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News for the Michigan Organic Listserv Sept 18-Oct 1

 

1.	CSA Conference, Nov 10-13 in Tustin, Michigan at Kettunen Center
2.	OMRI (Organic Materials Review Institute) Seeks Your Advice
3.	Organic Seed and Transplant sources
4.	Scholarships available for farmers and extension educators to
attend The 2006 CSA conference
5.	Seeking a certifying agency for your organic or transitioning
farm?
6.	WHO CARES WHERE YOUR FOOD COMES FROM?
7.	Build the Organic Consumers Political Candidate Survey!
8.	FDA Statement on Foodborne E. coli O157:H7 Outbreak in Spinach
9.	Some good resources with practices to help assure YOUR farm food
is at minimal risk of microbial food safety hazards.

10.      Some e-newsletters that may be of interest....  

11.      Heads Up on the Aphid Front

12.      Try local, organic food in Mixed Greens event

13.      Two dairies to end use of artificial hormones

Hope to compete with organic milk

14.      Environmental leader leaves board





 

 

 

 

1. CSA (community supported ag) Conference in Tustin Michigan, Nov 10-13

 

Join us at the Kettunen Center <http://www.kettunencenter.org/>  (just
south of Cadillac, Michigan) to learn more about CSA - with speakers and
workshops for the prospective, new or experienced CSA farmer. Speakers
include CSA pioneers Steven McFadden and Scott Chaskey. Sponsored by
CSA-MI (with help from the sponsors listed below). Information at
231-889-3216. 

We will build on the highly acclaimed 2004 conference with an event that
is even better! http://csafarms.org/csafarms4056869.asp is the web site
you can go to obtain information and registration information about the
2006 CSA  conference. Or, you can write or call; CSA-MI 3480 Potter Rd
Bear Lake, MI 49614 231-889-3216

 

Registration and program is now available for the CSA conference

Here is a little more detail about the scheduled workshops.

 

CSA Conference Workshop Descriptions


Workshops 

Saturday
9 - 10:30 -- Breakout Session #1
1. Let's Talk Seeds for the CSA

* David and Barb Perkins, Vermont Valley CSA
2. Biodynamics Day to Day
* Anne Elder and Paul Bantle, The Community Farm of Ann Arbor
3. To be Determined

4. When Things Go Wrong: CSA in an Imperfect World

* Let's Talk
5. Beyond the garden wall: CSA and social activism
* Oxfam America
* MACSAC (HMO)

2-3:30 -- Breakout Session #2: 
1. The Spirit of Our Land, The Spirit of Our Times - A CSA Council
Circle. 
* Steven McFadden
2. Let's Talk* Seeds for the CSA
3. Animals and the CSA (tentative)
4. Let's talk* Distribution Strategies
* Theresa Williams
5. What is Bugging my Plants Now! Let's talk*
* Jon Watts, Meadowlark Farm
5. Will Eat for Change (tentative)
*

4-5:30 -- Breakout Session #3: 
1. Farm Safety 101: Yoga for Yeoman and Yeowoman 
* Steven McFadden
2. Keep those Veggies Coming - succession planting strategies

* TBD
3. Let's talk* volunteers 
* Traci Cruz
4. Who's watching the hen house? CSA and agricultural policy
* Oxfam America
5. Land Trusts

*	Ellie Kastanopolous 
*	Scott Chaskey


Sunday
7:00 Sunrise Service
9:00 - 10:30 - Breakout Session #4
1. Metaphors, music, and meaning: CSA and the arts
* Scott Chaskey
* Laura B. DeLind
2. Greenhouse Structures and Management for the CSA Farm
* John Biernbaum, MSU
3. Kicking the grid: CSA and renewable energy
* Jim Sluyter, Five Springs Farm
4. Doing the books - business planning for the farm and CSA
* Wendy Wieland

5. Mixing it up: Mixing CSA with other Markets

*Richard Andres, Tantre Farm

*Let's Talk
One of the suggestions from our last conference was to offer more
'discussion' type workshops. We are excited to offer several topics in a
Let's Talk format. Where you see Let's Talk you can expect someone with
knowledge and/or experience to start it off and moderate the discussion.
But this person will not be there to give a long presentation. The point
is to have a give and take, a discussion based on the experiences of the
whole group. Come with your ideas and an interest in sharing...or just
sit in and learn from the rest of the group.


Biodynamics Day to Day
Follow these farmers through their day as they explain what biodynamic
means to them, how it works on their farm and how some of these
techniques just might help you on your farm. Biodynamics at its
practical roots.
Anne Elder and Paul Bantle, The Community Farm of Ann Arbor


Beyond the garden wall: CSA and social activism
CSA is more than a source of sustainably-raised food. Equally important,
it is a model -- with food and farming at its center -- for increasing
the social responsibility and civic engagement of its members. CSA can
be a force for social change. How do CSAs and CSA members use their
collective talents and resources to promote a more just society, locally
and extra-locally? This session considers some ways in which CSA is
becoming involved in issues that transcend the garden (e.g., health
care, fair trade, co-housing) and help to ensure real social security.

The Spirit of Our Land, The Spirit of Our Times - A CSA Council Circle.
The Council Circle tradition is the oldest form of democracy in North
America, with roots reaching thousands of years into the past. In the
traditional manner, adapted to our needs a members of CSAs, we will take
seats as equals in the circle. We will pass the Talking Stick to share
the authority and hear the heart and mind of every person who chooses to
speak -- adding layer after layer to our understanding of our times, our
land, and our work.


Let's Talk: Distribution of Farm Shares Would it work better for your
farm to deliver shares right to your members' doors, or have members
come out to the farm to harvest their own shares, or would something
in-between be the right fit for your farm? Do all members receive
identical boxes or can members customize their weekly shares? These and
other distribution questions and options will be discussed. Bring your
experiences and ideas to share to this session and hear what has worked
for others.

What's bugging my plants now?
Get ready for a real down-to-earth discussion about bugs, common
diseases and critters that we deal with everyday. Bring your own
stories, questions & answers on how you manage pests on your farm.

Farm Safety 101: Yoga for Yeoman and Yeowoman. A yeoman is a diligent
farmer who cultivates the land, working constantly with his or her body
and the forces of nature and machines. The farmer's body must be
properly cared for over the years - for it is the most valuable piece of
farm equipment, and it eventually absorbs a lot of wear and tear. In
this experiential workshop, we will talk about basic body safety for
farmers, then learn and practice gentle stretches to keep our bodies
strong, limber, and uninjured while we attend to chores.

Who's watching the hen house? CSA and agricultural policy
Agricultural policy is not just for large-scale farmers and processors.
CSAs and their members -- as producers, consumers, and citizens -- are
affected by state legislation (e.g., Michigan's SB 777 (which removes
local authority over the use - or non-use - of gmos), national commodity
decisions (e.g., cheap corn and obesity), and international trade
agreements (e.g., COOL - country of origin labeling, NAFTA). This
session will discuss some of the impacts that current (and proposed)
agricultural policy has (and could have) on our bodies, daily lives,
environment, and democratic political process -- and what we can do
about them.

Metaphors, music, and meaning: CSA and the arts
In today's world of sound bites, fast food, and multi-tasking, we forget
(and are starved for) what art and aesthetics add to our lives. CSA
farmers and members are dedicated to a more humanely-scaled and
naturally-paced way of growing and eating. This needs to include
opportunities for creative expression and time to reflect on the beauty
and meaning that exist within ourselves and our shared environments.
This session will consider the value of stories, song, poetry, dance,
ritual, and the visual arts for building and enriching the CSA
community.

Scott Chaskey
Laura B. DeLind

Greenhouse structures and management for the CSA Farm
A greenhouse can be one of a CSA farmer's best friends. Is yours?
Greenhouse management includes selecting a structure and equipment that
can provide the right mix of light, temperature and gasses with minimal
electricity and fuel. It also includes a root medium with appropriate
fertility and efficient irrigation and fertilization methods. With 20
years experience teaching about greenhouse structures and management,
John Biernbaum can help you and your greenhouse be best friends and your
CSA farm be more productive and profitable.

Kicking the grid: CSA and renewable energy
Over the last decade, the consequences of maintaining a way of life
dependent on cheap, abundant oil supplies have become brutally clear --
environmentally, economically, and politically. There are alternatives.
What are they; how can they be managed; and how will their use enable
greater energy self-reliance? This session will examine several ways CSA
can use renewable energy on (and off) the farm, focusing on electricity
from solar (photovoltaic) cells and wind. Some attention will be given
to the 'off grid' lifestyle and energy efficiency.

 

 

Wal-Mart Declares War on Organic Farmers

 

Partners with Agribusiness for Corporate Takeover

 

 CORNUCOPIA, WISCONSIN:  A report released today by The Cornucopia
Institute, the nation's most aggressive organic farming watchdog,
accuses Wal-Mart of cheapening the value of the organic label by
sourcing products from industrial-scale factory farms and Third World
countries, such as China.  

 

 Wal-Mart announced earlier this year that they would greatly increase
the number of organic products they offered and price them at a target
of 10% above the cost for conventional food.

 

 "We have received scores of press inquiries over the past few months
asking us if Wal-Mart's organic expansion was 'good news or bad news'
for the industry," stated Mark Kastel, Senior Farm Policy Analyst for
the Wisconsin-based farm policy research group.  "My stock answer has
been:  If Wal-Mart lends their logistical prowess to organic food both
farmers and consumers will be big winners by virtue of a more
competitive marketplace. However, if Wal-Mart applies their standard
business model, and in essence Wal-Marts organics, then everyone will
lose."

 

 The Institute's white paper, Wal-Mart Rolls Out <
http://www.cornucopia.org/WalMart_White_Paper.pdf>  Organic
Products-Market Expansion or Market Delusion?, makes the argument that
Wal-Mart is indeed poised to drive down the price of organic food in the
marketplace by inventing a "new" organic-food from corporate
agribusiness, factory farms, and cheap imports of questionable quality.
"Organic family farmers in this country could see their livelihoods
disintegrate the same way so many industrial workers saw their
family-supporting wages evaporate as Wal-Mart and other big-box
retailers put the screws to manufacturers-forcing a production shift to
China and other low-wage countries," Kastel added.

 

 Wal-Mart, already the nation's largest organic milk retailer,
partnering with the giant milk processor Dean Foods (Horizon Organic),
recently introduced their own private-label organic milk packaged by
Aurora Organic Dairy.  Aurora, based in Boulder, Colorado, has faced a
maelstrom of organic industry criticism and negative press for operating
a number of industrial-scale dairies with thousands of cows confined in
feedlot-like conditions.  They are also the subject of two current USDA
investigations into their organic management practices.

 

 "If there was any previous doubt as to their intentions, partnering
with Dean/Horizon and Aurora should leave no question in anyone's mind
as to how Wal-Mart is approaching its organic initiative," proclaimed
Steve Sprinkel long-time industry observer and columnist for the
nation's leading sustainable agricultural journal, Acres USA.  Large
percentages of milk from Horizon and Aurora come from factory farms,
milking as many as 10,000 cows, allegedly without the required access to
pasture.  The two companies have also been accused of bringing
non-organic cows onto their farms.  "Because of the intense media
scrutiny there is no doubt that Wal-Mart entered into these
relationships in blatant disregard to the ethical expectations of the
consumers who have helped build organics into a lucrative $16 billion
industry," Sprinkel added.

 

 This April, The Cornucopia Institute released a rating of the nation's
approximately 70 organic namebrand and private-label organic dairy
products (www.cornucopia.org).  Although almost 90% received a very high
rating, Horizon and Aurora refused to participate in the study and
received the Institute's lowest score.  And in a subsequent poll of
their over 800,000 members, the Organic Consumers Association moved to
boycott Horizon and Aurora dairy products.  "It's hard to believe that
at this time Wal-Mart would embrace these products," said OCA director
Ronnie Cummins.

 

 In addition to the report's documentation of the Wal-Mart/factory-farm
connection, the study also highlighted the company's decision to lower
the per unit cost basis on organic products by collaborating with its
long-time trading partner China.

 

 "Even if it were not for many serious concerns about the propriety of
the certification process in China-and the fact that the USDA has
provided little if any regulatory oversight there-food shipped around
the world, burning fossil fuels and undercutting our domestic farmers,
does not meet the consumer's traditional definition of what is truly
organic," Kastel stated.  

 

 While Wal-Mart sources Chinese organic products, the industry's largest
organic and natural foods retailer, Whole Foods Market, announced plans
this summer to greatly expand their offerings of locally grown produce
in deference to organic consumer sentiments.  

 

 "Between Whole Foods and hundreds of the nation's cooperatively owned
natural foods groceries, we are certainly set up for a clash of the
titans," said Cummins.  "Will consumers choose cheap industrial food, be
it from factory farms or questionable Third World imports, or will they
continue to support ethical processors and family farmers?" 

 

 Wal-Mart also depends on Natural Selection Foods, Earthbound Farms, a
giant industrial enterprise farming tens of thousands of acres in
California, Arizona, Mexico and Chile as their prime vendor for organic
vegetables.

 

"I don't think (consumers) have any idea just how industrialized it's
becoming (mainstream organics)," said journalism professor and author
Michael Pollan in a recent interview with the St. Paul Pioneer Press.
Pollan's book, "The Omnivore's Dilemma" has been a national bestseller.
"There are some real downsides to organic farming scaling up to this
extent," Pollan added during the interview.  He and others worry that
the expansion of "Big Organic" will lower food quality, weaken standards
and hurt small family farms.

 

This month The Cornucopia Institute sent a letter to Wal-Mart CEO Lee
Scott suggesting that Wal-Mart's approach to organics would likely
undermine the corporation's campaigns to attract upscale shoppers to
their stores and to help cleanse the reputation of world's largest
retailer in terms of the widespread criticism that it has endured due to
its labor and environmental practices.

 

 "We are afraid that you are grossly miscalculating your move into
organics and underestimating the knowledge and commitment of the organic
consumer. Those buying organic food are comfortable paying the historic
premiums because they think that part of their purchase dollar supports
a different kind of environmental, animal husbandry, and economic
justice ethic," the letter from Cornucopia read in part.  

 

 The letter also cited an example of Wal-Mart selling mislabeled
conventional yogurt as organic.  In addition, the Institute's report
red-flagged the retailer selling organic baby formula made with both
questionable synthetic ingredients and processing materials.  The report
also suggests that Wal-Mart might lack the qualifications or commitment
to oversee what promises to be one of the nation's largest organic
manufacturing, distribution, and retail networks.

 

 "Wal-Mart's move into organics is worrisome to investors who realize
that the credibility of organic label, and the sustainability of organic
farming, is of greater significance to their returns than the mere
branding of the term 'organic,'" said Daniel Stranahan, Investment
Committee Chair of the Toledo-based The Needmor Fund.  "If we undermine
the legitimacy of organic label then we also undermine the investor and
consumer confidence that have brought historic premiums to organic
products."

 

EDITOR'S NOTE:  The Cornucopia Institute's White Paper, Wal-Mart Rolls
Out Organic Products.  Market Expansion or Market Delusion?, along with
a photo gallery containing images of some of the organic items now being
offered for sale at Wal-Mart stores, and the letter sent by The
Cornucopia Institute to Wal-Mart's CEO, can be found on the
organization's Web page at www.cornucopia.org <
http://www.cornucopia.org/> .

 

_________________________________
Janet Chrzan
Anthropology Department
University of Pennsylvania 

"But I know now that there is not a chance in hell of America becoming
humane and reasonable. Because power corrupts us, and absolute power
corrupts us absolutely. Human beings are chimpanzees who get crazy drunk
on power. By saying that our leaders are power-drunk chimpanzees, am I
in danger of wrecking the morale of our soldiers fighting and dying in
the Middle East? Their morale, like so many lifeless bodies, is already
shot to pieces. They are being treated, as I never was, like toys a rich
kid got for Christmas."  Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. 

 

2. OMRI (Organic Materials Review Institute) Seeks Your Advice

OMRI seeks comments on new draft Policy and Standards Manuals

 

The Organic Materials Review Institute (OMRI) is in the process of
updating its policies and standards. With consideration of public input
received in a previous public comment period, OMRI has drafted new
manuals detailing its standards and policies for review and listing of
inputs for use in organic production, processing, and handling.

 

To review these draft documents and offer your comments, please visit
the OMRI website at: http://omri.org/draft-ISO-manuals.html
<http://omri.org/draft-ISO-manuals.html> .

 

The comment period will close at the end of the day on Tuesday, October
24, 2006.

Thank you,

 

Dave DeCou

OMRI Executive Director

 

 

 

3. Organic Seed and Transplant sources

OMRI produced a searchable catalog of sources to purchase organic seed
and transplants

http://seeds.omri.org/ <http://seeds.omri.org/> 

 

 

Here is a web site of a list of organic seed sources from Pennsylvania
organic  http://www.paorganic.org/pdf/2006_ORG_SEED_SUPPLIERS.pdf
<http://www.paorganic.org/pdf/2006_ORG_SEED_SUPPLIERS.pdf>  

 

 

Vicki Morrone

Organic Vegetable and Crop Outreach Specialist

Michigan State University

C.S. Mott Sustainable Food Systems

303 Natural Resources Bldg.

East Lansing, MI 48824

517-353-3542

517-282-3557 (cell)

517-353-3834 (fax)

http://safs.msu.edu/ 

http://www.mottgroup.msu.edu/

 

 


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