all aspects of food and farming policies, from food assistance programs to conversation programs that support farmers that practice sustainable agriculture. More importantly, there are programs within the Farm Bill that directly impact the work of The Food Project.
That’s why action by YOU is needed urgently! The Community Food Project Competitive Grants Program (which has supported the work of The Food Project in the past) may lose its funding in the 2007 Farm Bill. Please read the action alert below for more information and call your representatives today! If you need more information about the Farm Bill, visit the Community Food Security Coalition website.
Community Food Projects could be Zeroed Out… Action Needed!
Support Blumenauer Amendment for REAL Funding for CFP
Begun in 1996, the Community Food Projects Competitive Grant Program (CFP), has been incredibly successful at empowering low-income communities to identify problems related to food security and take action to permanently solve them with a small investment from the federal government. The administrators of the CFP program highlight it as one of USDA’s most effective local initiatives supporting farmers and consumers.
Community Food Projects is ZEROED OUT!
In the past, the program has received $5 million annually in mandatory or REAL funding, that doesn’t need to be fought for each year. However, WE NEED YOUR HELP, because the House Agriculture Committee has not included any REAL money for CFP in the Farm Bill which will be voted on TOMORROW. While the House Agriculture Committee increased funds for CFP to $30 million, the money is not mandatory, meaning that it’s possible this vital program gets nothing at all when it comes time to dole out the money each year. There is no money in the appropriations bill for FY ‘08, so if the Farm bill doesn’t include mandatory money, there could be no money for CFP in 2008.
Please help us save this popular and vital program.
Call your Representative RIGHT NOW!
With the House of Representatives voting on the Farm Bill TOMORROW, it’s important that all Representatives recognize the importance of CFP and the need to to fund it. Please call your Representative and ask his/her office to support the Blumenauer amendment for MANDATORY funding for CFP. This detail is important because this may be one of several amendments offered by Blumenauer. If you don’t know who your Representative is or need to find their number, call the Capitol Switchboard at 202-224-3121.
These quick phone calls will take less than 10 minutes of your time, but could make a huge impact on whether this program continues.
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(Click on the picture above for a larger version)
The result of an activity during the youth summit at Kellogg’s Food and Society Conference, this wheel or “map” is a representation of the food movement. Using post-its, participants could show where they fit into the food movement: how they personally connected to the vision of a food system which nourishes the earth, communities, and people–both producers AND consumers.
If you would like a copy of the “wheel,” contact Rowan Dunlap at rdunlap@thefoodproject.org.




