rss Subscribe to the RSS feed.
What's RSS?

The Conversation

Farm to School Bill Failed During Budget Crisis - Will Not Go Away

As students and teachers around Oregon return from summer vacation and ask themselves what happened to Farm to School, it’s important that they know how hard people worked for the statewide bill and why it failed.

A bill that would have increased Farm to School programs statewide with much-needed funding failed to pass in the legislature this past session despite the program’s widespread support.

“It came down to money,” said Mel Rader, who lobbied hard for the bill (HB 2800) as project director of farm to school and transportation policies at Upstream Public Health. “The budgets were really tight this year. There weren’t very many new programs at all that went through. Most programs were cut across the board.”

Rader said the many advocates for the bill never faced anyone at the legislature opposed to the program.

“It was all about where it fell on the priority list,” he said.

The bill would have provided 15 cents per lunch and 7 cents per breakfast served in Oregon public schools to incorporate Oregon agricultural products into school meals. In addition, the $22.6 million in total funding called for in the bill would have provided grants to increase school gardens. It also would have likely created an estimated 477 jobs.

An Ecotrust study earlier this year based on 91 schools in Portland and Gervais school districts estimated that $66,000 in grant funding for Farm to School programs catalyzed $226,000 in local purchasing. The benefits also include encouraging healthy eating habits and the education school kids get about local produce and the food stream.

“Farm to school and school gardens is a movement that’s going ahead without the state legislation,” said Rader, who pointed to excellent programs at Bend-La Pine and Eugene school districts. “The state funding is a key component, however, so we’ll definitely be going back to the legislature.”

Despite the tough budget year, Rader said the bill was still very close to passing up until the last week of the session.

“I feel confident that we can get it in the future,” Rader said.

For school districts looking for grant funding or assistance in a Farm to School program, contact Ecotrust through their website.



2 Comments:

Posted by Emily Francis on October 29th, 2009 at 09:06 AM

It’s disappointing to see that Oregon legislation isn’t taking forward steps to bring healthy foods to children across the state.  Farm to school is an opportunity to teach kids about where their food comes form and the importance of eating healthy.  This also would have been a great opportunity to create more jobs in Oregon and increase local spending to help start pulling Oregon out of the economic slump.
In my opinion, Oregon has lost a prime opportunity to start the important lesson of where food comes from early in life, the chance to create connections between local farmers and schools, and the chance to improve Oregon’s economy.  Farm to school is another example of missed opportunity because of the legislators private agenda.

Posted by Andrew Plambeck on September 25th, 2009 at 08:30 AM

Sad to see this happen to such a beneficial program. Farmers in Oregon need the support of our state’s food-serving programs (like school cafeterias) to be able to compete with cheap, unhealthy and unsustainable corn and soy from the Midwest.

It’s better for our kids, it’s better for our economy and it’s better for Oregon.

At a luncheon at Marylhurst University yesterday, we discussed the fact that most universities have vast expanses of grass for students to lounge, study and walk. However, many of these single-species green spaces could be converted (without removing student rec space) to “communiversity gardens” to allow students, faculty and staff to grow their own vegetables in a protected area. It would allow the university food services to use produce grown right across campus!

These gardens could provide a number of educational, fiscal and nutritional benefits to higher education, just as farm-to-school will help K-12.




Join the conversation. Leave a comment.

Name: (required)

Email: (required) will not be published

Location:

URL:

Remember my personal information

Submit the word you see below:


Back to main