Potluck News: June 2008

FARM BILL UPDATE:

Farm Bill passed with veto-proof majority

 

FOOD FOR THOUGHT:

The end of the horn of plenty?

 

NEWS:

Northeast food and farms go “social”

Young Maine families desire simple farming way of life

Niche markets could fill Mid-Atlantic farmers' pockets

New York farms and wineries feel effects of a labor shortage

UConn raises bees to supply dining halls' honey

Vermont's Governor won't veto new hemp law

 

EVENTS:

6/1-3: Agriculture and the Environment: Achieving Balance, Harrisburg, PA

6/4: Small Ruminant Management, Sterling, MA

6/5: Hardy Har Harvest Comedy Show, Arlington, MA

6/6: Small Ruminant Production Tour, Bedford County, PA

6/7: The Role of the Horse in the Farm Organism, Chestnut Ridge, NY

6/7: 7th Annual RI Sustainable Living Festival & Clean Energy Expo, Coventry, RI

6/14: Raising Layers: Small-Scale Egg Production, Shelburne, VT

6/8-8/15: Vermont Sustainable Agriculture Semester, Craftsbury Common, VT

6/9: Construction of Portable Animal Shelters for Small Ruminants, Cumberland County, PA

6/10-14: International Symposium on Society and Resource Management, Burlington, VT

6/21: Transitioning to Organic Dairy, Hardwick, MA

6/22: Connecticut NOFA Organic Farms Tour, Fairfield County, CT

7/10: Organic Dairy Transition Pasture Walk, Colrain, MA

7/18: Rodale Field Day, Kutztown, PA

7/24: Raising and Marketing Grass-Fed Meat, Shelburne, MA

8/24: International Kitchen Garden Day, your garden, your community

9/19-21: Common Ground Fair, Unity, ME

9/19-21: PA Renewable Energy & Sustainable Living Festival, Kempton, PA

10/5: Mother Earth Harvest Fair, Glenrock, PA

 

OPPORTUNITIES:

Food Justice Coordinator, Just Food, New York City, NY

Executive Director, Intervale Center, Burlington, VT

Outreach Manager, Campaigns, The Humane Society of The United States, Gaithersburg, MD

Call for Nominations, Glynwood Center’s 6th Annual Harvest Awards

Food and Society Policy Fellowship call for applications

Marketing and Communications Manager, Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, Pocantico Hills, NY

Director of Development, Glynwood Center, Cold Spring, NY

Multiple Job Openings, The Food Trust, Philadelphia, PA

Multiple Job Openings, Community Food Resource Center, New York, NY

NRI: Agricultural Prosperity for Small & Medium Sized Farms

Organic Research and Education Grants

New York Agriculture Innovation Center Grant

 

 

*******************

FARM BILL UPDATE

*******************

Farm Bill PASSED WITH VETO-PROOF MAJORITY

For those of you who may have missed it, the Farm Bill was voted into law last month with a veto-proof majority.  Since then, there have been varying opinions on the merits of the bill ranging from enthusiastic praise to harsh condemnation.  What people think of the bill largely depends on who you ask, where they’re from, and what their issues and criteria for success are.   Below are some editorials and op-eds expressing some of these differing views.  For a closer look at what made it into the final bill, check out this Farm Bill snapshot produced by the Sustainable Agriculture Coalition: http://www.sustainableagriculturecoalition.org/ActionCenter/Revised_SAC_Farm_Bill_Snapshot5_08.pdf

 

Why we need the Farm Bill (Boston Globe, MA)

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2008/05/26/why_we_need_the_farm_bill/  

 

A Disgraceful Farm Bill (New York Times, NY)

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/16/opinion/16fri3.html

 

Farm Bill fights childhood hunger (Burlington Free Press, VT)

http://www.burlingtonfreepress.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080602/OPINION/806020301/1006

 

Farm bill distributes aid unfairly (Norwich Bulletin, CT)

http://www.norwichbulletin.com/opinions/x1208366975/Our-View-Farm-bill-distributes-aid-unfairly

 

More help for needy, but no reform (Morning Sentinel, Maine)

http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/view/columns/5068076.html

 

 

*******************

FOOD FOR THOUGHT

*******************

THE END OF THE HORN OF PLENTY?

(Toronto Star) - "On nearly every level, we are reaching the end of what may one day be called the `golden age' of food," Paul Roberts writes in his latest book. There is growing evidence that he's right. The most immediate manifestations: the soaring cost of corn, wheat, rice and other basic grains, the fruit of record-high oil prices, panic hoarding, greedy speculation, climate change, soil degradation, water shortages, natural disasters, and the heavily subsidized rush to convert edible grains into biofuel. The results: malnutrition, mass protests, and disease. It's not that the world is running short of plants and animals to fill nearly 7 billion bellies. Not yet, anyway. But the system for distributing the calories required to keep us going is completely out of whack. At one extreme, it provides North Americans with a diet that fattens and malnourishes them all at once. At the other, it denies even a pitifully adequate supply to at least a billion people. What Roberts writes about, though, is something even bigger. It is, as he calls his information-packed, 322-page work, The End of Food. Today's mess, he warns, is simply one station along the track to an unhappy destination. Not only does Earth's population continue to grow, but people in some developing countries are demanding, and beginning to copy, our gluttonous lifestyle. Cracks are appearing in what appeared to be our bottomless ability to increase production. Without dramatic changes in how we grow food and what we eat, we will experience shortages. Full article here: http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/Books/article/434830

 

 

*******************

NEWS

*******************

NorthEAST FOOd AND FARMS GO “Social”

Food and farms have always been good ways of bringing people together, but - thanks to a new online social network –  they’re helping to bring people and organizations from across the region together in new ways. The Northeast Food and Farms Network (http://www.nefood.org ) opened its virtual doors two weeks ago, offering a space where sustainable food and farm advocates from the 12-state Northeast region can connect and exchange information.  Participants are using the new site for different things including posting job and event announcements, blogging, uploading photos & videos, and creating virtual groups. Since opening for business, the site has seen over 150 people sign up and create profile pages.  The Northeast Food and Farms Network is a project of the Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Working Group (NESAWG).  For more info, please see: http://www.nefood.org

 

Young MAINE families desire simple farming way of life

(Bangor Daily) - There’s a glimmer of hope for agriculture in Maine in the guise of young families entering farming for the first time — no land inheritances, no barns full of equipment already bought and paid for, no established herds or fields — just a raw desire for a simple farming way of life. Fed up with mass marketing, the repulsive living conditions of commercially raised animals, and the mediocre quality of the products, Dan and Carrie Armiger established their first farm in rural Pittsfield just 18 months ago. In Maine, 65 percent of farmers are already at age 55 or older, with no family member coming up behind them to take over the farm, according to state agricultural experts. Many of these farms will be sold to developers and their "last crop" will likely be house lots. The Armigers, however, headed back to the land, seeking a simpler life, and along the way they discovered that many other people are seeking the same thing. Full article here: http://bangornews.com/news/t/midmaine.aspx?articleid=164487&zoneid=182

 

Niche markets could fill Mid-Atlantic farmers' pockets

(Baltimore Sun) - Although prices continue to rise at the supermarket, the farmer's share of the American food dollar has declined 35 percent over the past 27 years, and the farmers are looking for ways to reverse this trend. Niche marketing may be the answer, particularly for farmers in the Mid-Atlantic region, one of the most populous sections of the country. Niche marketing or direct marketing involves farmers selling directly to the consumer, and it can boost their share of the food dollar by providing them with a higher return per unit sold. This is a conclusion of a recent report, "Niche Marketing Outside of the Box, but in the Black," by Ginger S. Myers, a regional extension marketing specialist with the University of Maryland Cooperative Extension. Full article here: http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/harford/bal-ha.farm01jun01,0,5470721.story

 

Local farms, wineries feel effects of a labor shortage

(Grand Island Record) - Some local farms and wineries are having a problem with finding labor — the result of immigration issues and a shrinking pool of migrant workers. Jim Bittner of Singer Farms in Appleton said his farm is doing OK for now, but is making changes to compensate for the cost of the missing labor. He had to cut back on growing cherries and peaches because there isn’t enough help to pick them. Labor comprises about 50 percent of the costs of growing cherries and peaches. “We’re nervous as heck. We barely made it last year with enough help,” Bittner said. “It’s more a fear of the unknown. We’re hoping Washington, D.C., gets serious about it.” Bittner said his biggest labor need is when the apples are in season, which is about the first two weeks of September. The problem with growing fresh produce is the fruit has to be picked at a certain time. And there just aren’t enough hands to pick. “We made a decision in January not to plant as much,” Bittner said. “A lot of fresh market produce has to be picked in a timely fashion. Otherwise it turns too ripe or not ripe enough.” He added Singer will be growing blueberries, as well as tart cherries, that can be picked by machines, not workers. Full article here: http://www.grandislandrecord.com/local/gnnlocalnews_story_152235815.html

 

UConn Raises Bees To Supply Dining Halls' Honey

(Hartford Courant) - In a great green meadow, behind a forgotten apple orchard, 100,000 bees got to work Saturday making honey for University of Connecticut dining halls. Two university dining service employees gently shook the bees, shipped in from Georgia, into 10 new hives Saturday afternoon, making UConn probably the first college in the country to make its own honey for its dining halls. By next year, UConn hopes to produce as much as 2,000 pounds of honey from the hives, more than half the 3,800 pounds the university kitchens use a year in marinades, sauces and baked goods. Starting an apiary seemed like a logical, if novel, step in UConn's efforts to serve more locally grown food, part of a national trend in college dining services to become more environmentally conscious. Full article here: http://www.courant.com/community/news/ec/hc-uconnbees0601.artjun01,0,7820873.story

 

Vermont's Governor won't veto new hemp law

(Times Argus) - Gov. James Douglas will allow a bill legalizing hemp to become law despite concerns from the law enforcement community about its impact on marijuana eradication efforts in the state. The legislation, which legalizes the cultivation of industrial hemp in Vermont, won nearly unanimous support in the both the House and Senate this session. Though Douglas doesn't support the bill, and has refused to attach his signature to it, he will nonetheless forward the legislation to the Secretary of State, which will effectively enact the law. "It's a do-nothing bill," Douglas spokesman Jason Gibbs said Thursday. "The federal law still prohibits the cultivation of industrial hemp, and so the practical impact of this legislation is virtually nothing." Douglas could have vetoed the legislation, an option he considered after law enforcement officials raised concerns. But Gibbs said Douglas does not "exercise his veto authority lightly," and that the bill is too insignificant to warrant such an extreme action. "The consequence of this bill is so low, so insignificant, that it doesn't rise to the level of a gubernatorial veto," Gibbs said. Farmers won't be able to grow hemp crops just yet. Federal statute, which supercedes state law, draws no distinction between hemp and marijuana, and anyone growing either is subject to prosecution. Full article here: http://www.timesargus.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080530/NEWS01/805300377/1002/NEWS01

 

 

 

*******************

EVENTS 

 

******************* 

 

(Attention food and farm event organizers: the best way of insuring that your event appears below is to list it on the events calendar at www.nefood.org (once you have signed in, click on “events” and then “add an event”).  In doing so, you reach the nefood.org web audience and NEFOOD listserv audience in one go! Thanks)

 

 

6/4

Small Ruminant Management, Sterling, MA

NOFA/Mass, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the University of Massachusetts Extension have organized a series of Grazing Workshops as a continuing education resource for Massachusetts farmers. Topics at each event will vary, but will include pasture management, organic transition and herd health, forage species, soil fertility, fencing and water systems, and summer and winter grazing. Pasture walks will take place from 10:00 - 1:00. For more info, see: http://www.umass.edu/cdl/MassGrass.html

 

6/5

Hardy Har Harvest Comedy Show, Arlington, MA

To celebrate the opening of market season, Mass Farmers Markets presents "Hardy Har Har: a family-friendly comedy show" with Boston-area comedians Jimmy Dunn and Tony V. Join us Thursday, June 5th at 7pm at the Regent Theatre in Arlington. Tickets available online from the Regent Theatre (https://www.interweave.us/tix/hardy.htm), at the box office, or by calling (781) 646-4849.

 

6/6

Small Ruminant Production Tour, Bedford County, PA

Join PA-Women's Ag Network representative Melanie Barkley for a tour of two Bedford County farms that are producing meat goats and sheep. Melanie will guide a tour of the farms and discuss pasture species, fencing, and water systems. The tour will compare the farms' different marketing strategies—direct marketing meat goats on the farm, sales to New Holland, and sales of breeding stock. For more info, see: http://wagn.cas.psu.edu/Calendar.html

 

6/7

The Role of the Horse in the Farm Organism, Chestnut Ridge, NY

In this one-day workshop, farmer Mac Mead will present a comprehensive picture of the role of the horse in the farm organism. After reviewing the basic nature and care of the draft horse and its harness and equipment, we will move from the classroom to the barn, where attendees will get hands-on instruction and practice in the tasks of grooming and harnessing. In the field, attendees will try their hands at several practical tasks, such as logging, plowing, discing and working raised beds. For more info, see: http://www.pfeiffercenter.org/workshops/index.asp

 

6/7

7th Annual RI Sustainable Living Festival & Clean Energy Expo, Coventry, RI

Rhode Island’s premier event for Sustainable Living, combining educational workshops, children’s programs, vendors and exhibitors with live entertainment all in a fun family-friendly environment. For more info, see: http://www.livingfest.org

 

6/8-8/15

Vermont Sustainable Agriculture Semester, Craftsbury Common, VT

The Sterling College Sustainable Agriculture Semester immerses students in the daily rhythms and realities of farming. The Sustainable Agriculture Semester is a 8-11 credit integrated program of work and study exploring ecological management of plants, animals, and land. Classroom instruction, hands-on training, and work on the farm are combined to teach sustainable practices and to foster discussion about agricultural issues. The deadline for application for the 2008 summer semester is April 14, 2008.For more information, see:

http://www.sterlingcollege.edu/AD.summerfarm.html

 

6/9

Construction of Portable Animal Shelters for Small Ruminants, Cumberland County, PA

Join Pennsylvania Women's Ag Network representative Sandra Miller at Painted Hand Farm in Cumberland County for a hands-on construction workshop. At this event, the third in a series of construction workshops, participants will build small, light, and inexpensive shelters for sheep and goats. For more info, see: http://wagn.cas.psu.edu/Calendar.html

 

6/10-14

International Symposium on Society and Resource Management, Burlington, VT

ISSRM is the official meeting of the International Association for Society and Natural Resources, and is the largest international meeting of social scientists who focus on environmental and natural resources issues. The theme for this year's symposium is "People and Place: Linking Culture and Nature." For more info, see: http://www.issrm2008.org/

 

6/14

Raising Layers: Small-Scale Egg Production, Shelburne, VT

This morning workshop is part of the Backyard Farmer series presented by Shelburne Farms. Learn the basics of backyard egg production, including the economics of producing eggs, selecting the perfect laying hen, basic and innovative housing solutions, feed requirements, and flock health management. For more info, see: http://www.shelburnefarms.org/calendarofevents/index.shtm

 

6/21

Transitioning to Organic Dairy, Hardwick, MA

NOFA/Mass, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the University of Massachusetts Extension have organized a series of Grazing Workshops as a continuing education resource for Massachusetts farmers. Topics at each event will vary, but will include pasture management, organic transition and herd health, forage species, soil fertility, fencing and water systems, and summer and winter grazing. For more info, see: http://www.umass.edu/cdl/MassGrass.html

 

6/22

Connecticut NOFA Organic Farms Tour, Fairfield County, CT

Tour three organic farms in Fairfield County with the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Connecticut. For more info, see: http://www.ctnofa.org/

 

7/10

Organic Dairy Transition Pasture Walk, Colrain, MA

NOFA/Mass, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the University of Massachusetts Extension have organized a series Grazing Workshops as a continuing education resource for Massachusetts farmers. Topics at each event will vary, but will include pasture management, organic transition and herd health, forage species, soil fertility, fencing and water systems, and summer and winter grazing. This event takes place at Colrain Dairy Farm. For more info, see: http://www.umass.edu/cdl/MassGrass.html

 

7/18

Rodale Field Day, Kutztown, PA

At the Rodale Institute's annual field day their researchers provide updates and tours of the Farming Systems Trial research underway on the 333-acre certified organic farm. for more info, see: http://www.rodaleinstitute.org/on_our_farm

 

7/24

Raising and Marketing Grass-Fed Meat, Shelburne, MA

NOFA/Mass, USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the University of Massachusetts Extension have organized a series of on-farm pasture walks and Grazing Workshops as a continuing education resource for Massachusetts farmers. This event takes place at Wheel-View Farm. For more info, see: http://www.umass.edu/cdl/MassGrass.html

 

8/24

International Kitchen Garden Day, your garden, your community

Kitchen Garden Day is an annual, decentralized celebration of food produced on a human-scale. It is an opportunity for people around the world to gather in their gardens with friends, family, and members of their local community to celebrate the multiple pleasures and benefits of home-grown, hand-made foods. For more info, see: http://www.kitchengardenday.org  

 

9/19-21

Common Ground Fair, Unity, ME

MOFGA celebrates its 32nd Common Ground Country Fair on September 19, 20 & 21, 2008, in Unity, Maine. The Fair allows fairgoers to make connections with a rapidly expanding base of organic farms in the state of Maine. Hundreds of vendors, exhibitors and demonstrators, more than 1,000 volunteers, and roughly 50,000 fairgoers will gather to: share knowledge about sustainable living; eat delicious, organic, Maine-grown food; buy and sell beautiful Maine crafts and useful agricultural products; compete in various activities; dance; sing and have a great time. For more info, see: http://mofga.org/TheFair/tabid/135/Default.aspx  

 

9/19-21

PA Renewable Energy & Sustainable Living Festival, Kempton, PA

A three-day festival about renewable energy, natural building construction, sustainable agriculture, land-use planning, forestry and healthy living practices in general. Featuring dynamic speakers, national exhibitors, workshops, hands-on demonstrations, vendors, live music and entertainment, children's activities, food and more.For more info, see: http://www.paenergyfest.com/

 

10/5

Mother Earth Harvest Fair, Glenrock, PA

Combining the atmosphere of a traditional country fair and farmer's market with cutting-edge advances in alternative fuels, green building, and sustainable living, the Mother Earth Harvest Fair is a celebration and showcase of healthy, balanced, and sustainable living in the Chesapeake Bioregion. For more info, Contact: 717-235-6610

 

 

*******************

OPPORTUNITIES

*******************  

Food Justice Coordinator, Just Food, New York City, NY

Just Food is a NYC non-profit organization that addresses regional farm and food issues. We work to build a more just food system. This means, for example, that family farmers make a fair profit for their efforts, and all people have access to affordable, healthy food. It also means that farming techniques focus on the ecological methods that protect nature's resources, as well as the urban and rural people that live off these resources. One of the main aims of our Food Justice program is to encourage NYC residents to be more aware of and engaged in farm and food issue advocacy. Last day to apply: June 11, 2008 For more info, see: http://www.idealist.org/en/job/282395-329

 

Executive Director, Intervale Center, Burlington, VT

The Executive Director is responsible for carrying out the initiatives of the Board of Directors in accordance with the comprehensive strategic plan and leads the Intervale Foundation in fulfilling its mission to develop sustainable ecological systems that provide solutions for productive land stewardship, innovative farming practices, and sustainable economic development. Last day to apply: June 30, 2008 For more info, see: http://www.idealist.org/en/job/281560-123

           

Outreach Manager, Campaigns, The Humane Society of The United States, Gaithersburg, MD

Care about animals—and the planet? Here’s your chance to join a winning team that’s working hard to improve the lives of farm animals! The Humane Society of the United States is hiring an outreach manager for its factory farming campaign. Last day to apply: July 1, 2008 For more info, see: http://www.idealist.org/en/job/278349-76

 

Call for Nominations, Glynwood Center’s 6th Annual National Harvest Awards

The Harvest Awards honor individuals, organizations, and businesses across the United States that do an exceptional job of supporting sustainable agriculture and regional food systems. Deadline for nominations: 21 July 2008.  For more info, see: http://www.glynwood.org

 

Food and Society Policy Fellowship call for applications

The Thomas Jefferson Agricultural Institute is pleased to announce a request for applications for the 2009-2010 class of Food & Society Policy Fellows.

Due date: 26 June 2008. Download application information here: http://www.foodandsocietyfellows.org/publications.cfm?refID=102200

Download the application cover sheet here: http://www.foodandsocietyfellows.org/publications.cfm?refID=102199

 

Marketing and Communications Manager, Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture, Pocantico Hills, NY

Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture is a farm, a kitchen, a classroom—an exhibit, a laboratory, a campus. The mission of this unique, nonprofit, member-driven collaboration is to celebrate, teach and advance community-based food production and enjoyment, from farm to classroom to plate. Stone Barns has an immediate opening for a full-time Marketing and Communications Manager. Supervised by the Managing Director, the Marketing and Communications Manager will have primary responsibility for all marketing projects, overseeing development, design and production of all internal and external materials. Working with the Managing Director, the Marketing and Communications Manager will develop and implement an integrated marketing and communications strategy for this growing organization. Last day to apply: June 20, 2008 For more info, see: http://www.idealist.org/en/job/275759-287

 

Director of Development, Glynwood Center, Cold Spring, NY

The Director is responsible for all fundraising programs for Glynwood Center. This position reports to the President and the Board of Directors on fundraising goals and achievement. The Director will head a comprehensive fundraising program to meet the short and long-term needs of Glynwood Center. This will include gifts from foundations, corporations and individuals to support annual unrestricted needs, special projects and endowment. Last day to apply: June 22, 2008 For more info, see: http://www.idealist.org/en/job/276320-2

 

Multiple openings, Greater Boston Food Bank, Boston, MA

The Greater Boston Food Bank is the largest hunger-relief organization in New England, and one of the largest food banks in the country, distributing more than 25 million pounds of food annually to a network of more than 600 member hunger-relief agencies. For more info, see: http://www.gbfb.org/aboutUs/CurrentOpenings.cfm

 

MULTIPLE JOB OPENINGS, THE FOOD TRUST, PHILADELPHIA, PA

The Food Trust is a nationally recognized nonprofit organization improving the supply of affordable food and good nutrition in the mid-Atlantic region. The mission of The Food Trust is to ensure that everyone has access to affordable, nutritious food. For more info, see: http://www.thefoodtrust.org/php/about/jobs.php  

 

MULTIPLE JOB OPENINGS, FOODCHANGE, NEW YORK, NY

FoodChange (formerly known as the Community Food Resource Center) is dedicated to helping low-income New Yorkers gain and maintain access to nutritious food, income support and decent housing. For more info, see: http://www.foodchange.org/employment/employment.html  

 

NRI: Agricultural Prosperity for Small & Medium Sized Farms

One component of the National Research Initiative is the Agricultural Prosperity for Small & Medium Sized Farms Program. Proposals for this program must be "integrated," i.e. contain at least two of three functions: research, outreach, and education. This year the program is highlighting involvement of Extension personnel & curriculum development that involves K-12 teachers. The program also encourages applications on sustainable biofuel production. Due date: June 5, 2008. For more info, see: http://www.csrees.usda.gov/funding/rfas/nri_rfa.html

 

Organic Research and Education Grants

The Organic Farming Research Foundation (OFRF) has issued its Request for Proposals for organic research and education projects for Spring and Fall 2008 grants. OFRF offers funds for research on any topic that will improve organic production systems, and for education and outreach projects to share organic farming information with current organic producers and to farmers and ranchers considering transitioning their operations to organic. Proposals may request awards of up to $15,000 per year ($20,000 for fruit projects). Multi-year funding will be considered for fruit projects. Due date: July 15, 2008 For more info, see:http://ofrf.org/pressroom/releases/071116_stretchislandfunding.html

 

New York Agriculture Innovation Center Grant

The New York Farm Viability Institute seeks proposals for innovative projects that help farmers increase profits and provide models for other farmers to follow. Eligible grant applicants include farmers, producer groups, researchers, educators, organizations, agencies and businesses. Applicants may represent nonprofit or for-profit sectors. Projects should work with New York State resident farmers and outcomes should benefit agriculture in New York State.

Due date: July 15, 2008  For more info, see: http://www.nyfvi.org/grants-aic.asp

    

 +*~*+~*~!~+*~+*~+*~+~++*~*+~*~!~+*~+*~+*~+~++*~*+~*~!~+*~+*~+*~+~++*~*+~

 

Potluck is a monthly e-newsletter sponsored by the Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Working Group (NESAWG) and is supported in part by the Lawson Valentine Foundation and the Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation.  It is distributed via NEFOOD-L, the listserv for sustainable food systems in the Northeast generously hosted by Tufts University.  In case you know of someone who you think would be interested in receiving Potluck, please invite them to subscribe to NEFOOD-L by going here: https://elist.tufts.edu/wws/info/nefood  

 

* * * * * * *

 

Roger Doiron, NEFOOD Listserve administrator, [email protected]

The Northeast Sustainable Agriculture Working Group's mission is to build a sustainable regional food and agriculture system... one that is environmentally sound, economically viable, socially just and produces safe, nutritious food.

 

NESAWG P.O. Box 11, Belchertown, MA 01007 phone and fax: (413) 323-9878 e-mail: [email protected]