THE NEW RULES OF FOOD
By Alan
Mammoser
Conscious Choice March 21, 2007
What if you knew the story behind everything you ate, such
as where the food came from, who grew it and how? Imagine the landscape from
which it came, perhaps a thriving collection of family farms. What if you knew
the people that grew the food, knew that they got a fair price for it and that
they actively worked to protect the landscape?
How differently would we eat if we got to know our food
better?
Basic knowledge of where food comes from and how it is
produced is lost on many Americans today and with it a trust in the food supply
that sustains us. With the rise of a highly industrialized society, an
industrial farming system has developed along with it. Farms have become ever
more mechanized, specialized and distant from most of the population.
The federal government has contributed to the trend through
legislation, with consecutive farm bills that favor big concentrated commodity
growers --- sometimes known as "factory farms" --- while nearly
ignoring local growers with smaller operations, sometimes collectively called "family
farmers."
Now, when you walk into your local grocery, you see shelves
chock full of all the marvels of our food system, with colorful packaging and
displays. But do you know where it comes from? Do you trust it?
In most cases, there is no information beyond the basic
government approvals and ingredient lists. But for a growing number of people,
particularly in the age of food safety scares, the lack of information is
unacceptable. Many Americans want to get to know their food, and the story
behind it, better.
A new food movement is growing out of these concerns.
Concerned citizens, farmers and others are starting to work on a new set of
rules for the food system. These rules or standards would ensure sufficient
incomes for family farmers, fair treatment of farm workers, proper care of farm
animals and conservation of the environment.
While some are working on the specific rules, others are
figuring out how to communicate about the issue and efforts to others. They're
devising ways to convey the stories behind food, so grocery shoppers know more
about a cut of meat or a bag of beans and can use this information to make
better choices.
This food and farming conversation is gathering force,
appropriately, in the
"When national organic food standards were adopted in
the early 90s, there was a choice," says Jim Slama of Sustain
Slama and his colleagues are at the forefront of a
"food convergence." Previously, food-related issues were addressed
separately as individual groups focused on organics, local production, fair
trade or family farm issues. Today, these groups are coming together to look at
food from all angles with the belief that collectively, they can have far
greater impact.
Four key topics of discussion include certifying family
farms; fair trade standards; organics and beyond; and local food and flavor.
Fred Kirschenmann has watched with alarm as the number of
independent family farms decline across the
"New markets are opening," says Kirschenmann. "In
many cases, markets for organic foods, but they really take organic to another
level.
They come from peoples' rising desire to buy food that
protects the land and animals, supports farm families and farm workers. These
markets demand food products that independent family farmers can, by their very
nature, best provide."
This new demand for food can be summed up in three things
food must
convey: memory, story and relationship. People want food
that carries the land's qualities and nutrients to their tables --- that's its
memory. They want to know where it came from and follow it to its source ---
that's its story. And they want to enjoy a trusting relationship through real
communication with the producer.
Kirschenmann joined like-minded rural advocates and food
activists to form the Association of Family Farms (AFF). The organization's
goal is to differentiate themselves in the marketplace by forming cooperatives
and creating their own unique brands, which they will certify with a special
seal.
Like the ubiquitous "UL" (Underwriters
Laboratories) label on household goods, the AFF seal will appear on food
products from meat to wheat. It will certify food in three ways:
1) environmental stewardship on the farm; 2) social
standards, such as fair treatment of farm workers; and 3) fair business
practices including fair compensation for family farmers.
AFF is composed of farmers from local marketing
organizations and co-ops and is gradually expanding through regional
committees. In addition to the AFF seal, Kirschenmann foresees an interactive
website that will provide detailed information about the food, and the farmers
and practices used to produce it.
For AFF to work, it needs solid rules and agreed-upon
standards by which to judge whether a food item deserves the seal. The group is
drawing upon the Portland-based Food Alliance, whose certification programs
support sustainable agriculture. Their standards are comprehensive and touch on
every aspect of the farm economy and call upon farmers and ranchers for the
following:
* Provide safe and fair conditions for workers *
Ensure healthy and humane care for livestock * Avoid use of hormones or
related antibiotics * Avoid genetically modified crops or livestock *
Reduce their use of pesticides and other toxins * Actively conserve
soil and water resources * Protect wildlife habitat * Plan for
continuous improvement
Michael Sligh of the North Carolina-based Rural Advancement
Foundation is working to adapt international fair trade standards, such as
those well-recognized for coffee, to the domestic food market. "The
standards are tools to help small farmers make a claim, to make their products
more unique and more valuable," Sligh says
"Organic and beyond," is how the company's CEO,
George Siemon, describes it, signaling Organic Valley's desire to reach buyers
who care about a wide range of values in their food.
Erin Ford, a project coordinator at the company, notes that
good standards require good metrics. "To create useful standards, we need
to answer basic questions, such as 'what is a family farm?'" she says.
"Another is, 'what is local food?'"
For example, to define a family farm, the company sets out certain
thresholds, such as the number of heads of cattle (the maximum allowed for
members is 500 without special approval, although their farmer average is 65).
Their local milk is seen in a broad yet well-defined regional context, with
seven major trade areas across the country broken up into the following
regions:
To tell the food story, to convey trust, means food must
become more local, in both a real and a figurative sense. The food buyer must
come to know the landscape, the scene of the harvest, whether it be across the
continent or in the buyer's own region. Locality plays a big role in any new
standards for food.
The creation, or restoration, of local food systems goes to
the heart of what people love most about food, namely, flavor. The
international Slow Food movement sees this instinctively, placing the concern
for good flavor into broader agendas for land conservation and the survival of
diverse plant and animal varieties. Slow Food brings the discussion of fair
trade down to where it really matters
most: the plate.
"The universal aspect of food is pleasure," says
Erika Lesser of Slow Food
This appeal to taste could bring huge numbers of people into
the fair trade fold, by getting them to look for good -- and good-tasting --
meals. Slow Food projects bring producers together around agreed-upon standards
for special heritage varieties, such as raw milk cheese, Gravenstein Apples or
other high value or unique foods.
There is still a lot of work ahead to make the
"memories, stories and relationships" of food accessible to most city
folk who live far away from farms and food production. The evolving
conversation --- with new farmer-oriented standards, seals and methods to
communicate food stories --- may create a growing swell that will shake our
food system, and our ways of interacting with it, to its very roots.
ALAN MAMMOSER is a Chicago-based writer and regional planner.
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