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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/opinion/2002284644_peirce23.html

Of course we've been kind of PART of this whole movement,

but it's nice to hear folks talking about it ...

================================================

Time is ripe for urban agriculture

Is America ready for a metropolitan agriculture policy? Is the time ripe to take

some of the billions in subsidies now flowing to big commodity-crop operators

and focus instead on sustainable farm production in and around the citistate

regions where 80 percent of us live?

Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., and the man who founded Congress' Livability

Caucus, argues that with half of federal farm subsidies currently " flowing to

six states to produce 13 commodities that in the main we don't need, like corn,

wheat, cotton, and rice, " there's a dramatically superior alternative.

We should, says Blumenauer, " use that money to build sustainable agriculture,

create a farmer's market in every community, help farmers protect our land and

water, preserve our viewsheds, foster land banks and control erosion. "

Historically, he argues, our metropolitan regions weren't just centers of

commerce but areas of fertile fields, often in lush river valleys. Even today,

they have some of America's best land for sustainable agriculture. " With small

diversions from the agriculture bill, " argues Blumenauer, " we could provide

grants for communities to develop year-round farmers' markets " and help local

producers provide fresh vegetables and fruits, high-quality cheeses, honeys,

nuts and more.

It's not hard to dismiss Blumenauer's idea. Small-scale agriculture has been

losing out to big (and increasingly subsidized) farm operations for decades.

This winter, the Bush administration quickly retreated from its proposal to

significantly trim payouts to the mega-producers.

As for our food-raising-and-distribution system, the story is familiar: Big

agribusiness processes commodities often high in sugar and fat, raises poultry,

beef and pork in factory-like facilities, ships the shrink-wrapped products up

to thousands of miles to supermarkets, and relies heavily on flashy packaging

and advertising. How could anyone even loosen that hammerlock?

A bunch of reasons, it turns out.

First, millions of Americans are looking for fresher and more flavorful food

alternatives ­ the very kind of product, from fresh East Coast summer corn to

Montana cherries to South Dakota's new organically raised cattle on

state-certified farms ­ that local farmers most reliably produce and deliver.

A second factor driving the fresh-foods drive: health concerns. It's true, not

everyone catches on: a May 13 USA Today " cover story " celebrated such

fat-drenched excesses as Hardee's 1,420-calorie burger. The article's explicit,

unproven assumption: French fries, greasy burgers and heavy cheese-laden pizza

please the tongue; salads and fresh vegetables and similar foods don't ­ and

therefore don't sell well.

What's missing from that argument, aside from the horrendous health-system costs

of fat-laden diets, is how delicious healthy " thousands-mile fresher " foods can

be. Against the trend of chains such as Mcs, Domino's or Taco Bell taking

over school-lunch operations, several hundred school districts throughout the

nation have adopted forms of a " farm-to-school " program to introduce locally

grown farm products. When combined with nutrition education, farm visits, school

gardens and classroom instruction, reports the Community Food Security

Coalition, " children can develop healthy eating habits that will last a

lifetime. "

Matching that trend is the fast-growing national interest in organic foods free

of artificial fertilizers and pesticides. The economic secret to building up

local agriculture, says Schumacher, is some form of prepaid contract that

schools, hospitals, government cafeterias, restaurants, even private individuals

can enter into with local farm producers. The challenge ­ even beyond retargeted

farm subsidies ­ is a way to deliver economic security to small producers adrift

in a world of industrialized, high-risk agriculture.

The famed Wal-Mart slogan notwithstanding, says Blumenauer, lower prices for

consumers often incur alarming costs in terms of transportation, congestion, air

pollution and security. " What happens if your food supply chain is trucks that

have to travel 2,000 miles? And then diesel prices triple, or there's a security

issue? Or you're relying on such a few huge meat-processing factories and

there's a tainted meat problem? How secure is that? "

The smart regions, says Blumenauer, will be those that get their act together to

promote local food production, a critical step in a perilous global economy to

bolster physical health, conserve open lands, save dollars and assu

Time is ripe for urban agriculture

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Is America ready for a metropolitan agriculture policy? Is the time ripe to take

some of the billions in subsidies now flowing to big commodity-crop operators

and focus instead on sustainable farm production in and around the citistate

regions where 80 percent of us live?

Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., and the man who founded Congress' Livability

Caucus, argues that with half of federal farm subsidies currently " flowing to

six states to produce 13 commodities that in the main we don't need, like corn,

wheat, cotton, and rice, " there's a dramatically superior alternative.

We should, says Blumenauer, " use that money to build sustainable agriculture,

create a farmer's market in every community, help farmers protect our land and

water, preserve our viewsheds, foster land banks and control erosion. "

Historically, he argues, our metropolitan regions weren't just centers of

commerce but areas of fertile fields, often in lush river valleys. Even today,

they have some of America's best land for sustainable agriculture. " With small

diversions from the agriculture bill, " argues Blumenauer, " we could provide

grants for communities to develop year-round farmers' markets " and help local

producers provide fresh vegetables and fruits, high-quality cheeses, honeys,

nuts and more.

It's not hard to dismiss Blumenauer's idea. Small-scale agriculture has been

losing out to big (and increasingly subsidized) farm operations for decades.

This winter, the Bush administration quickly retreated from its proposal to

significantly trim payouts to the mega-producers.

As for our food-raising-and-distribution system, the story is familiar: Big

agribusiness processes commodities often high in sugar and fat, raises poultry,

beef and pork in factory-like facilities, ships the shrink-wrapped products up

to thousands of miles to supermarkets, and relies heavily on flashy packaging

and advertising. How could anyone even loosen that hammerlock?

A bunch of reasons, it turns out.

First, millions of Americans are looking for fresher and more flavorful food

alternatives ­ the very kind of product, from fresh East Coast summer corn to

Montana cherries to South Dakota's new organically raised cattle on

state-certified farms ­ that local farmers most reliably produce and deliver.

A second factor driving the fresh-foods drive: health concerns. It's true, not

everyone catches on: a May 13 USA Today " cover story " celebrated such

fat-drenched excesses as Hardee's 1,420-calorie burger. The article's explicit,

unproven assumption: French fries, greasy burgers and heavy cheese-laden pizza

please the tongue; salads and fresh vegetables and similar foods don't ­ and

therefore don't sell well.

What's missing from that argument, aside from the horrendous health-system costs

of fat-laden diets, is how delicious healthy " thousands-mile fresher " foods can

be. Against the trend of chains such as Mcs, Domino's or Taco Bell taking

over school-lunch operations, several hundred school districts throughout the

nation have adopted forms of a " farm-to-school " program to introduce locally

grown farm products. When combined with nutrition education, farm visits, school

gardens and classroom instruction, reports the Community Food Security

Coalition, " children can develop healthy eating habits that will last a

lifetime. "

Matching that trend is the fast-growing national interest in organic foods free

of artificial fertilizers and pesticides. The economic secret to building up

local agriculture, says Schumacher, is some form of prepaid contract that

schools, hospitals, government cafeterias, restaurants, even private individuals

can enter into with local farm producers. The challenge ­ even beyond retargeted

farm subsidies ­ is a way to deliver economic security to small producers adrift

in a world of industrialized, high-risk agriculture.

The famed Wal-Mart slogan notwithstanding, says Blumenauer, lower prices for

consumers often incur alarming costs in terms of transportation, congestion, air

pollution and security. " What happens if your food supply chain is trucks that

have to travel 2,000 miles? And then diesel prices triple, or there's a security

issue? Or you're relying on such a few huge meat-processing factories and

there's a tainted meat problem? How secure is that? "

The smart regions, says Blumenauer, will be those that get their act together to

promote local food production, a critical step in a perilous global economy to

bolster physical health, conserve open lands, save dollars and assure new

self-sufficiency.

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