Showing posts with label Agriculture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Agriculture. Show all posts

Friday, 30 September 2011

The Health of the Nation: New Article on Regional Foodsheds


After recently attending a Food Empowerment conference at Rutgers in Newark, I was left to consider the necessity of  cities to secure sustainable and resilient foodsheds and the types of policies that would go hand in hand with supporting these structures.  In researching ideas I came across a new 2011 law review article from the Fordham Environmental Law Review: Regional Foodsheds: Are Our Local Zoning and Land Use Regulations Healthy?  The article explains some of the reasons why its so important to focus on agriculture as a solution to our recent environmental, health and social equity issues and also inventories some local communities efforts (within the USA) and the policies they are experimenting with to create and sustain local foodsheds.

The most crucial point the article makes, and one which policy makers, activists and local communities should take note of, if they want to create an inclusive, broad reaching and sustainable foodsystem, is the idea that planning for regional foodsheds should be a collaborative process: “Regional foodshed planning must be comprehensive, and it should approach food not just [as] a commodity but as an infrastructural system. . . that needs to be managed and considered in all urban and regional planning efforts.”
Currently, in most situations, food is viewed exclusively as a commodity.  This understanding of food is as unsustainable and unhealthy as it is  incorrect, and we should be as concerned about the present dysfunctional state of our food supply system as we are with other forms of our crumbling infrastructure - roads and foreign-oil dependence.  Consider our current dependent on foreign oil and how stressful the situation has become, now imagine being dependent upon foreign food.  We would soon find ourselves in the situation faced by the majority of the global south, where crops are grown for export and the farmers growing these crops cannot afford to buy imported staple crops to feed themselves.  It is past time to consider how we can improve our current food system structure, and our relationship with food itself.
The article begins by providing an overview of local and regional foodsheds, reviewing not only the environmental and public health benefits, but also highlighting the economic benefits:
In 2009, U.S. households spent more than $526 billion on food produced outside of the home, indicating a significant economic market for locally grown and processed food. Local sourcing can supply a significant amount of food. A recent Michigan State University study posits that by converting vacant urban land to a host of urban agriculture related…, Detroit residents could be supplied with 76% of their vegetables and more than 40% of their fruits… Strong regional food markets economically support labor-intensive small and medium sized farms, which have been overtaken in the past several decades by mechanized, large-scale industrial agricultural operations. Local economies are also reinforced as the foodshed movement spurs the need for local food processing facilities and agri-businesses providing supplies, equipment and services… In addition to job creation and economic development, regional food markets reduce transportation costs and provide some insulation from volatility in the global food market. Furthermore, regional markets for production and processing can decrease costs for healthy foods, which can in turn produce economic benefits by preventing health care costs from diseases associated with poor diet and obesity.
Following this overview, the authors go on to detail strategies that local governments might attempt: creating food policy councils/task forces and incorporating food policies into their comprehensive planning.
Some local comprehensive plans contain sections…that touch on regional food policies, such as agriculture, sustainability, or economic development elements. For example, in Marin County, CA the plan supports “the production and marketing of healthy, fresh, locally grown food.”
The article also delves into a number of other policies being tried across the country, including policies that many larger cities (including NYC) have begun to explore: employing the purchasing power of local governments (and also large institutions):
Procurement policies that favor locally grown foods can help establish a market to support regional food production. In Cleveland, for example, an ordinance was passed in 2010 that requires the commissioner of purchases and supplies and each contracting department to develop a list of local food producers and businesses and to endeavor to maximize purchases from these sources. It also favors contract bidders that are locally based and purchase twenty percent of their food locally. Albany County, New York, has also enacted a policy to increase the percentage of local food consumed at the county‘s residential healthcare and correctional facilities. The policy recognizes that locally produced food supports the regional economy, requires less oil and gas, and provides nutritional benefits. Furthermore, in early 2011, a proposal was introduced in New York City to increase purchases of New York state food by city agencies.
The article is a great general starting place for anyone wanting to view a broad array of possibilities for their local communities.  It is also an invaluable tool for those in Newark’s city government and others involved in the redevelopment of the city’s food system and the new sustainability plan.

Wednesday, 25 May 2011

Needed: A New Conceptualization of Agriculture

It is a mistake to think of agriculture as simply about productivity. Agriculure provides employment and livelihoods, it underpins food quality, food safety and nutrition, and it allows food choices and cultural diversity. It is necessary for water quality, broader ecosystem health,  and even carbon sequestration. Agriculture must necessarily be integrated with the many needs of humans and ecosystems.

Thursday, 17 February 2011

Funding Food and Farming: Obama’s Budget for FY 2012

President Obama announced his proposed budget for the fiscal year 2012 this morning.  This years budget specifically provides $23.9 billion in discretionary funding, a decrease of $3.2 billion, for the United States Department of Agriculture  (USDA). In keeping with the Administrations priorities, investments are targeted towards renewable energy and key research areas.   Savings are to be created across a number of key areas: reducing direct payments to high-income farmers, refocusing USDA’s homeownership programs, and targeting USDA conservation programs.

Below are some overall funding highlights and those directly pertaining to the USDA, and those which will most directly effect policy related to food and the food movement: 

Local and Regional Food Systems & Agriculture
  • Agriculture and Food Research Initiative - Increases funding to $325 million and targets increases or research in areas that are key to American leadership: human nutrition and obesity reduction, food safety, sustainable bioenergy, global food security, and climate change.
  • Farm to School Tactical Team —An increase of $2 million is sought to support work at the USDA between agencies to facilitate the building of supporting linkages between schools and local producers.
  • Healthy Food Financing Initiative —Provides $35 million as a public-private grant and loan program to bring grocery stores and other healthy food retailers to underserved communities.
  • Rural Development Regional Proposal—USDA is again proposing to dedicate 5% of several rural development programs to the development of local and regional food systems.
  • Community Food Projects Competitive Grant Program —received $5 million in mandatory funding as provided by the 2008 Farm Bill.
  • Value-Added Producer Grant Program —The Administration proposes $20 million in discretionary funding, for a wide-range of value-added projects.
  • Farmers’ Market Promotion Program —$10 million in mandatory funding as provided by the 2008 Farm Bill.
  • SNAP Point of Sale Devices—As proposed in the FY 2011 budget, the President again proposes $4 million to equip farmers’ markets with wireless EBT terminals.
  •  Rural Housing Assistance – refocuses on programs that work better, providing 170,000 new homeownership opportunities, of which at least 30,000 are expected to go to low income rural borrowers.

Nutrition & Hunger Programs
  • 2012 Farm Bill —The Obama Administration is committed to working with Congress to reauthorize the 2008 Farm Bill and simplify programs, improve access, target payments, and enhance program performance and efficiency. As part of this collaboration, USDA will also work with the Congress to improve access to SNAP benefits, program operations, and program integrity.
  • Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) —$73.2 billion in mandatory funding. The Administration re-proposes to temporarily suspend the time benefit limits for certain working-age, low-income adults without dependents for an additional fiscal year. The Budget also proposes to restore the SNAP cuts that were used to offset the costs of Child Nutrition Reauthorization.
  • Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) —$7.4 billion was proposed, an increase of approximately $138 million above the 2011 level. This funding will support a monthly average of 9.6 million participants in the WIC program, as well as $60 million to help states work toward implementation of EBT, which is mandated by 2020.
  • Child Nutrition Reauthorization—The budget funds changes from the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 , as they become effective in 2012. Improving access to food for children and improving their eating habits are top priorities.
  • Increasing Access to Child Nutrition Programs—New school breakfast expansion grants and state childhood hunger challenge grants funded at $10 million and $25 million, to increase access to Child Nutrition programs, and combat child hunger.
  • Healthier US School Challenge —Funding will be increased to $1.5 million in FY 2012 so that work to encourage schools to take a leadership role in helping students learn to make healthier eating and lifestyle choices will be strengthened.
  •  WIC and Senior Farmers’ Market Nutrition Programs—Both programs were level funded at $20 million and $21 million, respectively.  
  • Hunger Free Community Grants—$5 million was proposed for the grants to focus on promotion, outreach, demonstration projects, and technical assistance to support communities in exploring local strategies to prevent hunger.
  • Congressional Hunger Center Fellowship—$3 million included to level fund the Bill Emerson and Mickey Leland Hunger Fellowship program.

Conservation and Energy
  • Renewable and clean energy  - Invests $6.5 billion to spur the creation of high-value jobs, make America more energy independent, and drive global competitiveness in the sector.
  • Forest restoration -  Maximizes efficiency and effectiveness of efforts to improve forest health and resiliency by combining and streamlining multiple programs.
  • Wetlands Reserve Program and the Environmental Quality Incentives Program – Provides funds to restore and protect 271,158 acres of wetlands and provide over $1.4 billion for conservation assistance. 



However, not all proposals were positive, the President’s 2011 budget would eliminate funding for two important programs, Healthy Urban Food Enterprise Development Center (HUFED) (http://www.wallacecenter.org/our-work/current-initiatives/healthy-urban-food-enterprise-development-center ) and the School Community Garden pilot program (Both these programs were funded at $1 million in FY 2010.

Currently, the FY 2012 Budget must still pass through Congress, who will make the final funding decisions.  (At this time Congress has yet to decided on government spending levels for FY 2011).  While Congress and the President agree that cuts need to be made in order to reduce the federal deficit, their opinions diverge around differ is how and where the cuts will occur. Therefore, many of the above sums are likely to change before the budget is finalized. 

For the full detail of the FY 2012 Budget, click here.

For PBS coverage of President Obama’s budget address, click here.

For NY Times coverage of the 2012 budget, click here