Archive for December, 2008

Food Democracy Now Agriculture Secretary Petition

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

53,358 people have signed this petition as of this writing. Petition at
http://www.fooddemocracynow.org/

Dear President-Elect Obama,

We congratulate you on your historic victory and
welcome the change that your election promises to
usher in for our nation. As leaders in the
sustainable agriculture and rural advocacy
community we supported you in record numbers
during the caucus, primary and general election
because of the family farm-friendly policies that
you advocated during your campaign.

As our nation

Fwd: Call to Action on food crisis presented to Obama

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008

>For immediate release
>December 15, 2008
>Contact: Christina Schiavoni, (212) 629-9788,
>Christina@whyhunger.org
>Kathy Ozer, (202) 543-5675, kozer@nffc.net
>
>
>President-elect Obama presented with urgent “Call to Action”
>to end food crisis
>Experts advise that economic reform must include sound farm and food
>policy
>
>As food banks scramble to respond to a dramatic increase in demand this
>holiday season, while unemployment surges and farmers face plummeting
>crop prices, a broad sector of groups are calling on the incoming Obama
>administration to put hunger and the global food crisis front and center
>on its list of top priorities.
>
>In today’s open letter to President-elect Obama, faith-based,
>environmental, agricultural, and hunger organizations outlined a “Call
>to Action on the World Food Crisis,” that includes specific
>recommendations for policy shifts and U.S. global leadership. The
>authors of the Call to Action call themselves the “US Working Group on
>the Food Crisis.”
>
>”The global food crisis ceded headlines to the financial crisis this
>fall,” noted Bill Ayres, Executive Director of World Hunger Year. “But
>the problem has not gone away. In fact, the fragile economy in the U.S.
>and around the world has only made hunger more widespread.”
>
>According to a recent report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture,
>which tracks U.S. food insecurity, 36.2 million people, including 12.4
>million children, were food insecure in 2007, even before the economic
>recession. The most recent global figures from the Food & Agriculture
>Organization estimate 963 million hungry people, a situation that the
>Working Group calls “morally reprehensible” and a potential driver of
>political unrest and instability.
>
>As a candidate, President-elect Obama pledged to end childhood hunger in
>the U.S. by 2015, and publicly recognized the deep flaws in the current
>global food system and the need for reform. “We want to give him some
>tools to reach these goals,” continued Ayres. “Addressing the food
>crisis well is not only more urgent in light of the economic downtown -
>it can be an important part of the solution.”
>
>The working group lays out specific recommendations for national
>policies that would:
>
>* Stabilize and guarantee fair prices for farmers and consumers
>globally;
>* Rebalance power in the food system;
>* Make agriculture environmentally sustainable;
>* Respect, protect and fulfill human rights of farmworkers and other
>food system workers; and
>* Guarantee the right to food.
>
>In promoting these solutions, the Working Group points to recent
>findings by international experts under the UN-sponsored International
>Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for
>Development (IAASTD). The IAASTD results, which were accepted and
>approved by 58 governments around the world (but not fully by the U.S.),
>emphasize the importance of supporting multifunctional, small-scale
>agricultural production to effectively address both hunger and
>environmental sustainability in the long term.
>
>”We are at a critical crossroads in rethinking the structure of our food
>and farming systems worldwide,” says Dr. Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, Senior
>Scientist for Pesticide Action Network and one of the authors of the
>IAASTD report. “We believe President-elect Obama can and must play a key
>role in moving us toward a future where sustainable agriculture supports
>vibrant rural communities, respects the dignity of workers, and delivers
>safe and healthy food for all.”
>
>”NAFTA, the WTO and other free trade agreements have pushed countries to
>become too dependent on highly speculative and volatile global markets
>for their food security,” said Ben Burkett, Mississippi farmer and
>President of the National Family Farm Coalition. “We need to reorient
>our farm policy away from a primary focus on exports and corporate
>profits and toward support for family farmers and food
>self-sufficiency.”
>
>Dennis Olson from the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy added,
>”There is now a global consensus that agricultural trade deregulation
>has played a large role in the food crisis. With regard to trade, we
>need to stop treating food like TV sets. Countries need the policy
>flexibility to stabilize agriculture markets and support their own
>production of healthy food - and that includes the U.S.”
>
>For more information:
>Letter to President-elect Obama:
>http://www.usfoodcrisisgroup.org/files/Open%20Letter%20to%20President-el
>ect%2012-15-08.doc
>US Working Group on the World Food Crisis and Call to Action:
>http://www.usfoodcrisisgroup.org/
>
>
>Available for interviews:
>* Kathy Ozer, Executive Director, National Family Farm Coalition,
>202-543-5675; kozer@nffc.net
>* Bill Ayres, Executive Director, WHY (World Hunger Year),
>212-629-6259; bill@whyhunger.org
>* Marcia Ishii-Eiteman, PhD, Senior Scientist, Pesticide Action
>Network North America (PANNA), 415-981-6205 x325;
>mie@panna.org
>* Dennis Olson, Senior Policy Analyst, Trade & Global Governance
>Program, Institute for Agriculture & Trade Policy, 612-870-3412;
>dolson@iatp.org

This message originated from or was forwarded by:
Chrys Ostrander
Chrysalis Farm @ Tolstoy
Organic Micro-permaculture
33495 Mill Canyon Rd.
Davenport, WA 99122
509-725-0610
chrys@thefutureisorganic.net
http://www.thefutureisorganic.net

“From each according to their ability, to each according to their needs”
Louis Jean Joseph Charles Blanc - “The organization of work” 1839
Karl Marx - “Critique of the Gotha Program” 1875

“The purpose of agriculture is not the production of food, but the
perfection of human beings”
Masanobu Fukuoka (February 2, 1913 - August 16, 2008) - “One Straw
Revolution” 1978

“We will never have an organic future and a stable climate until we
pull all the troops out of Iraq
and redirect our annual $650 billion military budget to greening the
economy and guaranteeing
a sustainable environment and economic justice for everyone.”
Ronnie Cummins, National Director, Organic Consumers Association
at the “Farms Not Arms” public forum and protest in Manhattan, September, 2007

Please consider making a contribution towards my sustainable
agriculture organizing work.
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Thank you.