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Food Policy Councils

Food Policy Councils. Mark Winne, Food Policy Council Project Director, Community Food Security Coalition – mark@foodsecurity.org , www.foodsecurity.org Executive director of the Hartford (Conn.) Food System (1979 – 2003)

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Food Policy Councils

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  1. Food Policy Councils Mark Winne, Food Policy Council Project Director, Community Food Security Coalition – mark@foodsecurity.org, www.foodsecurity.org Executive director of the Hartford (Conn.) Food System (1979 – 2003) Co-founder Hartford Food Policy Council: Conn. Food Policy Council; member of Santa Fe FPC Provider of technical assistance to over 150 food policy councils, networks, and coalitions Author of Food Rebels, Guerrilla Gardeners, and Smart-Cookin’ Mamas and Closing the Food Gap: Resetting the Table in the Land of Plenty

  2. Why Have Food Policy Councils “No major famine has ever occurred in a functioning democracy with regular elections, opposition parties, basic freedom and a relatively free media (even when the country is very poor).” Amartya Sen, Nobel Laureate

  3. To Address Food System Challenges in Indian Country • Diet-related illnesses – Diabetes (NM Dept. of Health survey: 33% of American Indian 3rd graders obese; 22% of all 3rd graders) • Poverty, geographic isolation, and limited access to healthy, affordable, and culturally appropriate food • Loss of food sovereignty (see High Country News on loss of farmland and fishing: http://www.hcn.org/issues/43.8/three-tribes-a-dam-and-a-diabetes epidemic

  4. Food Policy Councils (FPCs) Complement the Work of the Private and Public Sectors • The “3-Ps” of effective community food system work: Projects, Partners, and Policies • The private (for-profit and non-profit) and public sectors have developed numerous food and farm projects, programs, businesses, and services at the state and local levels • Partnerships have been forged to improve networking, coordination, and collaboration • But local and state public food policies have not been fully engaged to promote a just and sustainable food system. This is the primary task of FPCs. • Food Policy: The actions and in-actions of all levels of government that influence the supply, quality, price, production, distribution and consumption of food

  5. FPCs: What They Do and How They Operate • No state or local government has a “Department of Food”; FPCs can be a de facto Dept. of Food • They can serve as a food system planning venue for nutrition and health, food security, natural resources and food production, and the food economy • Membership is comprised of representatives from an area’s food system: government (local or state), academia, community members, farmers and gardeners, food banks, restaurants, retailers, and faith communities • They work to coordinate and focus numerous government functions – health, planning, economic development, education, agriculture, social services – around local or state food system concerns • FPCs tend to be advisory; they address local/state food regulatory, budgeting, legislative, programmatic, and administrative functions

  6. FPC Operation (cont’d) • FPCs can work across (synergistically) government lines; they look for intersections between programs at all levels of government • FPCs conduct public education and awareness campaigns such as the promotion of local food buying or to highlight the need for an obesity reduction initiative; may conduct community food assessments • Organizational: FPCs can be created by state statute or local ordinance, an executive order, or may be independently organized (government agencies participate but FPC is not a part of government); can also be organized as non-profits. • Private, non-profit groups often conduct grass-roots advocacy to create FPCs, and may provide staff, funding, and other resources • FPCs may link to other local efforts such as an obesity reduction coalition or a mayor’s office of sustainability

  7. Types of Networks • Cooperating: Low risk to members; little chance of systems change; can model best practices, test ideas, convene problem-solving sessions • Coordinating: low to moderate risk; better chance of systems change; can push organizational boundaries; engage in activities requiring greater mutual reliance • Collaborating: Moderate to high risk to members; best chance of systems change; methods in place to resolve conflicts; pursuing long-term system creation; radical shift from past operations

  8. What Do We Know about FPCs?(based on recent FPC survey by Food First and CFSC) • We estimate there are 100 FPCs in North America (only a few in Canada) • 75 FPCs were contacted for the survey; 39 FPCs responded: 7 state, 17 county or multi-county (regional), and 14 city • A small number are joint city/county FPCs • About 50% of FPCs have no staff; 40% have less than 1 FTE; 10% have 1 to 3 FTEs • Most (60%) of state FPCs are part of gov’t; some (20 to 40%) of local/county FPCs are a part of or have a strong connection to gov’t • Between 8 and 28% of FPCs have no funding; between 16 and 50% receive some gov’t funding; Foundations fund about 25% of FPCs • The federal sources of FPC funding are the Community Food Project Competitive Grant Program and CDC; Community foundations, local, county, and state governments

  9. Kansas City Origins: Grew out of interest of KC Healthy Kids and local health care foundations Organization: Independent; operates under auspices of KC Health Kids and serves 9 counties and 2 states Leadership: 1 full-time staff with support from KC Healthy Kids and other local and state groups Big Break: Interest in Farm Bill translated into interest for local food policy Issues and Outcomes: Prepared several policy briefs; modernized KC’s agriculture zoning code; co-hosted food summit; conducted a food issues survey with candidates for local office

  10. Baltimore • Origins: Comm. Food Assessment conducted by Johns Hopkins U. and community organization • Organization: Housed within city planning dept. but supported by local foundations and city funds; large number of food system sector representatives advise the Food Policy Director • Leadership: City Planning, Johns Hopkins, and numerous community organizations • Big Break: Press conference with Mayor attracted major media attention (CNN, CBS, NPR) • Issues and Outcomes: Expanded “virtual supermarket,” created farmers’ market coalition; secured EBT for farmers’ markets; zoning changes for urban agriculture.

  11. FPC Actions and Accomplishments • New Mexico Food & Ag. Policy Council: School nutrition rules for competitive foods; expanded farm to school funding; expanded funding for NMSU Extension support for tribal nations; working on a new economic development initiative to address the lack of high quality grocery stores in rural “food deserts”, including tribal communities; irrigation project in Navajo community • Cleveland/Cuyahoga County FPC: Secured zoning changes to protect community gardens, urban farms, and raising of chickens and bees; expanded urban ag. with city economic development funds, and promoted use of public purchasing for locally grown food; working with Case Western Reserve U. and Oberlin College to buy local food

  12. FPC Actions cont’d… • Missoula, Mont. FPC working with county land use board to direct development away from prime farm and ranchland; modified or rejected over 25 subdivision proposals; chicken and bee regulations; mapped prime agricultural soils • Boulder County FPC developing sustainable agriculture use plan for 25,000 publicly-owned acres of farmland; rejected proposal to plant GE sugar beet seeds • Fresno, CA food policy coalition secured zoning changes for farmers’ markets and community gardens; included food-related components for 9,000 acre annexation

  13. Muscogee (Creek) FPC • First Native American Food Policy Council – Tribal Res. 10-079 passed 9/25/10 • Food and fitness council promotes farming, gardening, hunting, traditional foods, food sovereignty, healthy eating • Partners: HIS, Health Div., Tribal leg., Exec. And Judicial branches, Mvskoke Food Sovereignty Initiative, farmers

  14. FPC Action cont’d… • City of Hartford FPC worked with city WIC agency to improve service delivery that restored WIC caseload to 10,000 from 6,000 persons; conducted public transportation study that led to the creation of a new bus route that connects the city’s lowest income residents to new supermarkets; • State of Connecticut FPC conducted major public education campaign regarding loss of the state’s farmland that resulted in the development of $30 million per year in state funding for farmland preservation, a farm to school initiative, and farm viability grant program; coordinated and improved the delivery of nutrition education services that were previously operated independently by 5 separate state agencies; developed a plan that brought the EBT program to most of the state’s farmers’ markets; currently working on the development of new livestock slaughter and processing facilities

  15. FPCs in the Pipeline • City of Seattle and King County formed regional Puget Sound FPC • Salt Lake City FPC is the “food expert” on the newly formed Mayor’s Office of Sustainability • Louisville, KYand Birmingham, AL recently formed FPCs • New York City doesn’t have FPC, but has several broad city-sponsored food initiative, e.g. Food Works • Los Angles established FPC under auspices of Mayor’s office • Legislation created a Massachusetts Food Policy Council

  16. FPCs – Opportunities and Challenges • With limited resources and occasional resistance from large food and agriculture groups, FPCs have demonstrated the ability to identify, and secure important local and state policy gains • Their comprehensive focus – from food security to sustainability – often makes FPCs the only place where systemic and coordinated local or state food system work take place • Given the enormous complexity of the food system, the number of stakeholders, and the vast array of local, state, and federal food and farm programs, well-staffed and adequately resourced local and state food system planning, educating, and coordinating entities have become an increasing necessity • FPCs should receive additional financial and training support to expand their numbers and effectiveness, and to ensure a just and sustainable food system for all

  17. Lessons Learned • Relationships count; cultivate them • Be inclusive of a wide range of interests • On conflict: work for consensus; foster climate of healthy debate but don’t expect to take on the oligopolistic forces of multi-national agribusiness • Educate yourselves, the general public, and policy makers constantly • Community food assessment is an on-going enterprise, not a one-time act • Look for synergy between – and be aware of – relationships between all levels of government • Cultivate good leadership and FPC champions

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