The Future of Our Food System Depends on Healthy Soils — and Policies That Support Soil Stewardship

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Healthy soils are the foundation of a healthy food system. These soils teem with life: earthworms create water channels as the burrow through the soil, allowing rain to soak in; residues from previous crops help soil retain moisture, suppress weeds, and prevent erosion and runoff; microorganisms help filter contaminates and form the glue that helps… Read More

Faces and Visions of the Food Movement: Patrick Holden

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Patrick Holden is a true visionary in the sustainable food movement. Based in the United Kingdom, he works internationally and locally. Patrick was director of the Soil Association from 1995-2010 and is a long-time advocate for organic farming, having spearheaded numerous campaigns in support of sustainable food. His farm, Bwlchwernen Fawr, is the longest established organic dairy farm in Wales. Patrick is now the founding director of the Sustainable Food Trust. Read More

Live Longer, Cut Out the Crap

Keep Calm and Eat Your Vegetables. (Photo by Robert Couse-Baker.)

Bolivian indigenous farmer Carmelo Flores made global headlines this week as “the oldest person to have ever lived.” Though that claim has yet to be verified, part of Mr. Flores’ story is that he attributes his longevity to a traditional Andean diet of quinoa, riverside mushrooms, and coca leaves. Not surprisingly, this has led to hyperbolic headlines, such as Australia’s Daily Telegraph‘s “Quinoa, Mushrooms, and Coca Kept Me Alive for 123 Years.” Read More

Food Sovereignty: The Real World Food Prize

Haitian farmers marched against Monsanto in 2010, while refusing genetically engineered seeds the company  tried donate to the earthquake relief efforts.

In the Basque Country—an autonomous community in Northern Spain—the official unemployment rate for young people lingers around 40 percent, but some estimate it might be even higher. It’s a region where the steel and manufacturing industries once dominated, but have since faced huge declines. Finding a first-time career, or returning to an old one for that matter, is increasingly difficult. Read More

Childhood Obesity: Turning the Ship Around

Kalu Oyama (Photo by Mei Ratz.)

Three days ago I met Tae-Young Nam. He’s a recent University of Wisconsin grad, who studied pre-medicine in college, and spent last year serving in Chicago public schools as a teaching assistant with City Year. He’s headed off this coming week to Anthony, New Mexico to become a FoodCorps service member. He’ll be teaching kids about healthy food, building and tending school gardens with them, and collaborating with school food staff to get high quality local food onto school lunch trays. Read More

Big Changes Coming to School Vending Machines

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The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) recently finalized its updated nutrition standards for snacks and beverages sold in schools through vending machines, school stores, a la carte, snack bars, and on-campus fundraisers.  Combined with the recent improvements in school lunches, at long last, all foods and beverages sold in schools will soon need to meet healthy nutrition standards. Read More

L.A.’s Ron Finley Wants to Make Gardening Gangsta

Stephen Zeriglaer for Alternative Apparel.

 

In 2010, Ron Finley planted a garden on the 150-foot-long curbside strip outside his house in South Central Los Angeles. The produce — tomatoes, kale, corn, you name it — was free for the taking, and the colorful riot of herbs and flowers and vegetables got a lot of attention. The only unwelcome scrutiny was from the city of Los Angeles, which owns the land. Finley received a citation for growing plants that exceeded height limits, and for failing to purchase a $400 permit. By circulating a petition and bending the ear of a receptive city council member, Finley convinced the city to leave his garden alone. Around the same time, he helped start an organization called L.A. Green Grounds, dedicated to installing free vegetable gardens in curbside medians, vacant lots, and other properties in blighted areas. Read More