npr: Hybridization – an open source platform for sharing natural seed diversity

An online conference, The 2014 Food Revolution Summit serves up a star panel of experts & celebrities to provides the truth about GMOs and dangerous chemicals — and how carbs, gluten, fat, and sugar affect your weight, energy, sleep and the planet.

http://foodrevolution.org/summit/

Immerse yourself – your Corporate Skills best utilized in sustainable agriculture

Tell Congress you have a right to know GMOs: Oppose the DARK act

TV – “Years of living Dangerously” explores food system concerns.

http://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/blog/3070/years-of-eating-dangerously#

From Showtime series – Years of Living Dangerously:  It turns out that we’ve been living and eating dangerously. Where and how food is grown, processed, distributed, and even discarded is a huge part of the climate crisis, but with the right incentives and practices food can be a big part of the climate solution. Here’s what you can do:

  • Eat fresh, unprocessed foods
  • Buy local and in-season
  • Choose organic foods
  • Eliminate industrial meat and dairy consumption; opt instead for pasture-raised products
  • Reduce food waste and compost at home, at school, and at work

Environmentalist Jan Schlichtmann is On Growing Business Radio

For every one dollar increase in (local) agricultural sales, personal income rose by 22 cents over the course of five years.

The motto ‘Think Globally, Act Locally’ has long been a guiding tenet of the sustainable food movement. But does acting locally really make a difference and if so, what kind of difference? That’s just what a team of economists set out to explore in the study Linkages Between Community-Focused Agriculture, Farm Sales, and Regional Growth, published in Economic Development Quarterly (2014). Their results revealed that yes, direct farm-to-customer-sales in the form of farmer’s markets and farm visits do make a difference – but what kind of difference depends where the farms are located and on how well local communities have built up an supply chain to support this kind of local buying.

http://foodtank.com/news/2014/04/think-global-buy-local-a-new-study-looks-at-the-impact-of-buying-local-prod

Don’t fear – mainstream Organics is here! Yikes – Wal-Mart betting on Organics?

Proactive antibiotic abuse in feedlot animals could cripple human health

Food Hubs:  Heart of the local food movement Northeast…

The growth of the local food movement over the past several years is no subject to debate. Farmers markets are an oft-cited indicator, and Massachusetts is a poster child for the trend. According to the state’s Department of Agricultural Resources, the total number of markets rose 36 percent between 2005 and 2012.

http://www.ecori.org/massachusetts-econ/2014/2/8/food-hubs-heart-of-local-food-movement.html

A “food hub,” according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), is an entity that combines production, aggregation, distribution and marketing of local produce in order to help small and mid-sized farmers reach markets that would be logistically difficult, if not impossible, for them to access on their own.  In other words, food hubs help facilitate local food transactions by connecting the links in the supply chain — inputs, farmers, processors, aggregators, distributors, outlets, consumers and scrap.