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Growing Food, Growing Community, Community Supported Agriculture In Rural Iowa

Growing Food, Growing Community, Community Supported Agriculture In Rural Iowa. Betty L. Wells and Rhonda Yoder. What is CSA?. A direct partnership between a farmer/grower & consumers The consumer pays for shares In exchange for a weekly share of the future harvest

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Growing Food, Growing Community, Community Supported Agriculture In Rural Iowa

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  1. Growing Food, Growing Community, Community Supported Agriculture In Rural Iowa Betty L. Wells and Rhonda Yoder

  2. What is CSA? • A direct partnership between a farmer/grower & consumers • The consumer pays for shares • In exchange for a weekly share of the future harvest • Growers & consumers share the bounty & the risk of production

  3. What is CSA? • “…farmers & community members working together to create a local food system. CSA farmers may produce fresh vegetables, fruits, & meats directly to local community members. CSA differs from direct marketing in that members commit to a full-season price in the spring, sharing the risks of production. With this up-front support, farmers can concentrate on growing quality food & caring for the land. In return, members know where their food comes from & how it is grown; they receive weekly food shares & share a connection to the land & the farmer.”

  4. The First CSA • In the 1960s, Japanese women, concerned with increased food imports, food prices, and loss of family farms asked local farmers to grow fruits & vegetables directly for them • Farmers agreed on condition that families commit to supporting the farmers • “teikei” means partnership, or food with a farmer’s face

  5. Diversity of CSAs • Some CSAs offer shareholders an opportunity to work in exchange for a reduction in their cost (some require their members to work) • Some maintain central distribution sites, others require members to pick up their food at the farm (transportation is one of the biggest problems)

  6. As an Alternative • CSA is becoming a thriving partnership on the edges of the global system. • 1986 in the Northeast in the U.S. • There are over 1000 CSAs in the U.S. & Canada • 100,000 households are members

  7. Iowa • This article looks at the growth of Community Supported Agriculture in Iowa • By 1996 there were forty CSA farms in Iowa. • In the past rural communities and family farms were synonymous

  8. The globalization of Agriculture, as well as the farm crisis, shifted power from rural to urban. • In a traditionally agricultural state, Iowa has become urban & a net importer of food. • Even so, rural communities in Iowa still depend on healthy agriculture, and farm families still depend on healthy rural communities. • CSA is a way to strengthen ties to between farmers and non-farmers in rural areas.

  9. CSAs reduce the hidden costs associated with our food system • In the conventional food system, food travels 1129-2146 miles • In a CSA system food travels a maximum of 200 miles, consumes less energy • CSAs reduce waste by minimizing packaging • CSAs maintain biodiversity & local ecological knowledge • Rather than externalities of the conventional system, CSAs externalize environmental benefits • Food dollars circulate locally

  10. CSA Production • This article challenged the Idea that CSA members were educated rich folks who lived in cities and had different lifestyles than the farmers. • More than half of CSA’s serve rural areas and small towns. Some have all their members within a few miles. • Many conventional farm families became members because they did not have time to grow their own food, but understood the value of good home-grown food.

  11. Values • Farmers involved in CSA production need to make enough money to continue production, but they also stressed other motives for getting into CSA, education, diversity, and a community-based system. • Many producers wanted to build friendships with customers and educate people about food and farming, and pass on practical knowledge between generations.

  12. Growers take pride in growing a diverse variety of crops, and providing alternative land use. • Also more than half of CSA producers are women. They often live on conventional farms and start a CSA as a way to generate income and stay on the farm.

  13. Many farmers also see a divide between the producers and consumers of food and want to provide a community based alternative. • They also believe that they can change the economic situation in Iowa. “Cooperation with nature and cooperation with people.”

  14. Iowa Examples • Field to Family Community Food Project. Goals are to work for local, sustainable, and equitable food systems. Also to create self- reliant producers, and get wholesome food to low-income families. • Strong endorsement given to this group by Mid Iowa Community Action Agency. • FTF also gives local foods vouchers for use at farmers markets.

  15. Summary • Integrating the CSA into daily family and food rhythms creates family and community ties based on food and farming and counters the global system of competition, homogenization, standardization, and fabrication. • The CSA is a sensible alternative to the industrial food system.

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