Urban Agriculture in Brooklyn Center

Posted: March 3rd, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

Urban Agriculture in Brooklyn Center from Fourth Sector on Vimeo.

Check out this short video that Fourth Sector recently produced to promote the idea of urban agriculture in Brooklyn Center.


Michael Pollan on Oprah

Posted: February 3rd, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

Via Civil Eats:
On Wednesday, Michael Pollan appeared on Oprah to discuss the food system and the film Food, Inc. At the beginning of the program, entitled “Before You Grocery Shop Again: Food 101,” Oprah said that she saw Food, Inc., and it inspired her to host this discussion. “We all have to start paying more attention to what we’re putting in our bodies,” she said. “Do you know where you food really comes from? What’s been added, what’s been taken out? What goes down before they put a label on it?” Interspersed throughout the show were clips of the film, including the film’s introduction on the disconnect between our idea of food production and its reality; chicken production, featuring a farmer speaking out against the industry; and a family that can’t afford to eat real food and is forced to choose fast food.

Here’s a longer clip:


The First Lady Takes On Childhood Obesity

Posted: January 29th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: Uncategorized | No Comments »

First Lady Michelle Obama kicks off a campaign to confront the problem of childhood obesity at a YMCA in Alexandria, VA. She is joined by Surgeon General Regina Benjamin, HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, and Dr. Judith Palfrey, President of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Public Domain


School Lunch Awareness Reaching Critical Mass

Posted: January 25th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , | 5 Comments »

Astute observers would have noticed last week that School Lunch and the debate associated around it has seemed to reach a critical mass. Lets hope that policy makers follow what has now become a growing consensus among our citizens: the time for reform has come.

Did Jamie Oliver meet his match in ‘America’s Fattest City’?

When last we saw British superstar chef-turned-food-system-reformer Jamie Oliver, he was in the midst of teaching “the fattest city in America” how to cook. How did it go? Well, thanks to the miracle that is reality television, we’ll find out one episode at a time. The series—Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution—doesn’t premiere until the end of March. But ABC has provided us a sneak peak. Key takeaway? The recalcitrant residents of Huntington, West Virginia have driven poor Jamie to tears. Tom says check it out:


full article here via grist

Michelle Obama’s Anti-Obesity Movement

File:Michelle Obama speaks at Kids' Inaugural 1-19-09 hires 090119-N-1928O-182a.jpg

photo wikimedia commons

and there is no shortage of links to one of the biggest stories of the week:

“This isn’t the kind of problem that can be solved in one year, or even one administration,” said Michelle. But make no mistake about it, this problem can be solved. We don’t need to wait for some new invention of discovery to make this happen. This doesn’t require fancy tools or technologies. We have everything we need right now– we have the information, we have the ideas, and we have the desire to start solving America’s childhood obesity problem. The only question is whether we have the will.”

full article here via examiner.com
also see The Washington Post, abc news

and on to the relationship between the two above news items:

From Sesame Street to Iron Chef

Students marvel over a potato at the White House garden last fall. (Photo: ZUMA Press)

During the first lady’s recent visit to Sesame Street to help Elmo and some kids plant vegetable seeds, Big Bird asked if he had heard correctly that she eats seeds. Not exactly, she replied, but “I do eat what grows from these seeds.” She encourages the kids to eat all their vegetables, telling them that if they do, they’ll “grow up to be big and strong just like me.”

The garden also inspired a culinary showdown on an episode of Iron Chef America. Filmed partly at the White House, the contest paired White House chef Cristeta Comerford and Bobby Flay against the duo of Mario Batali and Emeril Lagasse.

full article here via mother nature network

School Lunches: We Can Do Better Than $1 Per Meal

photo by SpecialKRB via flickr

Yet lack of funding isn’t the only problem. Many argue that the U.S.D.A. has a looming conflict of interest since one part of the agency is responsible with providing school children nutritious food and another helps agricultural companies sell surplus meat. One USA Today article reported that schools have received millions of pounds of meat from the government that wouldn’t even meet quality or safety standards of many fast-food restaurants. And a followup article reveals that the chicken sent to schools by the USDA are otherwise used in pet food and compost.

full article here via Huffington post

Mrs. Q and Fed Up: School Lunch Project Snowballs

photo by back_garage via flickr

Even after only a few weeks of posts, Fed Up paints a devastating picture of how the school lunch program is failing kids. Mystery meat, still-frozen fruit cups, “pizza” with cheese that separates into fat layers. Everything is individually wrapped and, if it’s hot, it’s been microwaved. Weird pairings are rampant: Pizza and pretzels? A hot dog, cookie, and Tater Tots? The pictures are disgusting enough, but the descriptions are even worse: “I guess the green beans had some kind of butter sauce. I didn’t taste a sauce but there was a little buttery residue on the bottom of the paper package.” Is this food supposed to be fueling the next generation?

link to story (mentions Ann Cooper)



A Year of School Lunch

Posted: January 15th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: society | Tags: , , , , | 5 Comments »
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image credit: "Fed Up: School Lunch Project"

At the time we thought nothing of it, school lunch was supposed to be terrible. Most kids just bought a honey-bun from the vending machine anyways, and maybe some fries. Hardly anyone ever went for the Full Monty unless they were serving the bbq rib sandwich-the mystery meat molded into a vaguely rib-like form was delicious if only because of the tangy sauce that was probably loaded with sugar. Looking back it all seems a little suspect though, why should childhood and adolescence, the time of your life when you need the most nutritious diet, be in fact the opportunity for federally sanctioned malnutrition? A recent article examines evidence that school lunch on average is probably of lower quality than pet food. How has this situation been allowed to continue for so long, and wherefore comes the odd cultural inertia that hews against the implementation of a sane exit strategy? Is there some sort of conspiracy at play here? Is the USDA being run by a cabal of intransigent space lizards with ties to the Illuminati ? The mind reels.

So apropos of the gathering storm around our school lunch cafeterias, and in the great tradition of documentarian Morgan Spurlock and his seminal Super Size Me, an anonymous blogger/school teacher known only as Mrs. Q, has pulled out a machete to sharpen the debate with the appropriately named blog: “Fed Up: School Lunch Project”.  As of the time of posting, she is only 9 days into a year of eating nothing but school lunches, but already her blog is attracting some critical attention.  It’s not hard to see why her tack is so deadly effective-the prospect of voluntarily consuming what our children have no other choice but to-only serves to highlight what we already know: that American school lunch is at large both completely unappetizing and severely lacking in basic nutritional value. Aside from the deadpan and oddly amusing daily commentary of Mrs. Q, the collected imagery of the wilting and oily food offerings crammed unceremoniously onto a small Styrofoam tray are perhaps the greatest testament to just how bad the situation has remained.  Nothing like actually being presented with direct physical evidence. Checkmate Caitlin Flanagan.

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image credit: "Fed Up: School Lunch Project"

So lets hope Mrs. Q survives the year without suffering some serious health repercussions. And furthermore, lets hope her project attracts some much needed attention to one of our most critical public-health issues. If we are going to leave the next generation with an enormous sovereign debt, depleted resource base, rising sea-levels, and the prospect of chronic under-employment, the least we can do is give them a school lunch that’s better than pet food. I mean come on. The Lateral Hippogriff approves !

Fed Up: School Lunch Project


Raj Patel on Colbert Nation

Posted: January 13th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: society | Tags: , , | No Comments »
The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
Raj Patel
www.colbertnation.com
Colbert Report Full Episodes Political Humor Economy

Raj Patel is a political economist who wrote Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System and who has recently has published new book on consumption, called The Value of Nothing. Patel describes how the hidden cost of our consumption causes a great deal of environmental harm and social destruction.


A Fresh Crop of Topical News Items

Posted: January 8th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: news, social entrepreneurship | Tags: , , , , , , | No Comments »

The Facts About Food and Farming

The issues facing agriculture today are much more complicated than lining up behind labels such as "local" and "organic."

image credit: Los Angeles Times

excerpt:

One of the more pleasing developments of the last decade has been the long-overdue beginning of a national conversation about food — not just the arcane techniques used to prepare it and the luxurious restaurants in which it is served, but, much more important, how it is grown and produced.

full article here via The Los Angeles Times

It takes a community to sustain a small farm

File:Pleasantville Iowa 20080111 Grocery Store.JPG

image credit: wikimedia commons

excerpt:

These days it seems the most popular person to be in the food system is the “local farmer.” Farmers markets are popping up everywhere, and their size and popularity grow all the time. Local food is trendy—even the First Family is in on it.

But as anyone who has ever raised grain or livestock can tell you, the farmer is not the only person in the chain of players from her farm to your fork. In addition to producers, your food chain includes processors, distributors or transporters, and retailers.

full article here via grist

Three Things To Watch With The Social Innovation Fund


excerpt:

The New Year is bringing with it an accelerated buzz and excitement around the forthcoming Social Innovation Fund. A few weeks ago, the Corporation for National and Community Service released funding guidelines and asked for public comment. Sean has been curating that conversation on Tactical Philanthropy and an excellent guest post by nonprofit consultant Adin Miller prompted me to think about the three things I’m watching for with the Social Innovation Fund.

full article here via Social Entrepreneurship

St. Augustine School Chicken Project

excerpt:

In fact, the 200 students at this parochial school know more than many city kids do about where the food on their plates comes from. Behind the four-story brick 1905 school building is St. Augustine’s own chicken coop, where 15 hens with black feathers and speckled breasts lay large brown eggs. In the community garden across the street, students this year grew beets, cucumbers, tomatoes and broccoli. If all goes as planned, by June tilapia will be swimming under a blanket of hydroponic herbs in a tank in a new greenhouse. And, yes, even live turkeys are a possibility for the future.

full article here via changeobserver


Pollan on the Daily Show

Posted: January 6th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: news, society | Tags: , | 1 Comment »
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Michael Pollan
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show
Full Episodes
Political Humor Health Care Crisis

via grist:

Michael Pollan has for a while now been pointing to a way out of the reform stalemate caused by the power of lobbies: that space for reform opens when powerful lobbies turn against one another. Pollan appeared last night on the Daily Show, promoting his new book Food Rules. He made a point he has made before: if even a modicum of health care reform passes, one that bars insurers from denying coverage to sick people or purging them when they get sick, than the interests of the mighty insurance industry will turn against those of the mighty agribusiness/processed-food industry. The insurance industry, forced at least on some level to deal with the chronic illnesses caused by the U.S. diet, will join the food-reform movement, Pollan predicts. Backed by a well-heeled industry lobby, the movement will be empowered to create real change.


Dustup on the Urban Prairie

Posted: January 5th, 2010 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: hybrid, social entrepreneurship, society | Tags: , , , , , , | 5 Comments »

Urban Farming in Detroit

One of the greater ironies of the early 21st century might be that Detroit, oft considered the poster-child for post-industrial blight and decay, may well end up as a cutting edge example of how Urban America can best respond to the difficult realities of the emerging post-abundance paradigm. Recently, a growing chorus of voices has begun to sketch the outlines for the metamorphosis of Detroit into a shimmering “Urban Prairie”, a thriving agrarian hub rising from the denuded ruins of the once proud industrial mega-city. Detroit, with over 103,000 vacant lots, clearly is a prime candidate for urban agriculture, although the most ambitious plan for sparking this renewal, a working commercial farm in the heart of the city proposed by former financial guru John Hantz, has raised several issues that illustrate the difficulties of implementing any wide-scale systems change.

The subject of a flurry of recent articles, Hantz Farms aims to eventually convert over 5,000 acres of now deserted land into a fecund expanse of organic crops, all to be consumed within the local foodshed. Although many local leaders are encouraged by the prospect of new farm-labor jobs in Detroit, several community activists have taken issue with the structural inequities that they perceive as emblematic of such large-scale ventures. The project clearly offers some public benefit in the form of economic activity and community re-development, but many feel that private enterprise by its very nature ends up exploiting community members rather than offering opportunities for empowerment. One vocal critic speaking at the Food & Society Conference in San Jose lat April went so far as to describe the Hantz proposal as nothing more than a “plantation” amidst several hundred thousand poor and challenged urban residents.

It’s an understatement to say that the future will hold some serious challenges as we shift into a lower energy world, and the responses that we enact will often represent compromises based on pragmatic realities rather than Utopian “solutions” that promise to continue the status quo into infinity. Within this new headspace, we need to have the ability to see past the public-private dichotomy, and start realizing that what we perceive as polar opposites are in fact two sides of the same coin. Absolutist ideology provides grist for extremist politicians on both sides of the aisle, but the real world works in much more subtle and nuanced ways. Systems change exhibits emergent characteristics that do not follow the rules and expectations of previous cognitive models, and we must adapt our understanding of these new conditions to form a clear vision of how the transitions can be best managed.  There is always a danger that power will be abused, but bereft of an organizing entity of some sort, it would be impossible for any type of collaborative effort to be realized. This threat exists in all forms of political organization past, present, and future.

I think we have to realize that although Hantz Farms will probably not please everyone or make good on all of its promises, it nevertheless represents a positive step towards acknowledging our predicament and crafting a creative solution to deal with the future pro-actively rather than re-actively. As a high profile experimental model, it will doubtless serve as a test case that will flush out land use and zoning and tax issues and create new legal precedents for the re-allotment of public and private spaces that will be immensely valuable. Urban farms of the future hopefully will likely be heterogeneously imagined, as communal co-operatives, individual micro-farms, private entities, and everything in between. There is no quick fix to anything, but if we are able to think beyond the wall of our previous psychological investments, it might be possible to craft a new consensus reality in which a sane a sober path through the rapidly changing world can be found.


round ‘em up….

Posted: December 22nd, 2009 | Author: Jacques de B | Filed under: news | Tags: , , , , | No Comments »

USDA sustainable-ag czar Merrigan hits youtube

great find via grist

Minnesota Council of Nonprofits: Economic Outlook 2010

Their findings in a nutshell — “grim”:

  • Sixty percent of organizations reported an increase in need for services, compared with 42 percent in 2008.
  • The ability to meet this increase in need for services is undercut by the reduction in revenues to these organizations.
  • The types of organizations most frequently reporting declining total revenue were environment related, education and employment/jobs related.
  • Organizations with budgets under $400,000 have faced the most difficulty in 2009.

full article here on Philathropy Potluck

The Social and Commercial Two-Step

hybrid model

excerpt:

The desire to combine social and commercial in the pursuit of an outcome has led to creative ways to structure an enterprise—often known as a hybrid model or dual structure, because it combines a nonprofit arm with a for-profit arm. The for-profit allows an enterprise to facilitate investment, while the nonprofit can facilitate grant capital and provide non profit-making services to a community.

While hybrid structures are innovative, they are, in essence, stopgap measures to get around the fact that in most countries, there is no legal label that meets the needs of an entity that exists to provide social good and yet makes a profit.

full article here via social edge

White House Embraces Social Innovation

excerpt:

The Social Innovation Fund, designed to identify proven solutions to some of the country’s greatest challenges partners government with philanthropy and the best non profits in the field in a groundbreaking way. Rather than continue to attempt to solve community problems from Washington down by frequently sustaining programs that have been failing to solve society’s problems for decades, the Social Innovation Fund will find programs working throughout the country that can actually show measurable results in their given field. The vision for this bold new idea is to rewrite the social contract in America by saying in effect that government will change its way of doing business (no more blank checks for broken initiatives) if community leaders and innovators step forward with their best ideas and commitment to service. The breakthrough idea here is to move government into the role of catalyst and out of the business of provider, offering real hope for the expansion of solutions-based programs. That’s change we can believe in.

full article here via social entrepreneurship

Many school cafeterias aren’t inspected

excerpt:

Many schools aren’t making the grade when it comes to receiving the mandatory inspections of their lunch programs, according to a recent USA Today article — part of a series investigating school lunch safety in the U.S.

The investigation uncovered that more than 8,500 schools failed to have their kitchens inspected at all last year, and another 18,000 fell short of a requirement in the Child Nutrition Act that calls for cafeteria inspections at least twice a year.

full article here via mother nature network