Photo by John Valls

Photo by John Valls

Farm to School typically brings to mind fruits and vegetables — a bowl of bright red apples, or a salad bar station. But for Tom and Sue Hunton, owners of Hunton’s Farm and Camas Country Mill, located southwest of Junction City, Farm to School means freshly baked rolls, springy pizza dough, and supple tortillas, all made with their own locally grown and processed grains. This is the second year that the Bend-LaPine School District has sourced flour from the Huntons.

This February, Tom and Sue joined other Oregon farmers, food processors, school district staff, and food security advocates in Salem to voice their support for expanding the Farm to School and School Garden Program. This was one of serious of hearings on Oregon House Bill 2649, which, if passed, would bring $5 million dollars to Oregon school districts to support Farm to School initiatives that help bring healthier, local foods to the lunchroom and provide kids with invaluable food and farm education, both in the classroom and through hands-on experiences.

HB 2649 will compensate school districts around the state up to 15 cents per meal for buying Oregon grown and processed foods. Tom looks forward to expanding their reach within the school food market. The day following their testimony, the Huntons received an order from the Bend-LaPine School District for 12,500 lbs of Hard White Spring Wheat flour and 2,500 lbs of Club Wheat Pastry Flour, which they believe is the single largest order they have ever received. The passage of HB 2649 has the power to seed partnerships that can sustain and grow Oregon agriculture.

The Huntons also offer experiential education to students through farm and mill tours. A sign in their fields designates plots for the school district, and students can visit the wheat as it grows. State funding will allow new opportunities for partners like the Willamette Farm & Food Coalition to develop educational materials and programs that give more depth to students’ hands-on experiences.

Legislators say they love Farm to School programs, but they haven’t committed to funding them, so they need to hear from you! How can you help bring more local foods and garden-based education to schools statewide? Call, email or attend an event this month!

Click here to get more information on how to contact your legislator, and where, and when public budget hearings are taking place!

Learn more about the Huntons and others involved in forging a local grain economy in Edible Portland’s spring article, Grist for the Mill.

Upstream Public Health and Ecotrust are among the nonprofits leading the charge to grow Farm to School and School Garden funding in Oregon. Learn more about Ecotrust’s Farm to School program at www.ecotrust.org/farmtoschool.

 

On August 9th, 1945 the United States dropped an atomic bomb named “Fat Man” on the city of Nagasaki, Japan. The plutonium used in the bomb was produced in southeastern Washington at the Hanford Nuclear Site.

A multi-disciplinary exhibit called Particles on the Wall (POTW) explores the human and environmental legacy of nuclear technology, specifically focused on the global implications of the Hanford facility. Since its debut in January 2010, POTW has traveled to nine communities within Washington and will soon be traveling to the Natural Capital Center for its first showing in Oregon.

A free opening reception of Particles on the Wall will be held on Friday, May 3rd from 6-8 p.m. at Ecotrust’s Billy Frank Jr. Conference Center.

Hosted by Oregon Physicians for Social Responsibility in collaboration with Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility and the Institute of Neurotoxicology and Neurological Disorders, the night’s opening reception will also honor the high school student winners of the 2013 Greenfield Peace Writing Scholarship. Students submitted essays based on the prompt, “Why does Hanford matter?”

Covering 586 square miles alongside the Columbia River, Hanford is owned by the federal government and operated by the U.S. Department of Energy. The site began production in 1944 and was commissioned to supply plutonium for the Manhattan Project, which included the first nuclear test, codenamed “Trinity.” Two-thirds of the plutonium used in the nation’s stockpile of nuclear weapons between 1944 and 1988 came from Hanford reactors.

The B Reactor, pictured here, supplied plutonium 239 used in the first atomic device ever exploded on July 16, 1945, known as the Trinity Test. Photo: toxipedia.org (Washington Nuclear Museum & Ed. Center)

The B Reactor, pictured here, supplied the plutonium 239 used in the first atomic device ever exploded on July 16, 1945, known as the Trinity Test. Photo: toxipedia.org (Washington Nuclear Museum & Ed. Center)

Decommissioned following the Cold War, it is still home to 53 million gallons of chemical and radioactive waste from over three decades of plutonium production. The B Reactor—the first reactor ever built, which supplied the plutonium for the Nagasaki bomb—was designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark on August 19th, 2008. It is open for public tours.

Richland had more than enough sky. Wind was the landscape. It had swept out the past; the present was dust. I can almost taste it. The rain smelled sweetly of it. Even the snow was dusty. Even the dust, though we didn’t know it then, was radioactive.”

–Excerpt from POTW’s “The Landscape of Memory” by Debora  Greger, originally published in Desert Fathers, Uranium Daughters

POTW’s founders and curators Dianne Dickeman, Nancy Dickeman, and Steven Gilbert wanted to create an exhibit that brought together visual, literary, scientific, and historical disciplines to “stimulate examination, discussion, and creative expression about the nuclear age.”

It is dedicated in the memory of poet William Witherup, who was a driving force behind the exhibit, but passed away from leukemia prior to its development. His poetry reflects many of the environmental and social concerns for the site and the ramifications of nuclear destruction. An excerpt from his poem B-REACTOR: HANFORD: A NATIONAL MONUMENT reads:

A mutant dragon fly
Sips a chemical cocktail
From a dank cooling pond.
Coyote has a tumor on his tongue,
And Magpie is blind-
See her hopping in circles,
Dragging her wings
And once-saucy tail?”

Materials from POTW have been gathered in a hard copy book, which can be purchased online, or alternatively downloaded as an e-book for iPad, Kindle, or in .pdf format. Downloads are free, but donations can be made to support the work of Healthy World Press and the Institute of Neurotoxicology and Neurological Disorders.

Ecotrust will display a smaller installation of the exhibit from May 3rd—June 14th.

 

To celebrate Farm to School Month, dozens of Oregon legislators headed to school cafeterias this October to check out what’s new on the menu.

Why did these legislator lunches take place? Statewide funding and legislation is key to growing Farm to School efforts in Oregon. House Bill 2800, passed in 2011, provides just under $200,000 in statewide funding to bring more Oregon-grown and processed foods into school lunches and support food, agriculture, and garden-based educational activities. Starting last week, school districts have the opportunity to apply for this funding to expand their Farm to School efforts.

Congressman Kurt Schrader (D, District 5) and Representative Brian Clem (D-Salem, District 21) eat a fruit- and vegetable-filled lunch with students after touring the Salem-Keizer Education Foundation’s (SKEF) Learning Gardens at Grant Community School.

Although the $200,000 will be awarded to just a few Oregon districts as part of a pilot program, Ecotrust research shows that every dollar spent on Oregon-grown and -processed foods has a significant multiplier effect on Oregon’s farming and processing industries.

In 2013, a growing group of Farm to School advocates will return to the legislature to ask for an expanded $5 million Farm to School grant program. These advocates, co-led by Ecotrust and Upstream Public Health, invited legislators to lunch to showcase the real impacts that Farm to School and school garden programming have for hungry kids and hard-working farmers in their communities.

Healthy school lunch gives young Oregonians – including the large number who experience food insecurity – a daily, balanced meal. Garden-based education helps increase children’s food literacy and teaches life-long healthy eating habits. Farm to School supports regional food economies and creates new markets for Oregon farmers.

Ecotrust helped organize three lunches: at Cascade Elementary in the Lebanon Community School District, Centennial Learning Center (CLC) in the Centennial School District, and Grant Community School in the Salem-Keizer School District. Increased funding from the state will allow schools like Cascade, CLC and Grant to sustain and expand their innovative programming and allow more schools across Oregon to develop successful programs.

Legislators get a taste of how school lunch is changing
On Food Day, October, 24, Representative Sherrie Sprenger (R-Scio, House District 17) toured Cascades Elementary. Student guides gave a tour of the district’s Planting Seeds of Change edible teaching and production gardens, which produced 800 pounds of food for the school meal program and a local hospital last year! (Learn more about the visit in this Democrat Herald story.)

On October 26, Senator Laurie Monnes Anderson (D–Gresham, District 25) and Representative Greg Matthews (D-Gresham, District 50) visited Centennial Learning Center. They experienced their innovative lunch program, which incorporates farm fresh produce. In August 2012, the district began incorporating a weekly share of vegetables from Dancing Roots Farm into its school lunches. All students learn to cook in the culinary program, which prepares breakfast and lunch daily for the school. Centennial Learning Center was also the first school in Gresham to pilot composting food scraps.

Senator Laurie Monnes Anderson (D–Gresham, District 25) and farmer Brian Dickerson of Dancing Roots Farm listen as Conrad Schumacher, Centennial Learning Center chef and teacher, describes the lunch they are about to eat, prepared by CLC students using vegetables from Dancing Roots.

Rep. Greg Matthews (D-Gresham, District 50) points out what’s on the menu for lunch at the Centennial Learning Center, highlighting vegetables from Dancing Roots Farm. He is flanked by the Oregon Department of Education’s new Farm to School Coordinator Rick Sherman, FoodCorps fellow Emily Ritchie, principal Jamie Juenemann, and the Oregon Department of Agriculture’s Farm to School Specialist, Michelle Ratcliffe.

On Halloween, October 31, Congressman Kurt Schrader (D, District 5), Representative Vicki Berger (R-Salem, District 20), and Representative Brian Clem (D-Salem, District 21) ate school lunch at Grant Community School. They joined Food Service Director Dave Harvey; representatives from the Salem-Keizer Education Foundation, Kaiser Permanente, and Ecotrust; and elementary students to tour the school garden, learn about the school’s composting program, participate in an apple taste test, and experience how the district is changing what students eat and how cafeterias source food. (Learn more about the visit in this Statesman Journal story and this Capital Press story.)

A raised bed in the Salem-Keizer Education Foundation’s Learning Gardens at Grant Community School overflows with abundant fall produce. Students at Grant report that kale is one of their favorite vegetables (!) – they turn it into tasty kale chips with School Garden Coordinator Brenda Knobloch.

FoodCorps service member Chelsea Thomsen and Salem-Keizer Education Foundation School Garden Coordinator Brenda Knobloch serve tastes of several varieties of Oregon apples to students in the cafeteria at Grant Community School.

From left: Representative Brian Clem (D-Salem, District 21), Representative Vicki Berger (R-Salem, District 20) and Congressman Kurt Schrader (D, District 5) check out the composting setup in the cafeteria at Grant Community School in the Salem-Keizer School District.

Photos by Stacey Sobell.

 

On November 6, Californians will vote on whether to require foods containing Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs) to be labeled. People around the country are paying close attention to the measure; many believe it will result in GMO labeling across the country. (Historically, when California has enacted product label requirements, companies have changed their labels tout de suite.)

Whether or not genetically engineered seeds should be sold to farmers is not a question posed by Proposition 37; nor is whether foods grown from those seeds—most often as ingredients in processed foods—should be sold to eaters. Rather, Prop. 37 addresses whether citizens should have the right to make individual choices about the contents of what they buy and eat. Whatever the final outcome, Prop. 37 is raising awareness about very complicated issues in the business of food, including all of the inputs that farmers purchase to grow our food supply.

On Saturday, Oct. 20, come to the Portland Farmers Market for a workshop on seed saving and a seed exchange. Photo by Carole Topalian

Tomorrow, October 20, the Northwest Food Sovereignty Coalition is hosting a day of celebration called the Seed Freedom Summit, at the Portland Farmers Market.  Although nothing akin to Prop. 37 is currently on Oregon ballots, the Northwest Food Sovereignty Coalition has begun working at the grassroots level in Portland to address issues around who owns seeds; how seeds are propagated, distributed, and saved; and the significance of genetic diversity within our food supply—all issues tightly nested in the national and international conversations around GMOs.

The Summit will begin with music and poetry, followed by a seed saving workshop, then a panel discussion with activists working on the local and global stages, and finally a potluck and seed exchange. All events are free, and everyone is welcome to join in at any point.

One of the coalition’s leaders is Karen Swift. Raised on a farm in California where her family grew subtropical fruits, including passion fruit, feijoa, horned melon, and diverse vegetables, Swift became active in California as a founder of the Biosafety Alliance, a coalition working to bring many people to the table to talk about GMOs. The Alliance’s work dovetailed into the campaign launched by Pamm Larry, a grandmother from Chico, that eventually fed into Prop. 37.

Swift has since moved to Portland to study law at Lewis & Clark, and has taken her passion for food activism with her. In the spring, Swift and the Biosafety Alliance hosted Indian seed freedom advocate Dr. Vandana Shiva in a conversation at Ecotrust.

On International Food Day, October 16, Edible Portland sat down with Swift to learn more about the seed freedom movement and her vision for a new economy.

Q.When you began the Biosafety Alliance in California, your focus was not on legislation, but on coalition building and grassroots activism. You’re taking that same approach here. Why not focus on legislation?

A.We support Prop. 37; we simultaneously need to find other means to grow movements addressing GMOs. I think we really need to focus on localization, supporting local seed growers, bringing back cultural traditions around food, bringing back diversity and alternative varieties.

We’re going to have a seed saving workshop on Saturday. A lot of that knowledge [around how to save seed] has been eroded globally. In the U.S., the erosion of [seed-saving] knowledge has also brought about the erosion of varieties. We need a network of seed savers and more reclamation of varieties.

I also see a need for more lawyers to work around transactional legal matters – financing farmer cooperatives and entities that support the local economy. It’s very difficult for small farmers to access capital.

Q.How would Prop. 37 passing change the conversation around GMOs?

A.I think it will be interesting to see if there is a big consumer push back. Biotech industry leaders have said labeling GMOs is akin to stopping GMOs because they know people don’t want to buy it. So maybe there will be.

I think patents on seeds are a huge issue. The idea that you can patent seeds is strange. I think debunking the underlying justifications is really important. Until 1924 the USDA was handing out seeds you could plant. And then in 1924 the privatization of the seed supply began as another way to make money… The Plant Variety Protection Act was passed in 1970 specifically not to allow for patents on seeds. They were going to allow for a protection on seeds – you have 20 years to market your specifically bred variety and get some kind of market favoritism. In 1985, the Patent and Trademark Office suddenly decided that seeds were patentable. Then in 2002, the Supreme Court legitimized that decision. There is a lot to be challenged. We haven’t legitimized this system that promotes monoculture rather than diversification, but we will every time we remain silent.

Q.The seed freedom movement is global in scale, inspired by people like Dr. Vandana Shiva. How do you see local efforts impacting what’s happening around the world?

A.It’s a challenging question: How do we really stand in solidarity with people internationally? I think awareness-raising and getting people to learn about what’s going on globally [is significant]. At the local level, we can create new economic models that don’t depend on the corporate system, which needs people to sustain it. We can support an alternative that actually helps make obsolete the system that we have exported.

When I first moved [to Portland], my frustration was that a lot of people are living an alternative lifestyle, but they seem very apolitical. They are stepping outside, growing their own food – and that is a political act. But they are not getting involved in the political processes. I think people need to stand in both worlds. There’s amazing potential for change in small pockets – that’s where change comes from.

Connect with us: