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On the Campaign Trail

On the Campaign Trail

The first weeks of our March 20th Special Election campaign for the 103rd New York Assembly District have gotten off to a terrific start. It has been wonderful to reconnect with friends and supporters from 2010 and I am inspired by the warm and immediate response of so many volunteers signing up to call, canvass and help out. Check out our website at www.didibarrett.com to sign up, catch up or contribute.

I have had terrific meetings and phone chats with many Town Supervisors, Mayors and Town and Village Board Members throughout the district – Democrats and Republicans —  to hear first hand about their local issues. It is my goal to talk with the leaders of each of the municipalities in the district.  I’m finding these local leaders welcome my interest in their communities and respect my longtime community activism and passion for the Hudson Valley. My priorities of creating quality local jobs, curbing unfunded mandates, providing middle class tax relief and protecting and supporting what we love about living in this region are right in sync with many of theirs.

I was pleased to hear that job creation and economic development were among the top priorities expressed by the new Dutchess County Executive Marcus Molinaro when I attended his first State of the County address.  I’m hoping that he is looking to develop the region’s agricultural economy as part of this effort.  While Molinaro didn’t specifically talk about agriculture in his speech, I couldn’t help but notice that the Dutchess County seal, which was prominently displayed on the screen behind him, features what appears to be a shaft of wheat and a plow, reflecting the critical role farming has played in the develoment of Dutchess County.   We may no longer have as many farmers as we once did, but that makes those we still have — and the young farmers who want to join them —  even more important to support.  After all, we all do eat.

The farm economy is so essential to this region that even while on the campaign trail I continue to stay on top of important ag-related events in the region. Here are a few of note:

*American Farmland Trust ‘s annual No Farms No Food Rally in Albany on February 15 where they urge legislators to strengthen New York’s farm and food economy; protect farmland and the environment and increase access to locally grown food.

*A community conference, Farming our Future, will look at growing food, farms, and community in the context of a rapidly changing local, regional, and global food system.  The day long conference, featuring Steffen Schneider, Director of Farm Operations at Hawthorne Valley Farm, as the keynote speaker, will take place on Saturday, February 25 at Taconic Hills Central School in Columbia County. This inaugural conference is geared to local and regional farmers, educators, farmers’ market managers, agricultural students, providers of goods and services, and consumers — all those interested in exploring the future of farming in our community.

*Pure Catskills is currently assembling their annual buy local guide which focuses on farm and food producers in New York’s Watershed area. Pure Catskills farms are located on farmland that protects clean drinking water for 9 million New Yorkers in an innovative partnership that focuses on healthy, working farmland and the water protection practices it takes to keep streams and reservoirs safe.

Lots of creative ideas out there.  I look forward to bringing this outside the box thinking to Albany!

Posted in Didi's dish | Also tagged American Farmland Trust, Columbia County, Didi Barrett for Assembly, Dutchess County, Farming Our Future, Marc Molinaro, March 20 Special Election, No Farms No Food, NY State Assembly, Pure Catskils | 1 Comment

More Farm Work — Educating the Consumer

Back in the day, farmers farmed and shoppers shopped and, there were many middle men and little interaction between the two.  Fortunately for those of us who care about what we feed our families and like knowing where our food comes from that has started to change for many Americans.

Farmers increasingly see that part of their farm work is, in fact, to educate the public about who they are, what they do, and why it matters.  And from a business standpoint they are right about this.  As the late off-price retailer Sy Syms, so famously put it, “An educated consumer is our best customer.”  The explosion of farmers markets around the country is testament to the desire for more connection by both farmer and consumer. So are the many new locavore restaurants and the number of farmers now selling right off their farms.

On the macro scale there is the recent debut of the US  Farmers and Ranchers Alliance, obviously well funded given the full page NY Times ad and multiple snazzy websites.  This alliance of “agricultural groups at the national, regional and state levels,” founded it seems in reaction to the public response to films like Food, Inc  and books like The Omnivore’s Dilemna, is offering  to “lead the dialogue and answer Americans’ questions about how we raise our food,” according to their Food Dialogues site. One hopes they are willing to listen to the dialogue that is already in full swing at local farmers markets, farm stands and in communities around the country.

Here in the Hudson Valley there are a number of farms for whom education has always been part of their mission. In Poughkeepsie alone, both the  Poughkeepsie Farm Project, with its community focus, and the 200 acre Sprout Creek Farm highlight education as part of their mission. Since 1982, Sprout Creek Farm, through summer camps and year-round programming, has been welcoming children and families — including my own — to “provide educational experiences for children and adults that will foster appreciation for, and understanding of, our place within the natural world…” And they do it well.

Don Lewis of Wild Hive Farms in Clinton is ever the educator.  The man knows more about grains than anyone. In addition to his cafe (which is also home to the world’s smallest, and most adorable, library), he recently acquired a mill down the road with the goal of creating an interactive learning center with classes and milling demonstrations.

Perhaps the Hudson Valley’s most impressive example of “farm ed” has been happening for 40 years — often below the mainstream radar screen — at the 400 acre biodynamic Hawthorne Valley Farms in Ghent.  The farm is part of the Hawthorne Valley Association which spells out its commitment to Education, Agriculture and the Arts as part of its full name. In addition to a K-12 Waldorf School with 200 children right on the grounds, Hawthorne Valley offers extensive training programs and apprenticeships in farming — and soon in the bakery and creamery; workshops, classes and teacher training on subjects from biodynamics to forging musical instruments, from cheese-making to a weekend conference on Rudolf Steiner’s World Economy.

In addition, Hawthorne Valley Farms regularly welcomes school visits from students who come from as near as Hudson and as far as New York City.  They take their expertise on the road and provide in-school talks on any farm related subject for kids from kindergarden through high school.  And they offer after-school classes — working with local agencies to provide limited transportation to the farm –  in cooking, farm work, and land-based crafts.

All these farms are committed to connecting local communities to the farmers that feed them and the food that nourishes them. At Hawthorne Valley Farms they count on both the farmers and the food products, as they say, “to open an educational dialogue about our environment, our economy, and ourselves.”  To get a first hand look at Hawthorne Valley Farm’s pioneering work you can visit their 17th Annual Fall Festival on Sunday, October 9 from 10 am to 4 pm, rain or shine.

Posted in Didi's dish | Also tagged Poughkeepsie Farm Project, Sprout Creek Farm, US Farmers and Ranchers Alliance, Wild Hives Farm and Cafe | Leave a comment
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