Blog Archives

New Documentary Highlights Work by Farm Advocates

Farm Aid has produced a new documentary called  Homeplace Under Fire which celebrates over 30 years of work by Farm Advocates. A Farm Advocate, as defined by Farm Aid, is someone who works one-on-one with individual farmers to help them navigate the complex world of farm lending, state and federal regulations, contracts, and government programs.  This enables farmers to stay on their own land and have sustainable success in their business. Farm Advocates often additionally uncover biases, injustices, unflawed servicing, or identify opportunities for legal action at a broad systems level. The film identifies and recognizes individuals who are advocates and their work – many Farm Advocates are now in their 80s.

The trailer can be viewed here.

Purdue Extension Helps Local Schools Connect With Local Farmers

The Purdue Extension program in West Layfayette, Indiana is now offering a training to local educators and community members on how to provide high school and elementary students with healthy meals and nutrition education by connecting schools to area farmers. The program is offered through a partnership between Extension and the Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems and the U.S. Department of agriculture’s Sustainable Agriculture and Research Education (SARE) program.

 

It is a Farm-To-School-Professional Development initiative to teach participants how to locally source more menu items for school food service operations as well as incorporating good eating habits into general education curriculum.  Each of the participating school districts who apply are required to establish action committees consisting of 6-10 members – who may be from school leadership or various actors in the local food system.  All schools, both public and private, K-12 are eligible to apply, and participation is free.

Find the application here: https://www.purdue.edu/dffs/localfood/purdue-resources/f2straining/

 

Our Farms, Our Future Conference: The Next 30 Years of Sustainable Agriculture

Save the date for next year’s Our Farms, Our Future Conference:
April 3-5, 2018
Hyatt Regency at the Arch
Downtown St. Louis, Missouri

The Our Farms, Our Future conference, hosted by SARE (Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education) and NCAT/ATTRA (National Center for Appropriate Technology) will bring together the nation’s diverse agricultural community: farmers and ranchers, agricultural professionals, agribusiness, students, researchers, scientists, agency representatives, and nonprofit leaders. Every 10 years SARE hosts a conference to look at the progress of sustainability in agriculture, and to understand our trajectory for the future. The conference will feature:

  • Dynamic keynote speakers
  • Engaging panel sessions where you will hear from new and established farmers and ranchers
  • Farm tours
  • Project posters by SARE grant recipients
  • Breakout sessions on topics such as cover crops, soil health, grazing for beef and dairy, urban agriculture, success stories in farming and ranching, and water challenges
  • A pre-conference session led by NCAT/ATTRA for military veterans featuring previous Armed to Farm program participants

SARE’s mission is to advance innovations that improve profitability, stewardship and quality of life by investing in groundbreaking research and education.

SARE’s vision is an enduring American agriculture of the highest quality. This agriculture is profitable, protects the nation’s land and water and is a force for a rewarding way of life for farmers and ranchers whose quality products and operations sustain their communities and society.

Learn more about SARE here.

U.S. Food Waste Policy Finder Released

The Food Law and Policy Clinic of Harvard Law School released a great new tool yesterday to help planners, policymakers and community members review and evaluate policies related to food waste. Created in partnership with ReFED, the U.S. Food Waste Policy Finder is an interactive tool for exploring federal and state policies that affect food waste reduction and diversion. It provides a comprehensive database of laws surrounding food waste and contains searchable maps that allow users to explore state-level laws around date labeling, tax incentives and liability protection for food donation, feeding food scraps to animals, and organic waste bans and waste recycling laws.

 

View the database here.

New Massachusetts SNAP Program Refunds Local Fruit And Veggie Purchases

A new state program in Massachusetts encourages those with limited incomes to eat more local produce through a financial incentive. SNAP or food stamp recipients can now participate in a healthy incentive program where the amount of purchases made at farmer’s markets, mobile market, farm stand, or community supported agriculture program is deposited back into their food account. A purchase of $4 automatically results in $4 being deposited back into their account. By incentivizing purchases at local farms, the money stays within local economies.  Although there are dollar limits according to family size, which typically ranges from $40-$80 per month.

Hear the story here.

Ohio Smart Agriculture Multi-Year Project Launched

Solutions From The Land, a national collaboration led by forestry and conservation leaders, has teamed up with Ohio State University’s Initiative for Food and Agricultural Transformation (InFACT) and other partners to coordinate a 3-5 year project for Ohio farmers. The project aims to assist farmers throughout the state in adapting to the changing climate through improving the resiliency of their farms in addition to increasing their capacity to support local communities through producing nutritious foods. The initiative was facilitated by the establishment of strategic partnerships among various stakeholder groups within the food system whose focus areas include food policy, water quality, and sustainable agriculture projects.

With the initiative launching this week, the Steering Committee will hold its inaugural meeting and review the goals, objectives, expected outcomes, timeline, and plan of work for the project.

Learn more about this initiative here.

 

 

Annotated Bibliography on Structural Racism Present in the U.S. Food System: Fourth Edition

The Michigan State University Center for Regional Food Systems (CRFS) recently updated its comprehensive list with an additional 55 scholarly citations on structural racism within the United States food system.

 

The CRFS aims to engage people, especially those working in local and regional food systems space who are white, to understand the underlying inequities and disparities in the food system, which are symptoms of greater issues embedded within food systems structures.

 

It can be viewed here.

Healthy Food Financing Initiative for Dona Ana County Proposed to Las Cruces City Council

On Monday March 27th the Las Cruces City Council featured a presentation on the Healthy Food Financing Initiative in Dona Ana County and proposed for the creation of  a Healthy Food Financing Initiative in Dona Ana County.

 

A Healthy Food Financing Initiative would provide loans, grants, and technical assistance to support the investment and establishment of new food businesses in low to moderate income communities who have low access to nutritious affordable food. By improving access to healthful foods, public health improves, and as a result can spur economic growth and employment. To learn more about this proposal, click here. To learn more about the Healthy Food Financing Initiative, click here.

Harvard Law School and Vermont Law School Release Blueprint For a National Food Strategy

The Blueprint for a National Food Strategy is a collaborative project that calls for a national food strategy in the United States to strengthen and support our current and future food system needs. This project comes out of a collaboration between The Food Law and Policy Clinic of Harvard Law School and Vermont Law School‘s Center for Agriculture and Food Systems (CAFS).

Read the report here:

http://foodstrategyblueprint.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/Food-Strategy-Blueprint.pdf

Release of Don’t Waste, Donate: Enhancing Food Donations Through Federal Policy

The report, written in collaboration with our colleagues at NRDC (Natural Resources Defense Council), presents actions the federal government should take to better align federal laws and policies with the goal of increasing the donation of safe surplus food. Don’t Waste, Donate offers 16 actionable recommendations spanning five key areas of federal policy that can increase the amount of safe, wholesome food donated to those in need, along with an appendix targeting specific recommendations directly to Congress, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Read the report here: Dont-Waste-Donate_-March-2017