Food Activists See New & Deeper Hunger Crisis

Food Activists See Portents of New and Deeper Hunger Crisis

August 18, 2012

Food rights activists from around the world will descend on the coastal U.S. state of Florida next week to protest homelessness and hunger facing millions of people in the United States and across the globe.

The Aug. 20-26 protests in Tampa were organized to draw attention to the Republican Party’s aggressive stance on tax cuts for the rich and reductions in the social safety net for poor and working families.

The Republicans hold their national convention in Tampa on Aug. 17 to formally anoint Mitt Romney as the party’s candidate for the presidential election in November.

“I have seen people who did not eat for five days. This is happening in the world’s wealthiest country,” Keith McHenry, co-founder of Food Not Bombs and an organizer of next week’s protests, told IPS.

More than 46 million U.S. citizens currently rely on the federally-funded food stamp program to help meet their nutritional needs – more than one in seven people. The average benefits amount to about 143 dollars a month, even as food prices continue to rise.

“What’s going on with the poor here and abroad is economic manipulation,” said McHenry. “Access to food is a right, not a privilege, but our leaders don’t recognize that. That is why there are so many people in jails because they are poor.”

The United States leads the world in incarceration rates, with more than two million people living behind bars.

The Barack Obama administration intends to cut food stamps funding by about two percent, or 1.6 billion dollars, a year. Besides attacks on health-care, the Republicans are seeking much greater cuts to the program, whose funding in 2011 was 78 million dollars. (Read more)

Immokalee workers take protest to Publix headquarters – Tampa Bay Times

Immokalee workers take protest to Publix headquarters – Tampa Bay Times.

tampabay.com
Immokalee Workers Take Protest to Publix Headquarters

http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/agriculture/immokalee-workers-take-protest-to-publix-headquarters/1218521#

The Ledger
Published Monday, March 5, 2012

LAKELAND — More than 100 people, including Immokalee tomato workers and supporters wearing blue, white or gold armbands, lined the entrance of Publix Corporate Parkway on the first day of a six-day fast to get Publix Super Markets Inc.’s attention.

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers and their supporters want the Lakeland-based company to end what they call “disingenuous rhetoric” and sign the coalition’s Fair Food Agreement. Under the agreement, Publix would pay an extra penny per pound for tomatoes harvested by the Immokalee workers.

Ten corporations have signed the Fair Food Agreement, including McDonald’s, Burger King, Whole Foods Markets and Trader Joe’s. The group said it has also reached out to most major supermarkets across the country, including Walmart, Kroger and Stop and Shop, but has not received any response.

Holding signs that read, “I go hungry today so my children won’t have to tomorrow,” the protesters said they hope Publix Super Markets chief executive Ed Crenshaw will come out and talk with them. A Publix spokesperson said he will not.

“For over three years, Publix has refused to even talk to us, and we’re here so that our families don’t continue to suffer from hunger,” said Oscar Otzoy, a farmworker and one of the leaders of the Immokalee group.

Tomato harvesters make insufficient wages to provide for their families, he said. Without the extra penny from corporations signing the Fair Food Agreement, workers make 50 cents per 32-pound bucket of tomatoes, a wage they say hasn’t changed in more than three decades. To make at least the minimum wage of $7.67 an hour, a worker has to pick about 153 buckets on a 10-hour day, Otzoy said.

“Publix refuses to recognize the humanity of those who harvest the tomatoes sold in their stores,” Otzoy said.

The workers said they’ve been subjected to mistreatment, sexual harassment and, in a few extreme cases, modern-day slavery where workers are held against their will. The coalition has helped authorities successfully prosecute at least six cases of farmworker slavery between 1997 and 2010.

But Publix spokeswoman Shannon Patten said Publix is unaware of any slavery or underpayment in its supply chain.

“If they’re saying they’re not making minimum wage, that’s against the law and they should go to the authorities,” she said.

Publix has said on numerous occasions this is a labor dispute between the farmworkers and their employers, and it doesn’t want to be dragged into it.

“We have a long history of not intervening in those disputes,” Patten said, reiterating that the company is willing to pay the extra penny per pound if included in the price of the tomatoes.

But the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and its supporters, including members of the National Council of Churches, local religious leaders and students, are dissatisfied with Publix’s position.

“We want to see Ed Crenshaw answer the phone and say, ‘Yes, I’ll talk to you,’ ” said the Rev. Michael Livingston, director of the Poverty Initiative of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA.

Livingston, who traveled to Lakeland from Trenton, N.J., to join the fast, said that by staying out of the agreement, Publix enables the continuation of abuse in the farms.

“And this is unjust and immoral,” he said.

© 2012 • All Rights Reserved • Tampa Bay Times
490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111

Article Link:

http://www.tampabay.com/news/business/agriculture/immokalee-workers-take-protest-to-publix-headquarters/1218521#

GERMANY: While Some Waste, Others Feast – IPS ipsnews.net

GERMANY: While Some Waste, Others Feast – IPS ipsnews.net.

GERMANY
While Some Waste, Others Feast

Julio Godoy

HAMBURG, Jan 20 (IPS) – Shortly before midnight last Saturday, Alexander, a 24-year-old law student, stepped out of his small apartment in Hamburg and set off for a jaunt around the local supermarkets to pilfer their garbage containers.

Alex, who did not want his family name to appear in the newspapers, dines almost exclusively on the food that other Germans – from individual families to grocery stores, restaurants and supermarkets – throw away.

“Of course I do this because I (get to) eat for free,” Alex told IPS. “But I also do it out of a deep conviction that throwing away food other people can eat is irresponsible and immoral.”

According to a 2011 study by the Food and Agricultural Organisation (FAO), the average German citizens throws away roughly 105 kilogrammes of edible food each year.

While this phenomenon of waste arises partly from concerns over the aesthetics of food, many experts have linked the rampant dumping of edibles to consumers’ misunderstanding of the expiration data printed on food packages and bottles.

For instance, supermarkets and grocery stores ‘sort out’ potatoes that are too large, cucumbers that are “too bent” and cheese and yoghurt supposedly about to expire for dumping.

“Ever more people expect food in large assortments and of the best quality,” said Claus Herda, director of Hamburger Tafel (“Hamburg’s Table”), a humanitarian organisation that collects food for the poorest inhabitants of this affluent German city, located some 300 kilometres west of Berlin.

“If one supermarket does not provide such quality and variety, consumers go elsewhere to buy their groceries,” Herda added.

He told IPS that practically every German consumer misinterprets the so-called “best before date” printed on all food containers as a warning instead of a suggestion.

This behaviour forces the stores’ management to eliminate foodstuffs considered ‘unattractive’, even if they are still edible. As a result, thousands of tonnes of apples, bananas, milk, coffee, yoghurt, sugar and cheese rot in enourmous garbage containers all over the country.

Alex calls this throw-away mentality “outright insanity. I no longer pay for food. When I see what other people throw away, I realise the craziness of our affluent society.”

Twenty-eight-year-old Berlin resident Raphael Fellmer also benefits from the wasteful behaviour of his society. He and his companion Nieves, along with their four-month old daughter Alma Lucia, eat only ‘sorted out’ food.

“We only eat organic food thrown away by specialised stores,” Fellmer told IPS. “We do not spend a cent on food.”

Three to four times a week, mostly around midnight, Fellmer tours the nearby supermarkets. His equipment consists of nothing more than a head-lamp, a pair of gloves, a big rucksack and a bicycle.

“I usually collect more food than my family can actually eat,” he told IPS. “You just open the container and a mountain of edible food emerges in front of you.”

During the interview, Fellmer brewed a mug of organic coffee from Nicaragua. “I just got it from the store across the street,” he said. “It is even marked ‘fair trade’.”

“The sugar, also organic, comes from Madagascar,” he added.

Fellmer commented that such details illustrate “the sanctimony of many self-proclaimed (ethical) consumers in this rich society. You simply do not transport organic coffee and sugar across the world to throw it away here only because the ‘best before’ date suggests that the goods may be too old to be consumed,” Fellmer stressed.

The act of collecting thrown away food has become so widespread that people like Alex and Raphael have even coined a new verb – containern, meaning “looting food containers” – and have created Internet networks to spread the news about the best locations from which to collect dumped groceries.

In response to what the food retail industry has dubbed ‘looting’, supermarkets and grocery stores are now locking up their garbage containers. Many companies have even hired security personnel to keep away the looters.

Other food producers have found more creative ways to recycle food and avoid throwing it away. In the Western city of Duesseldorf, a bakery chain used to toss up to 12 tons of bread every month.

“I was deeply unhappy with this waste,” Roland Schueren, owner of the bakery chain, told IPS. “Now, we burn the old bread as (fuel) for our backing ovens. If all bakeries in the country did the same, Germany would save enormous amounts of energy and could spare one or two nuclear power plants.”

So far, this enormous waste of edible food has not led to substantial political change. The ministry for consumer protection announced in late 2011 that a new study would be carried out this year “to exactly quantify the dimensions of the problem,” according to one spokesperson.

The spokesperson also praised the policy of “best before date” labelling as “a great political accomplishment, since it (alerts) the consumer to the precise freshness of the foodstuff.”

However, the spokesperson admitted that the misinterpretation of the data “has led to waste. We will revise this.”

Germany’s wasteful behaviour is not unique in the industrialised world. According to the FAO study quoted above, roughly one third of the food produced in the world for human consumption every year gets lost or wasted.

Consumers in rich countries waste almost as much food (222 million tonnes) as the entire net food production of sub- Saharan Africa (230 million tonnes), according to FAO research.

The study suggested that the supermarkets’ tactic of encouraging consumers to buy more than they need is a huge factor leading to the mountains of waste that accumulate outside food retail stores, especially the so-called “buy three, pay two” marketing policy.

The study also suggests that consumers in countries such as Germany be taught that throwing food away “needlessly is unacceptable”, and be made aware that “given the limited availability of natural resources it is more effective to reduce food losses than increase food production in order to feed a growing world population.”

(END/2012)  Article Link: http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=106503

Survival: Exchanging Bold Ideas to Empower Urban Farmers

- Nourishing the Planet – http://blogs.worldwatch.org/nourishingtheplanet -

Innovation of the Week: Exchanging Bold Ideas to Empower Urban Farmers

Posted By Nourishing the Planet On December 29, 2011 @ 4:30 am

By Janeen Madan

Julius Musimenta, from the Agency for Integrated Rural Development in Kampala Uganda, spent 6 weeks in April working at Growing Power, a U.S. nonprofit working to improve access to healthy and safe food. At the headquarters based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Julius conducted vermi-composting projects, using worms to improve soil fertility, and worked on backyard poultry projects.

Food security fellows share ideas on practices in urban agriculture that are working on the ground. (Photo credit: Supriya Kumar)

Julius is one of 53 Professional Food Fellows in Food Security – an exchange program that brings together young leaders from the U.S. (Wisconsin, Colorado, and Indiana) and Africa (Uganda and Kenya), who are working to alleviate hunger in their home communities. They are involved in a wide range of agricultural projects, including expanding extension services, improving nutrition, and raising livestock and poultry in urban areas.

The program is supported by Bold Leaders—a Denver-based non-profit that provides training services for young leaders around the world—in partnership with Growing Power, Mazingira Institute, and Environmental Alert. It aims to foster collaboration among farmers, activists, and educators, working in the field of urban agriculture and encourages them to share ideas of what’s working on the ground.

During the two-year fellowship program, fellows visit each other’s countries twice a year, where they participate in training workshops, meet local organizations, and engage in discussions on the social, economic, and political factors that impact urban farming. The program hosts an interactive online forum where fellows can stay connected with each other and continue to share ideas, discuss best practices, and ask for advice.

The program is empowering fellows to make direct impacts on food security issues in their communities. After sharing his ideas and learning from other fellows, Stephen Makere Alexander developed a plan to start a school poultry farming project in his home community in Tanzania. The project will teach students to raise poultry, boosting nutrition and enabling them to earn extra money to pay for school supplies and uniforms.

The program emphasizes protecting environmental resources that small-scale farmers depend on for their food and income. According to Julius, food security has a symbiotic relationship with the environment. During his experience working with Growing Power, Julius worked with other fellows to find practices that can sustainably rebuild soil fertility.

Rather than silver bullet solutions, the program emphasizes the value of local innovations and seeks to find ways to connect farmers with ongoing research, says Alex Zizinga, founder and coordinator of  The Community Garden Project in Uganda. He adds that researchers—especially in Africa—are focused on scientific knowledge and often ignore the vital local knowledge of farmers.

This experience has enabled the visiting fellows to share lessons from their own work and to learn about similar food security issues facing communities in the U.S. “We shared our experiences with them and they told us what’s working. Now we’re taking a lot back home,” said Sylvia Galuoch, an urban farmer from Nairobi, Kenya.

Sharing ideas of what’s working and learning from each others’ experiences is an important first step in finding concrete solutions to the common challenges that urban farmers face.

Do you know of other exchange initiatives that foster collaboration among farmers across borders?

Janeen Madan was a communications associate with the Nourishing the Planet project. She is currently working with the World Food Programme in Dakar, Senegal.

To read more about the BOLD Food Leaders, see: Community Livelihood Strengthens Food Security at Grass Root Level

Holiday offer: To purchase a copy of State of the World 2011: Innovations that Nourish the Planet at a 50 percent discount, please click HERE and enter code SW1150. And to watch the one minute book trailer, click HERE.


Article printed from Nourishing the Planet: http://blogs.worldwatch.org/nourishingtheplanet

URL to article: http://blogs.worldwatch.org/nourishingtheplanet/innovation-of-the-week-exchanging-bold-ideas-to-empower-urban-farmers/

Copyright © 2011 Nourishing the Planet. All rights reserved.

Your grocery Bill Getting Higher, and Higher

Your grocery bill is getting higher, and higher

Getty Images

Grocery bill going up? You’re not alone — By Allison Linn

Paula McGowan has cut out soda, switched to store brands for other foods and even sent her boyfriend hunting for deer so she can put food on the table.

Still, she finds herself struggling with higher food prices.

“It’s milk, bread, just the basic stuff,” she said. “We’re looking at basics and it’s all going up.”

After two years in which overall food prices barely budged, groceries are getting more expensive.

The price of food at home is projected to rise by 4 to 5 percent this year, and another 2 to 3 percent next year, according to the Agriculture Department. That’s adding another financial worry for many people already living with tight budgets thanks to the weak economy and high jobless rate.

The percentage of people who say they had enough money to buy food in the last 12 months fell to its lowest level in three years, according to a Gallup poll released this month.   (Read Full Article)

FoodDay: October 24th

More Dust Storms Expected as Texas Drought Lingers

More dust storms expected as Texas drought lingers
‘Thing that is scary … dust storm is the same type of dust storm from during the 30s’
John Holsenbeck  /  AP

A billowing wall of red dust approaching Lubbock, Texas, on Monday. Meteorologists say people living on the parched High Plains of Texas could see more of the massive dust storms reminiscent of the Dust Bowl years as a record drought tightens itsgrip across the Southwest.

By BETSY BLANEY

LUBBOCK, Texas — The towering wall of billowing red dust roaring across the blue West Texas sky took Monroe Debusk back more than eight decades to the Dust Bowl years when he was growing up on his family’s cotton farm.

The 90-year-old farmer looked out his window Monday and saw the sky darken as a rare 1.5-mile-tall, 250-mile-long dust cloud stretched across the rain-starved land and blotted out the sun.

“I didn’t do anything — just thought back to the way it used to be,” Debusk said, recalling the massive dust storms that overwhelmed the region in the 1930s. “That’s the way they were.”

Meteorologists say people living on Texas’ parched plains could see more dust storms as a record drought tightens its grip across the Southwest. At least six sandstorms hit Phoenix this summer, with the most powerful striking on July 5 and measuring a mile high. But experts say another Dust Bowl is unlikely thanks to modern irrigation and farming techniques aimed at holding soil in place.

Dust storms form when wind whips up loose soil. They aren’t unusual in West Texas, although the size and speed of Monday’s cloud was rare. Typically, the wall of dirt climbs to only about 1,000 feet in that area, not the 8,000 feet seen with the latest storm, experts said.

The wind picked up with a drop in pressure along the edge of a fast-moving cold front, a pattern that typically happens in the fall and winter, meteorologists said. When the cloud hit Lubbock, winds speeds reached 74 mph in some places and visibility was far less than a quarter of a mile.

The wind knocked down tree limbs, which fell on utility lines, knocking out power in parts of the city of about 210,000 people. Dust lingered in the air afterward, filling people’s ears and nostrils and leaving grit in their teeth. A layer of dirt covered the pavement, cars and anything else left outside.

“The thing that is scary is this exact type of dust storm is the same type of dust storm from during the 30s,” said Tom Gill, a geology professor at the University of Texas-El Paso who has studied dust storms for years.

(READ FULL ARTICLE)

 

LATIN AMERICA: High Food Prices Present Challenges and Opportunities

LATIN AMERICA: High Food Prices Present Challenges and Opportunities – IPS ipsnews.net.

LATIN AMERICA
High Food Prices Present Challenges and Opportunities
By Emilio Godoy*


MEXICO CITY, Oct 14, 2011 (IPS) – The global food crisis, which threatens to aggravate hunger and poverty, makes it necessary for agriculture to diversify, adapt to climate change and raise productivity, say FAO and experts.

The report, “Panorama de la seguridad alimentaria y nutricional en América Latina y el Caribe. Altos precios de los alimentos: oportunidades y riesgos” (Outlook and perspectives of food security and nutrition in Latin America and the Caribbean: high food prices; opportunities and risks”), was presented Friday Oct. 14 by FAO (Food and Agriculture Organisation)

The report, currently available only in Spanish, warns that food prices, which have hit record highs, could continue to climb and remain extremely volatile.

This jeopardises the advances made in the fight against hunger and child malnutrition in the region, says the report, released ahead of World Food Day, Oct. 16, and the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, Oct. 17.

For major food producer countries such as Argentina, Brazil and Mexico, the present situation could increase the value of their exports, while suppliers of minerals, oil and gas such as Bolivia, Chile and Peru could offset costly food purchases thanks to the high prices of oil, copper or gold.

The countries of Central America, however, are hit hard by the high cost of food.

In Guatemala, where half of the population of 14 million lives in poverty and 17 percent in extreme poverty, according to United Nations figures, the food situation remains precarious.

Rony Palacios with the non-governmental National Network in Defence of Food Sovereignty in Guatemala (REDSAG) told IPS that the measures taken by the government to counteract food insecurity have been “ineffective, and do not address the structural problems.

“Trade agreements are signed, allowing subsidised purchases of food like rice, corn and wheat – crops in which we were self-sufficient in production, whereas now we depend on imports of those products, which has led to a loss of food sovereignty,” he said.

The first wave of surging food prices, in 2008, had a heavy impact on Latin America’s poor. Since June 2010, prices have been rising again, and in August 2010 prices were 130 percent higher than the average of the period 2000-2005 – even higher than the 2008 levels, FAO reports.

In Latin America and the Caribbean, hunger affected 52.5 million people last year, or nine percent of the total population.

That was 600,000 fewer than in 2009 – a drop due to policies implemented by governments to combat the problem which, however, have brought uneven results.  (READ FULL ARTICLE)

Horn Of Africa: 10 Ways You Can Help

Horn Of Africa: 10 Ways You Can Help.

Horn Of Africa: 10 Ways You Can Help

Published on 22 July 2011

Girls at the Howlwadag refugee centre in Mogadishu where WFP is currently provides cooked meals for around                            5,000 people every day. Photo: WFP/MarcoFrattini

More than 11 million people across the Horn of Africa are in urgent need of food assistance and WFP needs your help to get it to them.   Here are 10 things absolutely anyone can do to help us save lives.

1. Make an online donation
Over the coming weeks, WFP will feed more people across the Horn of Africa than live in Los Angeles. That’s a big job. Making a secure online donation is one of the best ways you can help us get it done. Donate now.

2. Donate by text message
Don’t have a credit card? No problem. If you live in the United States, Canada the United Kingdom or South Africa you can also donate by text message. Here’s how:

  • For the US, text the word AID to this number: 27722 to donate $10.
  • For Canada, text the word RELIEF to this number: 45678 to donate $5.
  • For the UK, text the word AID to this number: 70303 to donate £3.
  • For South Africa, text the word FOOD to this number: 38727 to donate R10.

3. Take the quiz
How much do you know about what’s going on in the Horn of Africa? Find out by taking this short quiz. For every person who takes it, a child will receive a warm meal thanks to an anonymous donor. Put your knowledge to the test and then challenge your friends! Take the quiz

4. Share this video
It’s less than one minute long and will give you a good idea of the situation in the Horn of Africa and what WFP is doing about it. After you’ve seen it make sure all of your friends see it as well. Watch the video

5. Stay current
Thousands of people are on the move across Somalia and WFP is rapidly scaling up its operations in the region. Check out our interactive crisis map to see how WFP’s emergency operation is unfolding. For the latest news and updates plus plus photos, videos and stories from the field go to the Crisis Page.

6. Get social
The world needs to know about what’s going on in the Horn of Africa and that starts with your friends on Facebook, your followers on Twitter, your subscribers on YouTube etc.  Join our online communities and share the message with your friends and followers. Facebook | Twitter | Youtube

7. Grab a banner
Are you a blogger? Go check out our collection of banners and then put one on your site. Make sure that the people who come to your blog know what it’s for. If you don’t write a blog yourself, send this link around to the bloggers you like to read and tell them what to do. Grab a banner

8. Get these ads published
Contact your local newspaper and ask them to publish one of our print ads. Make sure they know that you think this is the single most important story in the news right now. See the print ads

9. Be creative
There are hundreds of things ordinary people can do to help our operations in the Horn of Africa. Taking up a collection at school or holding a neighbourhood fundraiser are just a few of things are supporters have done to help feed the hungry. If you need some inspiration, find out what Andrew, an 11-year-old from Ghana, has done to help children like him in the Horn of Africa. Read the story

10. Keep us posted
We want to know what you’re doing to raise money and awareness to help us do our work. You can write to us at community@wfp.org, get in touch with us on Twitter at @WFP or post a comment on our Facebook page.

Page Link:   http://www.wfp.org/stories/horn-africa-10-ways-you-can-help?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=enews-aug2011-USCA-supporters

How Food is Being Used as a Weapon

How food is being used as a weapon.

naturalnews.com
Originally published August 17 2011
How food is being used as a weapon
by Anthony Gucciardi

(NaturalNews) When people begin to starve, instinctive primal triggers lead to a desire to do absolutely anything for food. Those with food, whether it is the government or a nearby family, will have complete power over others. Food could essentially be used as a weapon, thousands of times more powerful than money or most any other resource. But even in current times, food is used as a weapon by those in power through the use of government regulations and chemical additives that destroy both your health and your bank account. Artificial inflation and speculation, toxic substances hidden in the food, and government regulations are but a few examples. But where did the idea of using food as a supremely powerful weapon begin?

In 1974, the idea of using food as a weapon was introduced in a 200-page report (http://wlym.co/text/NSSM200.htm) by politician Henry Kissinger. The report, entitled National Security Study Memorandum  200: Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S. Security and Overseas Interests, stated that food aid would be withheld from developing countries in need until they submitted to birth control policies that would effectively sterilize large numbers of the population to curb growth.

The document states:

“There is also some established precedent for taking account of family planning performance in appraisal of assistance requirements by AID [U.S. Agency for International Development] and consultative groups. Since population growth is a major determinant of increases in food demand, allocation of scarce PL 480 resources should take account of what steps a country is taking in population control as well as food production. In these sensitive relations, however, it is important in style as well as substance to avoid the appearance of coercion.”

With little economic prowess and a nation in peril, developing countries would be forced to comply or face continued famine and death. Food was the weapon, and it was being held captive as a means of foreign policy and warfare. Holding onto valuable food aid and allowing innocent villagers to starve is not much different than waging open physical warfare upon them, which would be prohibited by international law and frowned upon by the majority of citizens worldwide. Henry Kissinger’s report is but one incident of food weaponry, however. There are a number of other ways in which food is used as a daily weapon against the public.  (Read more)

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