Jurisdiction Name: | Missoula County |
State/Province: | MT |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | Municipality/County |
Population: | 109,299 |
Population Range: | 50,000 to 249,999 |
Policy Links: | Web – PDF |
Policy type: | resolution |
Year: | 2005 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections |
Keywords: | access, affordability, affordable, agriculture, community food and agriculture coalition, food access, food security, healthy, healthy food, land use, local, local food, local food system, multi-stakeholder, resolution, sustainability, sustainable agriculture |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Board of Missoula County Commissioners |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | n/a |
Support Entity(s): | Missoula City Council |
Funding Amount: | not available |
Funding Sources: | not available |
Policy Outcome(s): | established a multi-stakeholder Community Food and Agriculture Coalition that addresses community needs related to food and agriculture in a comprehensive, systemic, and creative way |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 – Link 2 |
Blog Archives
Cabarrus County Central Area Plan
Jurisdiction Name: | Cabarrus County |
State/Province: | NC |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | County |
Population: | 184,498 |
Population Range: | 50,000 to 249,999 |
Policy Links: | Web – PDF |
Policy type: | plan |
Year: | 2008 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections, community food production |
Keywords: | agricultural viability, agriculture, farmland, farmland protection, food production, land use, plan, production, rural, rural agriculture, soil |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | Planning and Development |
Support Entity(s): | LandDesign Consultants |
Funding Amount: | not applicable |
Funding Sources: | not applicable |
Policy Outcome(s): | plan incorporated agriculture in one of its goals and 2 of its sub-goals; plan addressed the protection of agricultural land; the County entered into an intergovernmental agreement with the City of Concord not to extend the utilities into the NE part of the county making it more difficult to develop the agriculture area |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 |
Trust Fund Supporting Local Food Economy, Motion
Jurisdiction Name: | Cabarrus County |
State/Province: | NC |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | County |
Population: | 184,498 |
Population Range: | 50,000 to 249,999 |
Policy Links: | |
Policy type: | motion |
Year: | 2009 |
GFC Topic: | community food production |
Keywords: | agricultural land, conservation, conservation easements, easement, economy, fund, land value, local, local food, local food economy, present-use value system, property tax, public funds, tax, trust fund |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | Cabarrus County Tax Administration, Finance Department |
Support Entity(s): | n/a |
Funding Amount: | unknown |
Funding Sources: | Cabarrus County (deferred taxes on property removed from the present-use value system) |
Policy Outcome(s): | Motion established a trust fund to support the local food economy; when property leaves the North Carolina agriculture present-use value system, the payment of deferred taxes on the property is placed in a special account that is dedicated to funding sustainable agriculture-related projects, instead of going into the general fund. |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 – Link 2 – Link 3 |
Cabarrus County Local Food Purchasing Policy
Jurisdiction Name: | Cabarrus County |
State/Province: | NC |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | County |
Population: | 184,498 |
Population Range: | 50,000 to 249,999 |
Policy Links: | Web – PDF |
Policy type: | standards |
Year: | 2010 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections |
Keywords: | access, economy, food access, food economy, food procurement, food production, food purchasing, healthy food, local, local food, local food economy, local food production, local food purchasing policy, procurement, production, purchasing, resolution |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | Planning and Development |
Support Entity(s): | n/a |
Funding Amount: | not applicable |
Funding Sources: | not applicable |
Policy Outcome(s): | established a local food purchasing policy; Cabarrus County Government Employees shall locally source at least 10% of all food served at county catered events and small department-sponsored meetings from food producers within North Carolina; connected to the NC 10% Farm to Table campaign |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 |
Food Policy Council Establishment Resolution
Jurisdiction Name: | Cabarrus County |
State/Province: | NC |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | County |
Population: | 184,498 |
Population Range: | 50,000 to 249,999 |
Policy Links: | Web – PDF |
Policy type: | resolution |
Year: | 2010 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections |
Keywords: | agriculture, buy local, community garden, economic development, food policy council, food system, health, kannapolis demonstration garden, local, local food, locally grown marketing campaign, marketing, public funds, sustainability, sustainable |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Cabarrus County Board of Commissioners |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | n/a |
Support Entity(s): | n/a |
Funding Amount: | $7,000/yr |
Funding Sources: | Cabarrus County |
Policy Outcome(s): | resolution established the Cabarrus County Food Policy County; the Food Policy Council developed as an outcome of the Central Area planning process; led and funded the creation of the Locally Grown Marketing Campaign – http://www.cabarrusfpc.org/eat-local/locally-grown-campaign/; spearheaded the Kannapolis Demonstration Garden project – http://www.cabarrusfpc.org/local-food-projects/community-gardens/ |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 – Link 2 |
Local Food Purchasing Policy, Resolution No. 496-a
Jurisdiction Name: | Albany County |
State/Province: | NY |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | County |
Population: | 97,856 |
Population Range: | 50,000 to 249,999 |
Policy Links: | |
Policy type: | resolution |
Year: | 2009 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections |
Keywords: | economic viability, food procurement, food production, food purchasing, healthy, healthy food, local, local food, local food production, local food purchasing policy, procurement, production, purchasing, regional diet, resolution |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Albany County Legislature |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | Albany County Purchasing Agent, Commissioner of Agriculture and Markets |
Support Entity(s): | n/a |
Funding Amount: | not available |
Funding Sources: | not available |
Policy Outcome(s): | resolution tasked the Albany County Purchasing Agent to purchase local food products for Albany County Residential Healthcare Facilities and the Albany County Correctional Facility |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 |
Food Policy Coordinator for the City of New York and City Agency Food Standards, Executive Order No. 122 of 2008
Jurisdiction Name: | New York |
State/Province: | NY |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | Municipality |
Population: | 8,175,133 |
Population Range: | 1 million or more |
Policy Links: | |
Policy type: | executive order |
Year: | 2008 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections, community food production, community food security |
Keywords: | access, advisory board, advisory group, city agency food standards, food access, food assistance, food policy coordinator, food policy task force, food procurement, food standards, food support programs, healthy, healthy food, local, local food, local food procurement, procurement, staffing, standards, sustainability, task force |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Mayor of the City of New York |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | New York City Office of the Mayor, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York City Coordinator, all New York City agencies |
Support Entity(s): | New York City Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services, New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, New York City Department of Education, New York City Human Resources Administration, New York City Office of the City Council Speaker, Council on the Environment of New York City |
Funding Amount: | not available |
Funding Sources: | not available |
Policy Outcome(s): | established the Food Policy Coordinator position within the Office of the Mayor; established requirements and responsibilities of the Food Policy Coordinator; established the New York City Food Standards; mandated all New York City agencies to follow the standards for food purchased, prepared and/or served by the agency and/or agency contractors; NYC Food Standards include Meals/Snacks Purchased and Served (enacted September 2008; established sustainability recommendations in addition to other requirements); Beverage Vending Machines (enacted May 2009); Food Vending Machines (enacted December 2011); Meetings & Events (enacted March 2013); and Commissaries (enacted March 2013) |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 |
FoodWorks: A Vision to Improve NYC
Jurisdiction Name: | New York |
State/Province: | NY |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | Municipality |
Population: | 8,175,133 |
Population Range: | 1 million or more |
Policy Links: | |
Policy type: | plan |
Year: | 2010 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections, community food production, community food security |
Keywords: | SNAP, WIC, access, agricultural production, agriculture, compost, composting, consumption, distribution, economic viability, environmental sustainability, farm, farmer, food access, food consumption, food distribution, food processing, food production, food transport, food work, hunger, local, local food, local food access, obesity, post-consumption, processing, produce market, production, regional, regional agriculture, regional farmers, regional farms, rural, rural agriculture, sustainability, transport, urban, urban agriculture |
Adopting Government Department(s): | New York City Council |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | New York City Council Speaker Christine C. Quinn |
Support Entity(s): | Baum Forum, New York City Coalition Against Hunger, The New School, Earth Institute at Columbia University, FGE Food & Nutrition Team, New York State Department of Agriculture and Markets, Karp Resources, Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture |
Funding Amount: | not available |
Funding Sources: | not available |
Policy Outcome(s): | Plan proposed a series of initiatives and policy changes at each phase of New York City |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 |
PlaNYC: A Greener, Greater New York, 2011 Update
Jurisdiction Name: | New York |
State/Province: | NY |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | Municipality |
Population: | 8,175,133 |
Population Range: | 1 million or more |
Policy Links: | |
Policy type: | plan |
Year: | 2011 |
GFC Topic: | community food connections, community food production, community food security |
Keywords: | access, community garden, distribution, farm, farmers market, farmers market expansion at community garden sites, farming, food access, food distribution, food retail, food transport, food waste, food waste reduction, healthy food, healthy food access, healthy food retail, plan update, retail, school, school garden, school gardens, sustainability, sustainability plan, sustainable farming techniques, transport, waste, watershed agricultural council |
Adopting Government Department(s): | New York City Council |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | New York City Mayor's Office of Long-Term Planning And Sustainability, New York City Mayor's Office of Recovery and Resiliency |
Support Entity(s): | n/a |
Funding Amount: | not available |
Funding Sources: | not available |
Policy Outcome(s): | Published pursuant to Local Law 17 of 2008; established food as one of several cross-cutting topics; food policy initiatives are integrated throughout the plan: housing and neighborhoods, parks and public space, brownfields, water supply, transportation, and solid waste; plan established goals and strategies related to healthy food access, healthy food retail, farmers market expansion at community garden sites, school gardens, Watershed Agricultural Council, sustainable farming techniques, food distribution and transport, food waste reduction for food-related businesses. |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 |
Regional Transfer of Development Rights, Ordinance No. 124285
Jurisdiction Name: | Seattle |
State/Province: | WA |
Country: | United States |
Type of Government: | Municipality/County |
Population: | 634,535 |
Population Range: | 250,000 to 999,999 |
Policy Links: | Web – PDF |
Policy type: | ordinance |
Year: | 2013 |
GFC Topic: | community food production |
Keywords: | TDR, agricultural land, agriculture, farmland, farmland protection, interlocal agreement, landscape conservation and local infrastructure conservation program, program, region, regional, rural, rural agriculture, transfer of development rights, urban, zoning |
Adopting Government Department(s): | Seattle City Council, Metropolitan King County Council |
Lead Implementing Entity(s): | Seattle Planning and Development, Central Budget Office, Seattle Parks and Recreation, Seattle Department of Transportation |
Support Entity(s): | n/a |
Funding Amount: | see http://clerk.seattle.gov/~public/fnote/117832.pdf |
Funding Sources: | see http://clerk.seattle.gov/~public/fnote/117832.pdf |
Policy Outcome(s): | An agreement between the City of Seattle and King County authorized incorporated areas to receive development rights transferred from rural and resource unincorporated areas; the agreement will protect up to 25,000 acres of farm and forest land by transferring development rights into the City of Seattle; program steers development growth away from rural and resource lands into King County |
Additional Resources and Information: | Link 1 – Link 2 – Link 3 |