Welcome to L.A.

Cross-posted from Community Food and Justice Coalition
 
By Erin Middleton

CFJC spent the week before Thanksgiving in Los Angeles, along with the Healthy Farms Healthy Peoples Coalition Coordinator, and had a number of conversations with coalition partners about the food justice movement, particularly in the L.A. region.  A few overarching themes surfaced regarding some of the critical  “whats” and “hows” of attaining food system change that is fair, healthy and sustainable at every point of the food chain – from growing and harvesting to distribution and waste management.

There are many essential issues that need to be addressed in order to transform our food system. A few discussed in LA on this trip were the decriminalization of poverty (criminalization of poverty involves declaring certain acts that are more likely to be committed by poor or homeless people, such as begging and being in public places, a crime.)[1], immigration reform, and carving out healthy space for young eaters.

While in conversation with the Los Angeles Community Action Network and Hunger Action Los Angeles we discussed the widespread false U.S. notion that we should “pull ourselves up by our bootstraps”. But what would you do if you had little or no opportunities? As congress considers deep cuts to SNAP (formerly food stamps) in the 2012 Farm Bill, increasingly more people do not know where their next meal will come from. In California alone an estimated 3.8 million adults — particularly those in households with children as well as low-income Latinos — can’t afford to put adequate food on the table.[2]

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National Call-In Day to Urge Congress to Protect Anti-Hunger Programs

By Gabrielle Serra

The federal nutrition programs are widely accepted and valued for providing assistance to millions of vulnerable families including women, children, and seniors that promote health and protect from poverty. With negotiations underway to try to avoid the fiscal cliff, however, congress and the administration have put virtually everything on the table, including cuts to entitlement programs, like SNAP, and other critical discretionary programs, like WIC.

On Wednesday, November 28, Feeding America is hosting a national call-in day to urge Congress to reject cuts to federal nutrition  and anti-hunger benefits as part of any deal on the fiscal cliff. For more information about how to participate, click here. Feeding America provides a toll-free number and suggested message points.

Now is the time to stand up for those who rely on the federal nutrition programs to feed their families and make ends meet by calling on congress to pursue a balanced approach that protects the most vulnerable among us from harm.

By marking your calendars for Wednesday, November 28, and by carving out just a few minutes of your time, you can make a big difference.


HFHP Calls on Congress to Enact a Comprehensive New Farm Bill

By Gabrielle Serra

Last week, the Healthy Farms Healthy People Coalition sent House and Senate Leadership a letter calling on congress to enact a comprehensive new farm bill before the end of the year. HFHP calls for a modern farm bill that protects children and families from hunger, promotes human and environmental health and sustainable farm land stewardship, enables community-driven food projects, and supports rural economic development. While HFHP did not endorse either the House or Senate farm bills in their entirety, we took this opportunity to urge congress to take action before the end of this session to advance legislation that will meet the diverse needs of the nation’s food and agriculture system, including the critical role of the food and agriculture sector for promoting and protecting human health. Please take a look, and feel welcome to use this letter as a template for your own letter to congress. If you have any questions, send us an email at info@hfhpcoalition.org.


Food Day 2012

By Gabrielle Serra

For at least one day every year, people across the country join together on October 24 for a nationwide celebration of food and the ever-growing movement for an equitable, healthy, affordable, and sustainable food system. The timing of this year’s Food Day couldn’t come at a more critical time.

Food Day is an opportunity to underscore the importance of equitable access to healthy, affordable, sustainable food, and clarify the link between federal food and farm policy (‘the farm bill’) and the real impact it has on real people in their everyday lives. The farm bill impacts every American through its impact on the price of milk at the grocery store to the price of gas at the pump. While it has a direct impact on consumers, the farm bill is also a jobs bill. More than 16 million jobs across the country are associated with agriculture. Further, the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), the largest program in the farm bill, provides one of the highest rated tools for stimulating local economy that simultaneously promotes health and protects more than 46 million vulnerable Americans from hunger.

While policymakers grapple over whether there is enough political support to drive action before the end of the year, Food Day is an opportunity to drive home the point that food and farm policy matters to everyone because everybody eats. A farm bill that doesn’t support a strong and profitable farm economy for farmers and farm workers, that doesn’t support a diversity of farming systems of all sizes, that doesn’t promote a food system that results in equitable access to healthy affordable food for consumers, including those who are most vulnerable among us, means the farm bill doesn’t work for our economy.  We need a new farm bill. And, Food Day reminds us that we are all in this together.

When Congress returns after the election, their attention will be on addressing the significant economic issues facing our country from the near term issues of spending and revenue to long term concerns of debt and deficits.  The Farm Bill should be part of this conversation because it can be part of the solution. Congress has the opportunity to advance modern food and farm legislation that reflects the current needs of American producers and consumers, without compromising the long-term viability of the sector to perform at the highest level for the next generation.

Stay tuned for more information on how you can be involved to let Congress know that the Farm Bill matters to you.


Is the Price Right? Getting a Handle on the Economics of Healthy Food

Cross-posted from Reporting on Health

By Christine Fry

The price of food is a hot topic right now, as fuel costs rise and America suffers its worst drought in five decades. But many consumers have long questioned the affordability of a healthy diet, as well as whether driving down the cost of healthy food will harm all but the very largest farming operations.

Are healthy foods like fruits and vegetables really more costly for families than fast food meals and other highly processed foods? And what would it take to make healthy foods more affordable for everyone — while still making sure farmers and the people who work for them are paid fairly?

New Measures

Conventional wisdom has it that healthy foods are pricier than the alternatives, but earlier this year two economists with the U.S. Department of Agriculture released a report questioning this assumption.

The report, “Are Healthy Foods Really More Expensive? It Depends on How You Measure the Price,” found that most studies measure the price of groceries according to price per calorie. But by every other metric – by edible weight, say, or by the average amount eaten – healthy foods actually cost less than their non-nutritious counterparts.

In fact, these other metrics are more aligned with why we eat food today, co-author Andrea Carlson points out. “We don’t eat fruits and vegetables to provide us with calories. We do it for the taste, to get nutrients and to feel full.”

Future Trends

Meanwhile, although the cost of food overall is likely to increase in the future, some analysts predict that some healthy foods will actually increase less in cost than unhealthy foods.

Chad Hellwinckel, a professor at the University of Tennessee’s Agricultural Policy Analysis Center, points to two trends — increasing weather disasters and energy costs — that will hit industrial production the hardest. In the not-so-distant future, he predicts, “low-input” (less processed) foods grown close to market will become the more cost-effective options.

Local Action

Much of the action toward making healthy foods more economically feasible is starting to happen in communities across the country.

City policies are encouraging residents to grow and sell their own food by making it legal to sell garden produce. Public agencies that do volume purchasing are trying to purchase more locally grown foods. Communities are making it easier for farmers’ markets to participate in federal food assistance programs, sometimes offering incentives for consumers to use those dollars.

Local innovations like these are a way to make fruits and vegetables less expensive — and not at farmers’ expense.

Christine Fry is a senior policy analyst at ChangeLab Solutions (www.changelabsolutions.org), a nonprofit public health center based in Oakland. She also serves on the steering committee of the Healthy Farms Healthy People (HFHP) Coalition, which hosted a recent webinar exploring the issues raised in this post (recording available at http://hfhpcoalition.org/2012/08/03/is-the-price-right-web-forum-recording/). You can contact Christine Fry at cfry@changelabsolutions.org or (510) 302-3302.

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World Food Program USA Supports the Senate Farm Bill

A Statement from Richard Leach, President and CEO – April 23, 2012

The Farm Bill developed by the bipartisan leadership of the Senate Agriculture Committee helps alleviate global hunger. It is a testament to the longstanding dedication of Chairwoman Stabenow and Ranking Member Roberts who have been steadfast in their commitment to addressing hunger. We strongly support the global hunger provisions in the bill. The bill builds upon the ongoing efforts of Congress and the Administration to transform the U.S. response to global hunger. It increases the sustainability of school feeding programs, improves the nutritional quality of food assistance, fosters integration of US food security programs and increases the cost-effectiveness of food aid. This is a good bill for the world’s hungry people.

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