Harvesting What`s Planted - Coulee Food System Coalition
Transcription
Harvesting What`s Planted - Coulee Food System Coalition
Harvesting What’s Planted: First Steps to Designing a Formal Assessment of our Community Food System Meeting held at Myrick Hixon EcoPark June 5, 2013 2:00 pm to 5:00 pm Session facilitated by Rande Daykin, Director of Resource Development at Western Technical College Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Participants ................................................................................... 3 Original Design and Content/Responses ................................................... 4 Key Deliverables ...................................................................................... 8 Top Ideas/Actions .................................................................................... 9 SWOT Assessment ................................................................................ 10 Page 2 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report LIST OF PARTICIPANTS Keith Baker ............................................................................ Cornerstone Church Sara Bentley ...................................................... Coulee Partners for Sustainability Erica Black .................................................................... Community Food Activist Heidi Blanke............................. Community Member (prior Exec Dir of WAFER) Karlena Brailey .............................................. Masters of Public Health Candidate Kassidy Cable ................................................................................ Organic Valley Kim Cable .................................................................................... CouleeCap, Inc. Leanne Carlson ................................................ Hillview Urban Agriculture Center Zack Gaugish .......... Hillview Urban Agriculture Center, Upstream Forest Garden Steve Hansen ................................................................................... Vivid Writing Beth Hartung ...................................................................................Options Clinic Shelly Krause ................................................................... The Hunger Task Force Lewis Kuhlman .......................................................................... City of La Crosse Jason Larson ................................................................... Great Rivers United Way Keith Lease ............................................................ Coulee Council on Addictions Tiffany Lein ................................................ La Crosse County Health Department Nick Lichter .................................................................................. Organic Valley Curtis Miller ............................................................................................... AMOS Jill Miller .......................................... YMCA – Pioneering Healthier Communities Vicki Miller ..................................................... Hillview Urban Agriculture Center Dana McConnell........................................................................................... Artist Nick Nichols.............................................................................. La Crosse County Susan Oddsen ......................... La Crescent Area Healthy Community Partnership Erin Waldhart ........................................................................................... WAFER Jason Witt........................................................ La Crosse County Human Services Janet Wollam ................................................. Mindoro/Stevenstown Food Pantries Page 3 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report ORIGINAL DESIGN, AGENDA, AND CONTENT OF SESSION The goal of the session was to move work forward in a reasonable and collaborative way, and to build consensus towards specific action steps that can be taken in developing the assessment any Community Food System needs to fully incorporate resources and needs in the region. We first laid out the goals and parameters of the meeting within the context of the work that had been done so far. The bottom row of Table One shares the rules we used to guide a respectful discussion. Table One: Background and Guidelines for the Session Background (Assumptions) CFS is holistic by design… incorporates and networks existing structures. Interest appears high among all stakeholders, not sure about high-barrier populations? Overall Purpose To move from discussion to action in a collaborative, respectful way. Purpose of Session To report on consensus from last meeting (WHY are we here?) Non-Purpose of Session To challenge the assumption that success is possible. To develop five key actions for beginning to assess our structure and connections (WHAT needs to be addressed first?). To establish a model of organization (HOW will we work together?). To define for others what their role or purpose is. To apply organization to next action steps (WHO will do the steps and WHEN do we hope to achieve them?) To discuss at this time what’s grant fundable. Food systems incorporate several stakeholders and attempt to create responses to “food deserts.” There appears to be some friendly competition among food pantries. To pull through assessment and development two new “key members of each component into the work. Lots of activity but some disorganization. Common elements include or are based on small farms, sustainable distribution, local markets, and gardens/grow-your-own. To contextualize the big picture actions and stages of growth with resource availability and thoughtful planning. Four aspects of CFS: proximity, security, self-reliance, and sustainability, or PSSS There are LOTS of models, all similar but few exactly the same… this is a new, or newly identified, process. To clarify purpose of the System. Breakout Groups ID’d following essential characteristics: Processing/Distribution; Core Values are focused around Fairness and ID or Concern about Resources To identify what high-value actions can be taken. To use this session for what’s working or not working (to assess current operations or programs). To Save the Earth. Page 4 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Policy/City Planning; Food Access; Healthcare/Education; Growers/Producers. Food Access appears to be a key issue, both in terms of local need and assessment of current practice. IF we assume the responses are reflective of desire, we can say that people feel resources are extremely necessary but don’t feel motivated to communicate. Definite indications that people are not sure what’s out there in terms of steps being taken. Low-income populations are thought to have largest challenges to access. To identify a work-group that will (or can) start assessment work within the next 60 days. Formal assessment of existing patterns and structures is usually first step. PROCESS RULES No speechmaking. Suspend judgment. Listen to each other. Spin/churn thoughts into rich ideas. In the second meeting, the group identified core values and an idealized food system. Informal scoring of that work shows a deep concern for resources (whether there are enough, not knowing how much is there, not knowing who will do the work) and some uncertainty about the importance of communication. As such, we focused our spinning/churning of ideas to explore strengths and weaknesses of the ability of the group to collaborate (Questions 1 & 2); the target or focus area of need that should be addressed more than any other (Knowns: question #3); and the most important questions to answer (Unknowns: Question #4). The group’s responses to these are on Table Two, page following. For dots and explanations, turn to Session Deliverables, pp 8. Page 5 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Table Two: Header Questions and Responses Question 1: When you speak about our ability to work together to other organizations or communities, what do you brag about? Question #2: What do we not admit to each other when we talk about that collaboration? Question #3: If we could only address one essential need or weakness in our community’s food system, what would it be? Question #4: What’s most important to learn? What don’t we know? Transparency between partners is evident. We are too nice—typically do not address what’s not working (two dots). Experience gap—too many cooks in the kitchen and some of them may not know how to cook (two dots). Actually getting food to the hungry. What could we really do to solve hunger (two dots)? Regional resource coordination and availability. Duplication of services (five dots). Comprehensive map/database of the food system. Generational commitment to the community: families stay in the area for multiple generations and are invested. Lots of volunteerism. La Crosse paradigm for getting things done. Reducing barriers at the policy level. How do you create nourishment (broadly across a community) (four dots)? How do we all become producers of food, change the culture of consumerism (one dot)? How do we ensure effective work meets human needs? Class tensions exist and are hard to break down (one dot). Knowledge and info sharing on community gardening. Vital associational life. Self-protection of interests (three dots). The number of coalitions—there is a structure in place for partnering and engaging with different organizations. Traditionally marginalized people are often not at the table (two dots). Access to available land and selfsufficiency in land use (related to gardening). Developing gardening as a civic virtue. Culture of inclusiveness. Organizational identities are selfprotected as well, and funding is viewed as life-sustaining or threatening (two dots). Suspicion of hidden agendas. Birth through graduation hunger and nutrition education and self-advocacy in parenting culture and youth having access to healthy choices/eating. Structure to knowledge sharing. Midwest culture ethos (respect and politeness… good neighbors to one another). Genuinely interested in helping each other (as community members). Willing to try new things and be in front of the curve. Innovation and/or Bravery to try. Breaking down walls of territorialism. Making sure the right people are in the room and are interested in what’s being created to respond to their needs. Desire to meet the needs of clients— clients don’t always self-identify (two dots)? Need to know data on needs, strengths, capacity on a regional basis (eight dots). Lack of leadership development. Page 6 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report The group then split into three smaller groups of six, who were asked to come up with one key action or response to improve or strengthen the six main components of a Community Food System. The group had 15 minutes to generate discussion which was meant to encourage good listening and collaboration but also to quickly get to top ideas. Each top idea was meant to also be based on the strengths and weaknesses of the collaboration identified in Table Two, and the Knowns and Unknowns of the System itself. In the table, the top-dotted idea is placed in the top row across under the header. Table Three: Top Ideas for Community Food System Component Structure Production, Growers (includes community gardens) Create and enable gardeners by training, educating, and actually gardening more (six dots). Create a vast listing of production resources (five dots). Create a gleaning project (four dots). Processing & Distribution (kitchens, transportation of goods) Create more community kitchens (six dots). Decrease wasted food through use of community kitchens. Consumers to product (in terms of transportation… get user to the food instead of getting food to user). Access (food pantries, accessibility) Consumption (Education of cooking, nutrition, health) Policy, City Planning Waste and Recycling Increase selfsufficiency in community by identifying areas of under-served (three dots). Coordinate transportation to existing resources and vice versa (two dots). Continue/extend farm-to-school programming (eight dots). Strengthen utilization and protection of land for growing (five dots). Create a city-wide composting system (seven dots). Re-instate cooking classes into broad educational curricula (two dots). Advocate for (?) ordinances to support house garden, shared resources, outlaw pesticides (one dot). Neighborhood composting waste site (one dot). Develop a Fresh Food meals-onwheels program (one dot). Purchase a digester for commercial/household waste (three dots). Page 7 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report KEY SESSION DELIVERABLES Observations The group was excellent to work with. When discussing collaboration, it’s interesting to note that the group focused on the ability to collaborate and the willingness of people to come forward, but nobody in the group mentioned achievement of results—The question only asked what we like about ourselves, yet nobody mentioned “I like that we have accomplished X, Y, or Z.” The statements are all focused around capacity and strength of character. Another note of interest is that most of the responses to Question #2 tend to focus around issues of identification, class, and the relations between different tiered social structures, indicating that there is some evidence of work needing to be done in bridging relationships between non-like groups. This is probably not a surprise. There appears to be conflict between the group’s answers to Question #1 and Question #2 (We work well together! No we don’t!) but I believe that’s because of the way the questions were structured. Top Ideas The group voted on the key strategies they would focus on and the greatest potential threats to success, and spoke briefly of the key resource(s) or agency(ies) that would be important to start with when beginning the assessment. This is represented below, Table Four, on page 9. Action Team The group voted on three models of taking action—with one being easier to get things done but less democratic, one that is more democratic but harder to organize, and one being MOST democratic and inclusive but necessarily slower in process. The group voted for a small action team to run the assessment and report back to the larger CFS collective. It is recommended that representatives of this team be selected by members of the collaboration who share their affinity (so members who are farmers/growers select one of their own to serve as the representative of their group). Contextualization The Header Questions provide input to contextualize the Assessment Step within a SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats) analysis. Questions 1 & 2 are INTERNAL—how we can/will work as a collaborative—and Questions 3 & 4 are EXTERNAL—issues we may face when going outside the collaborative to gather that data. These are the key thoughts and priorities the Action Team should focus their needs assessment around. Page 8 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Table Four: Top Ideas and Challenges to Consider to Achieving Them Structure Production, Growing Priorities Create and enable gardeners by training, educating, and actually gardening more (six dots). Key Sources UW Extension, to Approach Hillview Possible assessment question How much organic/healthy food is out there? What is the total capacity to grow in the region in X=amount of food per {Y=either hungry people, malnourished people, or Y=area of habituated space?} Processing & Distribution (kitchens, transportation of goods) Create more community kitchens (six dots). Access (food pantries, accessibility) Consumption (Education of cooking, nutrition, health) Policy, City Planning Waste and Recycling Increase selfsufficiency in community by identifying areas of under-served (three dots). Continue/extend farm-to-school programming (eight dots). Create a city-wide composting system (seven dots). Parks and Rec, Churches, K12 Hunger Task Force, WAFER, Mayo, Gundersen, University for data/research Farm-toSchool.org, Viroqua and West Salem for models. Strengthen utilization and protection of land for growing (five dots). Local Gov’t Current local plans and strategies vs. cost vs. sustainabili ty? See left. How many kitchens in area are running how many educational courses? Who attends? Who doesn’t? Who would but can’t get there? Number of lowincome people vs. number of services, vs. number of unused goods, vs. number of available goods? LAX Health Sci Consortium, United Way? Health effects in the community of unhealthy eating? City Gov’t Page 9 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report SWOT ASSESSMENT BY GROUP INPUT When planning how to begin the data analysis of table four, the action team should take into careful consideration the following strengths and weaknesses. These are the tools and the environment that they should be conscious of when beginning the assessment. Internal (collaborative) External (community) Areas to draw from Strengths Areas to be wary of Weaknesses There exists a tremendous sense of community here. A strong, innovative culture of collaboration, paired with Midwestern sense of ethos and openness, create valuable resources for social needs. Despite this, a perception of duplication of services and wariness of interorganizational purpose (likely due to increasing scarcity of funding) could easily disrupt new solutions, as generational territories create a parochial sense of the right way and wrong way to do things. Opportunities Threats There is a sense that food resources or systems exist, but access or education about them should be the priority. In an environment of shrinking financial resources, this is a good thing— the region needs to build bridges TO the main structures, not the structures themselves. There is evident concern that the will of the community at large may not match up with the need of the population at greatest risk. A very apparent wish to prioritize data illuminates willingness to do it right but potentially once again illustrates disconnect between components that must work together to achieve goals. Incomplete Work The facilitator did NOT get to determine the Action Plan or the Communication Plan. The following needs to be done to fully complete the work: Bring forward suggestions for team members who represent the key component groups who will represent the action team that will carry out the assessment/gap analysis; Agree on the Steps/Formal actions to be taken by this group; Arrange a communication plan that focuses on Key Messages needed by the ENTIRE team, who needs to know them, when they need to know, how they will learn the messaging, and who will tell them. The facilitator will attempt to get this information by a simple online survey, submitted at a later date, and will send one out to the entire group along with this report of the afternoon’s work. Page 10 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report ATTACHMENT A: VISUALIZATIONS OF FOOD SYSTEMS AND CONCERNS Figure A Source: Taos County Economic Development Corp. Viewed online on June 3, 2013, at http://www.tcedc.org/communityModel.html Page 11 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Figure B Source: University of Washington, Seattle. Viewed on June 5, 2013, at: http://students.washington.edu/uwfarm/2011/05/18/food-and-justice-inserting-equityinto-our-food-system/ Page 12 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Figure C Source: Community Roots Garden, viewed online on June 5, 2013, at: http://communityrootsgarden.org/community-food-assessment/ Page 13 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Figure D Figure E Source: NourishLife.org; Food System Tools, viewed online on June 4 th, at: http://www.nourishlife.org/teach/food-system-tools/ Page 14 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Figure F Source: eatwell-livelocal.org, Northwest Louisiana, on June 5th, 2013, at: http://www.eatwelllivelocal.org/images/HLFSDiagram7-11.jpg Page 15 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Figure G Source: Metro Vancouver Agriculture Advisory, viewed on June 5th, 2013, at: http://www.metrovancouver.org/planning/development/AgricultureAndFood/FoodSyste mPics/Food-System-Diagram.gif Page 16 of 17 Harvesting What’s Planted: Planning Session Report Figure H: Garrett and Feenstra: Growing a Community Food System. Washington State University and University of California; a Western Regional Extension Publication. Viewed on June 4, 2013. PDF at http://smallfarms.wsu.edu/wsu-pdfs/WREP0135.pdf Page 17 of 17