
Will Allen: MacArthur Fellow 2008
A Good Food Manifesto for America
By Will Allen
Founder and Chief Executive Officer
Growing Power
5500 W. Silver Spring Dr.
Milwaukee WI 53218
Phone: (414) 527-1546
Fax: (414) 527-1908
www.growingpower.org
will@growingpower.org
I am a farmer. While I find that this has come to mean many other things to other people – that I have become also a trainer and teacher, and to some a sort of food philosopher – I do like nothing better than to get my hands into good rich soil and sow the seeds of hope.
So, spring always enlivens me and gives me the energy to make haste, to feel confidence, to take full advantage of another all-too-short Wisconsin summer.
This spring, however, much more so than in past springs, I feel my hope and confidence mixed with a sense of greater urgency. This spring, I know that my work will be all the more important, for the simple but profound reason that more people are hungry.
For years I have argued that our food system is broken, and I have tried to teach what I believe must be done to fix it. This year, and last, we have begun seeing the unfortunate results of systemic breakdown. We have seen it in higher prices for those who can less afford to pay, in lines at local food pantries, churches and missions, and in the anxious eyes of people who have suddenly become unemployed. We have seen it, too, in nationwide outbreaks of food-borne illness in products as unlikely as spinach and peanuts.
Severe economic recession certainly has not helped matters, but the current economy is not alone to blame. This situation has been spinning toward this day for decades. And while many of my acquaintances tend to point the finger at the big agro-chemical conglomerates as villains, the fault really is with all of us who casually, willingly, even happily surrendered our rights to safe, wholesome, affordable and plentiful food in exchange for over-processed and pre-packaged convenience.
Over the past century, we allowed our agriculture to become more and more industrialized, more and more reliant on unsustainable practices, and much more distant from the source to the consumer. We have allowed corn and soybeans, grown on the finest farmland in the world, to become industrial commodities rather than foodstuffs. We have encouraged a system by which most of the green vegetables we eat come from a few hundred square miles of irrigated semi-desert in California.
When fuel prices skyrocket, as they did last year, things go awry. When a bubble like ethanol builds and then bursts, things go haywire. When drought strikes that valley in California, as is happening right now, things start to topple. And when the whole economy shatters, the security of a nation’s food supply teeters on the brink of failure.
To many people, this might sound a bit hysterical. There is still food in the suburban supermarket aisles, yes. The shelves are not empty; there are no bread lines. We haven’t read of any number of Americans actually starving to death.
No, and were any of those things to happen, you can rest assured that there would be swift and vigorous action. What is happening is that many vulnerable people, especially in the large cities where most of us live, in vast urban tracts where there are in fact no supermarkets, are being forced to buy cheaper and lower-quality foods, to forgo fresh fruits and vegetables, or are relying on food programs – including our children’s school food programs – that by necessity are obliged to distribute any kind of food they can afford, good for you or not. And this is coming to haunt us in health care and social costs. No, we are not suddenly starving to death; we are slowly but surely malnourishing ourselves to death. And this fate is falling ever more heavily on those who were already stressed: the poor. Yet there is little action.
Many astute and well-informed people beside myself, most notably Michael Pollan, in a highly persuasive treatise last fall in the New York Times, have issued these same warnings and laid out the case for reform of our national food policy. I need not go on repeating what Pollan and others have already said so well, and I do not wish merely to add my voice to a chorus.
I am writing to demand action.
It is time and past time for this nation, this government, to react to the dangers inherent in its flawed farm and food policies and to reverse course from subsidizing wealth to subsidizing health.
We have to stop paying the largest farm subsidies to large growers of unsustainable and inedible crops like cotton. We have to stop paying huge subsidies to Big Corn, Big Soy and Big Chem to use prime farmland to grow fuel, plastics and fructose. We have to stop using federal and state agencies and institutions as taxpayer-funded research arms for the very practices that got us into this mess.
We have to start subsidizing health and well-being by rewarding sustainable practices in agriculture and assuring a safe, adequate and wholesome food supply to all our citizens. And we need to start this reform process now, as part of the national stimulus toward economic recovery.
In my organization, Growing Power Inc. of Milwaukee, we have always before tried to be as self-sustaining as possible and to rely on the market for our success. Typically, I would not want to lean on government support, because part of the lesson we teach is to be self-reliant.
But these are not typical times, as we are now all too well aware.
As soon as it became clear that Congress would pass the National Recovery Act, I and members of my staff brainstormed ideas for a meaningful stimulus package aimed at creating green jobs, shoring up the security of our urban food systems, and promoting sound food policies of national scope. The outcome needed to be both “shovel-ready” for immediate impact and sustainable for future growth.
We produced a proposal for the creation of a public-private enabling institution called the Centers for Urban Agriculture. It would incorporate a national training and outreach center, a large working urban farmstead, a research and development center, a policy institute, and a state-of-the-future urban agriculture demonstration center into which all of these elements would be combined in a functioning community food system scaled to the needs of a large city.
We proposed that this working institution – not a “think tank” but a “do tank” – be based in Milwaukee, where Growing Power has already created an operating model on just two acres. But ultimately, satellite centers would become established in urban areas across the nation. Each would be the hub of a local or regional farm-to-market community food system that would provide sustainable jobs, job training, food production and food distribution to those most in need of nutritional support and security.
This proposal was forwarded in February to our highest officials at the city, state and federal level, and it was greeted with considerable approval. Unfortunately, however, it soon became clear that the way Congress had structured the stimulus package, with funds earmarked for only particular sectors of the economy, chiefly infrastructure, afforded neither our Congressional representatives nor our local leaders with the discretion to direct any significant funds to this innovative plan. It simply had not occurred to anyone that immediate and lasting job creation was plausible in a field such as community-based agriculture.
I am asking Congress today to rectify that oversight, whether by modifying the current guidelines of the Recovery Act or by designating new and dedicated funds to the development of community food systems through the creation of this national Centers for Urban Agriculture.
Our proposal budgeted the initial creation of this CUA at a minimum of $63 million over two years – a droplet compared to the billions being invested in other programs both in the stimulus plan and from year-to-year in the federal budget.
Consider that the government will fund the Centers for Disease Control at about $8.8 billion this year, and that is above the hundreds of millions more in research grants to other bio-medical institutions, public and private. This is money well spent for important work to ensure Americans the best knowledge in protecting health by fighting disease; but surely by now we ought to recognize that the best offense against many diseases is the defense provided by a healthy and adequate diet. Yet barely a pittance of CDC money goes for any kind of preventive care research.
In 2008, the Department of Homeland Security approved spending $450 million for a new National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility at Kansas State University, in addition to the existing Biosecurity Research Institute already there. Again, money well spent to protect our food supply from the potential of a terrorist attack. But note that these hundreds of millions are being spent to protect us from a threat that may never materialize, while we seem to trivialize the very real and material threat that is upon us right now: the threat of malnourishment and undernourishment of very significant number of our citizens.
Government programs under the overwhelmed and overburdened departments of Agriculture and of Health and Human Services do their best to serve their many masters, but in the end, government farm and food policies are most often at odds between the needs of the young, the old, the sick and the poor versus the wants of the super-industry that agriculture has become.
By and large, the government’s funding of nutritional health comes down to spending millions on studies to tell us what we ought to eat without in any way guaranteeing that many people will be able to find or afford the foods they recommend. For instance, food stamps ensure only that poor people can buy food; they cannot ensure that, in the food deserts that America’s inner cities have become, there will be any good food to buy.
We need a national nutrition plan that is not just another entitlement, that is not a matter of shipping surplus calories to schools, senior centers, and veterans’ homes. We need a plan that encourages a return to the best practices of both farming and marketing, that rewards the grower who protects the environment and his customers by nourishing his soil with compost instead of chemicals and who ships his goods the shortest distance, not the longest.
If the main purpose of government is to provide for the common security of its citizens, surely ensuring the security of their food system must be among its paramount duties. And if among our rights are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, we are denied all those rights if our cities become prisons of poverty and malnutrition.
As an African-American farmer, I am calling on the first African-American president of the United States to lead us quickly away from this deepening crisis. Demand, President Obama, that Congress and your own Administration begin without delay the process of reforming our farm and food policies. Start now by correcting the omission in your economic stimulus and recovery act that prevented significant spending on creating new and sustainable jobs for the poor in our urban centers as well as rural farm communities.
It will be an irony, certainly, but a sweet one, if millions of African-Americans whose grandparents left the farms of the South for the factories of the North, only to see those factories close, should now find fulfillment in learning once again to live close to the soil and to the food it gives to all of us.
I would hope that we can move along a continuum to make sure that all of citizens have access to the same fresh, safe, affordable good food regardless of their cultural, social or economic situation.
* * *
May 10, 2009 at 3:56 pm
Magnificent! Will Allen is truly an inspiration. I only hope and pray that we take this lead and that the new administration takes this to heart!
May 11, 2009 at 2:53 am
Ah, Will! What has it been? Almost a decade that you and I have worked side by side to bring meaningful change to food production and distribution in this city.
Once again, yes! I applaude and concur! Our agriculture policy, our national food policy must be reformed to support local production of food! Creation and enrichment of soil, particularaly in our urban deserts. And education and empowerment of every farmer – particularly new farmers – they’re our best retirement plan!
And right here in Milwaukee, we are doing much of it right, and making some very smart choices. Let’s keep making noise and acting up and speaking out! And – most important – getting our hands dirty!
Thanks to Milwaukee Water Works for saying “Yes!” and allowing us to install 78 raised bed gardens in the heart of Milwaukee, in the Victory Garden at Kilbourn Park on the borders of the Riverwest, Harambee and Brewers Hill neighborhoods. Check victorygardenmke.wordpress.com to keep track of our progress…
May 11, 2009 at 2:54 am
Kudos! well said and perfect for this time,
May 11, 2009 at 5:12 am
CUA’s!!
May 11, 2009 at 5:26 am
Thank you for this well-reasoned manifesto. You cover a lot of ground and have a good grasp of the need for more local agriculture. Not enough people consider there are “vast urban tracts where there are in fact no supermarkets” and many “are being forced to buy cheaper and lower-quality foods, to forgo fresh fruits and vegetables.”
Where you say,”It simply had not occurred to anyone that immediate and lasting job creation was plausible in a field such as community-based agriculture.”, you are a bit more forgiving than I would be, as I really do not see this as an oversight, but rather part of the design.
I feel it is important to bring attention to the latest food Bills:
After spending much time researching both sides of the latest “food safety” issues, it becomes clear it is not the small farms which are responsible. The latest rash of food bills will put many small farms out of business and add to the acreage of large industrialized (GMO) farms.
The implementation of the latest Food Bills in their present form would, whether by design or not, have a negative impact on small farms. What hurts the small farms will negatively affect many of us.
These latest food bills do NOT support local sustainable growers. These Bills would create a record keeping nightmare and make it cost prohibitive for all those not willing to go along with the corporate scheme of things.
HR759 Food and Drug Administration Globalization Act of 2009
S425 Food Safety and Tracking Improvement Act
HR875 Food Safety Modernization Act of 2009
HR814 TRACE Act of 2009
May 11, 2009 at 6:33 am
We at Black Dot Artists Inc/Village Bottom Farms are in total agreement with Will Allen’s manifesto. Growing Power to the People! Bottoms Up!
May 11, 2009 at 8:10 am
Great going Will. Urban agriculture needs to become a greater part of the public awareness. I read a criticism that it shouldn’t be separated from agriculture in general but I think that came from someone who may not have been aware of your Rainbow Coilition of Farmers which ties rural agriculture back with farming in cities.
May 11, 2009 at 2:20 pm
Will, thank you for your friendship and your way of sharing ideas. I think that Manifesto is very good. And like I said, you are a rich man, you have a lot of friends.
Regards from Macedonia
May 11, 2009 at 3:08 pm
YES!
May 11, 2009 at 3:25 pm
One way to promote sustainable practices in agriculture that will supply a healthful source of locally grown food is through the planting and care of fruit and nut trees. Please see “Promoting the Concept of Tree Crops,” the feature article for this month on the Web site of the Northern Nut Growers Asociation (www.nutgrowing.org).
May 11, 2009 at 4:52 pm
Great piece, but more people need to read it. Contact Michael Pollan and find out his New York Times connection and get this into the Magazine! Contact The Nation, talk to more outlets and get this out there! I’m sure that the petition for a white house garden was not the sole reason that there now is one (obviously Michelle Obama had an interest beforehand) but press attention can’t hurt and DC (and the White House) are more likely to pay attention. With politics (and policy) it isn’t simply good ideas that deserve to happen which get enacted (exhibit A being Health Care reform, which is now almost 15 years in the making). It needs a groundswell of publicly witnessed support, such as media coverage. Please don’t underestimate this part of pressing the idea!!!! Hope to see it out there soon! Thank you for all you do, I’d love to be a part of Center for Urban Agriculture!
May 11, 2009 at 5:11 pm
Kudos to the Ghandi of Green! As a supporter of CSAs, organic practices (growing and eating), farmer’s markets, windowsill gardens and harvesting wild foods and medicines, I celebrate Will’s words, and more so, his genuine heart.
May 11, 2009 at 5:48 pm
I cannot emphasize how strongly I support this wonderful vision of where we need to go in the future and how important Will Allen’s efforts are in achieving this goal. However, it is very important to know that in order to provide safe, toxin free foods extreme care must be taken in the infrastructure created for re-circulating aquaculture systems that are a wonderful part of this goal.
It is known that organotin compounds leach out of PCV and CPCV pipe into water. These compounds have been shown to be very toxic. A system that re-circulates water through PVC will have a certain amount of these compounds in it. Alternative materials are available that do not leach out these compounds.
To achieve this wonderful vision the extra effort required to assure that the food produced by re-circulating aquaculture systems is in fact safe and not tainted by these toxic compounds is imperative.
May 11, 2009 at 7:00 pm
Will you’ve been a hero and an inspiration for me as long as I have known about your work! Thank you for your commitment and this well argued piece.
I want to let you know about another way we can get more land into food production. I’ve built a site called hyperlocavore – a free yard sharing community. Folks all over the country want to start growing but some may lack certain elements, sometimes it’s space to grow, sometimes it’s physical strength, sometimes it’s skills or tools. By setting up a yard sharing group – people can bring all these elements together. Many hands make light work as the old saying goes. Old folks with space, but perhaps some physical limitation can find young folks to help, young folks in turn can learn what their grandparents know about raising the finest tomato! Kids get to know their neighbors while learning where food comes from…and we can bring our neighborhoods back to the way they should be.
Please come by and let us know what you think!
Liz McLellan
hyperlocavore.com a free yard sharing community
May 11, 2009 at 11:05 pm
Will,
Thank you for your leadership and vision in calling for the Centers for Urban Agriculture to be headquartered here in Milwaukee. This is just the type of vision and industry I want for this city that I live in.
I love purchasing your farm’s food. It tastes so good and is so fresh and energizing, something I cannot find anywhere else.
May 12, 2009 at 5:47 am
This manifesto is inspiring and poetic, as is all the work Will Allen and Growing Power have done over the years.
I grew up in Michigan, and in college I worked on MSU’s Student Organic Farm for a few years. Last August I moved to Chicago, and have been getting involved in the urban food movement here. Chicago’s numerous farming initiatives include Growing Power (the Chicago branch), City Farm, Angelic Organics, Windy City Harvest, and too many others to mention. It is great to see the passion and enthusiasm of all the people involved, but often disheartening to realize what an uphill struggle it can be.
As a young person entering the worst job market in decades, I have struggled to find a job in agricultural education despite my skills and experience. I hope the government can help these grassroots initiatives and foster a deeper understanding among Americans of the importance, or rather, the necessity of restructuring our food system.
Keep up the good work, Mr. Allen. You are an inspiration to us all.
May 12, 2009 at 5:58 am
Will Allen = the urban Johnny Appleseed! What a wonderful call to action!
May 12, 2009 at 12:21 pm
Now, what would it take to bring one of your training centers to Nashville, Tennessee?
I am a food and green jobs activist and willing to give my time and effort to make it happen!
May 12, 2009 at 1:50 pm
Shouldn’t we all call and write our reps too? Will said “I am asking Congress today to rectify that oversight, whether by modifying the current guidelines of the Recovery Act or by designating new and dedicated funds to the development of community food systems through the creation of this national Centers for Urban Agriculture.” I think everyone who reads this manifesto should contacts their reps ask for the same.
May 13, 2009 at 2:06 am
I’m all for remediating brownfields and getting unemployed people in the city into rewarding agricultural work. But the easiest way to feed more people, make more food available, and get more money to farmers in the US is to do something about FOOD WASTE. 40% of all food is wasted between farm and consumers, over $80 billion annually. Easily one quarter of that could be saved by better practices between harvest and market, and cooperation with food banks, which could be quickly implemented. But no one seems to be listening to this efficiency argument, they’d rather believe in capital-intensive projects at a time when there is little or no capital available.
May 13, 2009 at 5:42 am
Mr Allen. I’m so empressed with you desire to empower individuals and communities. It’s no wonder you have the term POWER in the name of your organization. With vision, hard work, and community support you are building a better world. I hope that the politicians see the wisdom in your words and actions. I don’t know how they could miss it: you shine.
May 13, 2009 at 2:59 pm
Will, I am new to your site but inspired. Building better communities with a connection to what truley sustains us will make a difference in generations to come.
May 14, 2009 at 6:18 pm
[...] A Manifesto [...]
May 14, 2009 at 9:05 pm
[...] A Good Food Manifesto for America By Will Allen Founder and Chief Executive Officer I am a farmer. While I find that this has come to mean many other things to other people – that I have become also a trainer and teacher, and to some a sort of food philosopher – I do like nothing better than to get my hands into good rich soil and sow the seeds of hope. [...]
May 14, 2009 at 11:17 pm
Will’s absolutely right. Food’s the most important thing on earth, and that means we need to pay attention now. To industrial agriculture, to bad nutrition, to the health of soils–and maybe most of all to the very rapid changes in our climate that are taking us straight off the planet to which our crops are adapted.
We trust everyone will join us in a day of local/global action on Oct. 24 at 350.org. It will be a great pleasure to see farmers everywhere standing up for the weather that makes their work possible! And so many thanks to Will for his leadership, not to mention his vegetables!
May 15, 2009 at 5:17 am
We just had Will here in VA for this week (for the second time for us here in Lynhburg). I invite everyone to visit our web-site at http://www.LynchburgGrows.org and learn about us. An incredible amount of our success in the past five years has been with Will’s, Erika’s and Growing Power’s help. Everyone in the network needs to make sure that we can build this effort together. Remember, the gift that Growing Power is giving is a ‘hand-up’ and not a ‘hand-out’. We all need to rally behind this incredible figure head and make sure that he and his organization are able to continue his work, but we must work together so that it is all not on his organization’s back.
One of the things I learned this week having our first (of what I hope is a mid-atlantice ROTC of Growing Power) is that ‘many hands make for a lighter load.’ We need to rallly behind Will but must realize that he alone and Growing Power cannot carry the load alone. We must build their capacity as we must build our own capacity.
And, I must say, that I am honored to be the person to post after Bill Mckibben. Bill, I give you credit as well because after reading your book ‘Deep Economics’ (A must read for EVERYONE on this blog) we realized that the first step is not figuring out a budget. Figure out a workplan and start to work! We have found that 90% of the incredible amount of progress we have been made is possible without simply throwing money at the problem in order to come to the solution. Now is the time to roll up our sleeves and get to work! Remember, it is not enough to simply put a check in mail (which you need to do to Growing Power ASAP) but we must also get dirt up under our nails.
We must also remember that just because we dig our hands in the dirt that it does not make us the owners of it. We have had over 2,300 people donate 24,000 hours (not counting board, and core volunteers) since 9/2006 to help us in our efforts. We have literally shed blood and not just sweat in this effor and realize that the more that we do that we do not own the land, instead we are of the land and it owns us. ‘From dust to dust’ is a true fact.
Thank you Will, Erika, and Growing Power for all that you do. All of us in Virginia and here in the heart of VA at Lynchburg Grows are committed to the cause and are here to help you through the long haul.
Everyone who gets excited about this, I encourage you to think about the fact that one organzation alone (let alone one man – no matter how large and powerful he is) can do this alone. Now is the time to come together as a group and figure out how we can do this collectively. Let’s use this opportunity as a chance to not only ‘give a gift that grows’ by donating to Growing Power but to also get some ‘dirt up under our nails’ in order to be successful. We all sink or swim together and we must ensure that we can support Growing Power by doing our best in our home towns and regions.
May 18, 2009 at 2:39 pm
Urban gardeners should be sure and have their soil tested for lead. Great article in the NYT recently outlines both the dangers of lead poisoning and ways to remediate your soil and garden.
http://tinyurl.com/exqys
We had our soil tested 25 years ago and have been working on remediation ever since. UW Extension is a great resource.
May 18, 2009 at 3:07 pm
Sorry, better link:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/14/garden/14lead.html
May 19, 2009 at 6:48 am
Thank you, Will, thank you.
You’ve said it all, and I will be contacting my senators and representatives in this issue.
Thank you again.
Sincerely,
Chandra Welter
May 21, 2009 at 4:34 pm
Thanks to @godsil on Twitter for the link.
Will: I need a toolkit. This would include:
A link to a copy of your do-tank proposal online
A very specific suggestion of what I want my representatives to do with it; i.e., call Vilsack? Introduce it as a bill? Who would do that? What’s the next strategic step at the Federal level? If there’s not a clear answer to this, it wouldn’t take long to come up with one.
You have big influence in the social media “cloud” and it wouldn’t take much to cloudsource some powerful action – but it needs to be focused. Not enough that everyone writes to their individual reps – there needs to be something extremely specific we want them to do.
I’ll check back.
All my love and thanks for your work!
Wendy
May 27, 2009 at 4:28 pm
[...] like to include here a small excerpt from a piece of writing by Will Allen, a MacArthur Fellowship Award winner. It is time and past time for this nation, this [...]
May 31, 2009 at 11:51 am
[...] Go to the Growing Power Blog to Read Will Allen’s Manifesto. Tags: willallen Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL. [...]
June 1, 2009 at 2:37 pm
Wonderful! Out here in my corner of CA, we just saw the unveiling of a high-tech, multi-million dollar greenhouse. Very energy efficient, integrated solar power, all the latest technology for minimizing water: Cutting edge stuff. Expect it was plopped down in the middle of the coastal Oxnard plain: Some of the richest topsoil on earth. Wouldn’t it be making so much more sense to build something like this in an urban brown field site, creating green jobs and clean food in communities that really need it. There is nothing worse than the misapplication of a good idea.