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Taking Back the Food System:
Organizing for Food Justice in California
A Report on the Second California Community Food Security Summit
by Liana Forest

On the stately, many-fountained campus of the University of Southern
California in Los Angeles last week, a revolution was brewing. Organizations and
individuals from throughout the State gathered to challenge our current system of
growing, distributing, and eating food. The aim is to provide affordable access
to fresh, locally grown, healthy foods, especially fruits and vegetables, for
all Californians. Equally important goals are to foster ecological,
sustainable farming practices, as well as to protect family farms, agricultural land,
and biological and cultural diversity for future generations. A big vision, and
one that generates a great deal of heat as well as light.

The Summit was co-sponsored by the California Food and Justice Coalition
(CFJC), and its parent organization, the national Community Food Security
Coalition (CFSC). Bringing together many diverse organizations focusing on sustainable
agriculture, nutrition, education, public health, school food services,
community organizers, public policy, and growers, these coalitions collaborate to
create a socially just, ecologically and economically sustainable food supply
that is healthful, and community-driven.

While I had attended national conferences of the CFSC, I had not caught up
with the California branch. The CFSC hopes to create such statewide coalitions
throughout the nation, but, as in so many other areas, California got there
firstest with the mostest. I was both amazed and inspired by how much has been
accomplished by the CFJC in barely three years.

Both the national and state coalitions provide information and support to
local organizations planning their own initiatives. What this Summit drove home
to me was the extent to which larger forces globalization of the food industry,
poor coordination between various State departments dealing with differing
aspects of the food system, scanty knowledge among legislators about
alternatives to current food and agricultural practices, resulting in inconsistent
policies regarding food access and food security play such a major role. CFJC notes
in their policy initiatives paper, “These issues are complex and systemic in
nature, and require a public policy response that is equally systemic in
nature.”

Anuradha Mittal, keynoter, underlined both challenges and progress made in
this movement. Our Oakland analogue to Arundhati Roy, Mittal spoke of a new face
to agriculture, one that will link justice with sustainability. A registered
dietician, Mittal was co-director of Food First, and is founder and executive
director of a new policy think tank, The Oakland Institute. She is also an
internationally renowned expert on trade, development, human rights, and
agricultural issues.

Beginning with Wendell Berrys comparison of industrial agriculture to a
one-night stand no commitment, you wont see me the day after Mittal barraged us
with fallout statistics from a callous system: in the 1930s 25% of our farms were
family-run, today less than 2%; the sector with the greatest job loss is
agriculture; the number one cause of death among farmers is suicide; and tax laws
allow large corporations to buy up family farms, turning our farmers into
share croppers. She then tied these American facts to the impact on worldwide
agricultural systems. India, due to U.S. agricultural corporations dumping
subsidized grains, stringent contracts with transnational companies, and failures of
Green Revolution industrialized agriculture, has seen 20,000 farmers
committing suicide since the 1960s, many by drinking pesticides. In Mexico, 600 small
farmers are displaced from their land every day.

However, the situation is not hopeless, Mittal said, given these indicators
of change: Increasing realization that factory-produced agriculture is not
cheap, given externalized costs. Grassroots support for the organic food movement
stopping deleterious changes in the organic standards. Increasing Farmers
Markets, Community Supported Agriculture (CSAs), and a Farm to Cafeteria bill.
Nine other California counties beginning initiatives against genetically
engineered crops, after one in Mendocino passed.

Anuradha also laid out our work for the future: Realizing we are the civil
rights movement of today, the worlds largest social movement. We are not
consumers, but creators of a local, just and sustainable food system.

• Rethinking priorities for our local, regional, and national markets based on
local food production
• Recognition of local, regional, and national food access needs
• Acknowledgement and support for farmers rights
• Direct, decentralized relations between farmers and their communities
• Genuine land reform

Given this vision of the larger system in which CA and the US are embedded,
we then learned, from speakers representing health care, disease prevention,
hunger action, sustainable agriculture, and food policy efforts, about linking
various California organizations to the Coalitions aims. Moderator Joy Moore
from Berkeley Public Health wound up this session with an impassioned, heartfelt
lesson on how use of terms such as “low income,” “poverty,” “average
American,” and “bleeding heart liberal” can impede the forming of community-based
coalitions. She inspired our movement to come from a place of love and caring.

Following a slide presentation featuring community food system projects
around the state, we dispersed to concurrent sessions to help us learn first hand
about community organizing, media advocacy, how the global food system affects
local food security, how to make community food assessments, examples of
community-based programs improving food access for both urban and rural com
munities, and the successes and challenges of farm to school programs across the
state.

At the Farm to School session, we learned nitty-gritties about starting and
maintaining a comprehensive program in the schools: garden-enhanced learning,
classroom nutrition education, farm tours, farmers visits to schools and
farm-to-school salad bars. With leaders of successful programs in Compton, Ventura;
Ojai; and Berkeley we discussed delivery and transport challenges, getting
kids interested in new foods and healthy choices, how many schools makes farmer
participation financially worthwhile, coordinating farmers seasonal offerings
with food service menu-planning; and where the money can come from.
Particularly impressive was how Ventura was able to include all 17 elementary schools in
three years, while developing a farmers cooperative of organic growers, pay
for the driver of a refrigerated vehicle, and train food staff, teachers, and
volunteer parents. Recently NPR did a story on their program, asking children
whether they would prefer a pizza or the school salad bar. Kids universally
chose the salad bar!

Late afternoon sessions focused on food assistance programs; activist
farmers; reparations and land reform; big picture issues GE-Free agriculture,
pesticides, irradiation; food policy councils; and tools for grassroots lobbying. At
the lobbying session we role-played meeting our elected officials. Day Two
focused on policy matters, splitting us into work groups to brainstorm solutions
and ways to gain political, financial, and technical support for four
initiatives: Farm to School, Land Access for Food Production, a State Food Policy
Council, and Access to Healthy Food.

Between these information-packed and motivational sessions, we enjoyed
organic fresh foods donated by local farmers. Day One ended with a lively evening at
the Mercado La Paloma, hearing local musicians and performers while eating
fresh Mexican foods. Here we had a chance to get further acquainted on a casual
basis. I learned all about food forestry from Adonijah Miyamura el, part of
the team who helped create the forest garden at Crenshaw High School, featured
in an urban agriculture field trip on Day Two. I came away grateful for the
dedication and spirit of all these active folk who are the ground soldiers of the
peaceful, heart-filled food revolution sweeping California.

Liana Forest, Ph.D. is an independent educational consultant specializing in
collaborative dialogue, cooperative projects, and crafting creative community.
She is involved in the Community Food System Project of SLO County, whose
goals are educating the public about access to fresh, local food and developing
farm-to-school programs to link students, teachers, farmers and parents in SLOs
various school districts. She can be reached at (805) 528-4510 or
bearforest @ earthlink.net.

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