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At
first glance, America’s food system appears to
be exemplary. We can head down to the local
supermarket almost anywhere in the country, and
generally purchase whatever we want at any time
— Mexican mangoes in May, Chilean grapes in
March, or even organic tomatoes in January. And
prices are largely affordable.
Of all industrialized countries, Americans
spend the lowest percentage of their income on
food.
There
is a cost to this cornucopia.
Small and medium farmers are regularly
squeezed out of business by high input costs, low
prices for their products, and poor access to
markets. An increasingly globalized food system
not only provides unfair competition for the
nation’s growers, but is energy inefficient,
threatens regional self-sufficiency, and
discourages consumer acceptance of regional and
seasonal foods. Suburban sprawl threatens prime
farmland in many of the nation’s metropolitan
areas. After decades of struggle, farmworkers
continue to earn poverty-level wages while
suffering from high rates of tuberculosis and
pesticide poisoning.
Low-income
urban areas are often marginalized by the
mainstream food system. Supermarkets abandon the
inner cities, making access to healthy and
affordable food difficult for the
transit-dependent. Transportation planners rarely
design bus routes around community food shopping
needs, leaving residents little choice but to
carry their groceries long distances, use precious
resources on taxi rides, or make multiple
transfers. Even those supermarkets that remain
often charge far above the prices of their
suburban counterparts, due to higher operating
costs and a lack of competition.
Despite
these obstacles community-based ventures such as
farmers’ markets, urban gardens, & community
supported agriculture (CSA) are flourishing. There
are now more than 600 CSA farms and 2,000 farmers
markets in the U.S. In Los Angeles County, CA,
farmers’ markets bring in over $25 million in
annual sales. Urban agriculture, touted in a new
United Nations study, is enjoying revived
interest. Together, these efforts comprise the
beginnings of community-based food systems,
powerful examples of alternatives to the dominant
corporate model.
Linking
these efforts together, both politically and
conceptually, is the community food security (CFS)
movement. Building upon the rich history of
international development and domestic anti-hunger
struggles, “community food security” was first
conceptualized in 1994 by a broad coalition of
advocates seeking comprehensive solutions to the
nation’s food and farming crises. It integrates
aspects of many different fields, such as public
health’s prevention-orientation, ecology’s
system analysis, community development’s
place-centered focus and emphasis on economic
development, into a comprehensive framework for
meeting a community’s food needs. Central to
this approach are five basic principles:
Low
Income: Like the anti-hunger movement, CFS is
focused on meeting the food needs of low-income
communities. Unlike the anti-hunger movement,
however, its goals tend to be much broader,
including such objectives as job training,
business skill development, urban greening,
farmland preservation, and community
revitalization.
Community
focus: A CFS approach seeks to build up a
community’s food resources to meet its own
needs. These resources may include supermarkets,
farmers’ markets, gardens, transportation,
community-based food processing ventures, and
urban farms to name a few.
Self-reliance/empowerment:
Community food security projects emphasize the
need to build individuals’ abilities to provide
for their food needs rather than encourage
dependence on outside sources, such as food banks
or public benefits.
Local
agriculture: Protecting local agriculture is key
to building better links between farmers and
consumers and gaining greater consumer knowledge
and concern about their food source.
Food
system: CFS projects typically are
“inter-disciplinary,” crossing many boundaries
and incorporating collaborations with multiple
agencies. Fundamental to this approach is an
analysis of a community’s food system, and the
need to plan for its food security.
The
national Community Food Security Coalition, has
united diverse constituencies — community
gardeners, farmers, anti-hunger advocates, food
bankers, nutritionists and dietitians, public
health advocates, environmentalists, churches, and
community development corporations — into a
single movement for a socially just and
ecologically sustainable food system. Its primary
accomplishment has been the passage of a new
grants program in the 1996 Farm Bill for
non-profit organizations to undertake community
food security projects. Authorized for seven years
at $2.5 million per year, the USDA-administered
Community Food Projects Program received over120
requests for funding totaling more than $21
million in 1996.
While
the development of the community food security
movement has generated great enthusiasm among food
and farming advocates, and led to many new
initiatives benefiting low income communities and
local farmers, great inroads remain to be made in
its institutionalization. For example, the idea of
planning for food security remains foreign to most
urban planners. While virtually every city or
county has departments that address residents’
basic needs, such as water, housing, health, and
transportation, no municipality in the U.S. has a
department of food. Food-related policies and
programs instead are embedded in virtually every
city department, unarticulated and disconnected,
making food system planning at the municipal level
very difficult. The need to develop comprehensive
food system planning will only become more urgent
as welfare reform forces cities and counties to
take a front-line role in averting hunger.
Community advocates and planners will need to
collaborate and educate one another on the issues,
resources, and opportunities available to work
towards a more equitable and ecological food
system.
The
Community Food Security Coalition (CFSC) is a
national alliance of 275 organizations dedicated
to the creation of comprehensive solutions to the
nation’s nutrition, farming, and hunger
problems. Our mission is to bring about lasting
social change by promoting community-based
solutions to hunger, poor nutrition, and the
globalization of the food system. The CFSC
promotes food self-reliance and local food systems
through federal policy advocacy, training and
technical assistance, organizing, and
dissemination of successful models.
Visit their web site,
http://www.foodsecurity.org/.
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