iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

USDA Finds New Ways To Boost Farm-To-School Programs

By STEVE KARNOWSKI   07/13/11 04:15 AM ET   AP

MINNEAPOLIS -- The popularity of farm-to-school programs that put locally grown food on cafeteria trays has exploded in recent years – so much so that the federal agency in charge of school lunches is giving them a new stamp of approval.

Deputy Agriculture Secretary Kathleen Merrigan said the programs have become so popular so fast that her agency doesn't have solid figures on how many schools are serving their students vegetables, fruits and meat grown by local farmers.

"We know it's just snowballing," Merrigan said in an interview with The Associated Press before her appearance Tuesday at the School Nutrition Association convention in Nashville, Tenn.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture used the convention to release a new report on what works in farm-to-school programs, what doesn't and what the agency can do to help them work better. The report was put together by a USDA team that traveled to 15 school districts across the country and comes as officials, including first lady Michelle Obama, are promoting the importance of healthier food for kids.

"First, it is about bringing fresh locally grown food into school cafeterias," Merrigan said. "So there's the yummy factor, the good nutrition factor. ... Number two, we believe it provides good market opportunities for local producers, particular those midsize farmers that are struggling to make a go of it. This is a real opportunity for them to increase the bottom line in their farming operations. So it's about rural economic development."

Third, she said, farm-to-school programs help connect people with where their food comes from, how it's produced and by whom.

"We know that children are very disconnected from agriculture ... literally thinking food comes from a grocery store," Merrigan said. But many schools use farm-to-school programs to work agriculture into the curriculum, she said, transforming the lunchroom into a classroom.

Farmers who supply schools say they benefit from having steady customers, and they also get satisfaction from knowing they're helping children eat healthier food. Jeff Rosenblad, owner of Happy Harvest Farms in Mt. Angel, Ore., said he gets great feedback from the districts he supplies with a wide variety of fruits and vegetables.

"The kids like it so much they're eating (from) salad bars more. They're eating watermelon, they're just gorging themselves," Rosenblad said.

Matt Jones, who owns Jones Farm Produce in nearby Gervais, Ore., said the extra business he gets from supplying schools lets him keep a few more workers employed for a few more weeks a year. He's been able to sell to schools later into the winter because he has plenty of cold-storage capacity for the apples he grows. A lack of refrigerator space is a common problem for many schools.

"These school districts are not just serving the fresh fruits and vegetables but they're also educating kids in the process," Jones said. "They're trying fruits and vegetables they never would have tried at home, so that's really good for the children."

Farm-to-school sales benefit rural economies, said Deborah Kane, vice president of food and farms for Ecotrust, a Portland, Ore., conservation and economic development group that organized a pilot program that gave the Portland and Gervais school districts an extra 7 cents per meal in 2008-09 to spend on local foods. An Ecotrust study coming out soon found even such a small sum could have a big impact – every dollar the two districts spent on local food generated $1.86 in economic activity, Kane said. And, for each job directly created by their purchase of local food, another 1.43 jobs were created indirectly.

Kane was invited to the White House last week to brief President Barack Obama on another Ecotrust initiative, a USDA-backed online service called FoodHub that helps connect family farms with schools and other urban buyers. The site covers parts of the Pacific Northwest now and aims to go national next year.

The USDA's 76-page report said team members learned in their travels that communities with farm-to-school initiatives are passionate about them and work hard to overcome the challenges they face, but success depends on good communications among schools, farmers and others invested in the programs. And it said money is needed to support these programs, particularly for food service staff training, equipment and facilities to process and store local produce, and to develop educational activities for students.

In an age when many districts do little more than heat up prepackaged foods, the report noted that schools often lack people trained to clean, cut and cook fresh fruit and vegetables. They may not even have enough knives and other basic equipment to do the job.

The USDA pledged in the report to step up efforts to connect schools with farmers, including increasing collaboration with nonprofits and expanding outreach and awareness initiatives.

Merrigan also announced a pilot program that will give Michigan and Florida schools more flexibility to use federal school lunch money to buy locally grown produce for their students, removing one obstacle. It's difficult under current rules for schools to direct their federal food money to local farmers, she said. The goal of the project is to work out the kinks in procurement systems and rules so the program can be expanded nationwide.

While various farm-to-school programs are operating in every state, Merrigan said, the USDA has relied on advocacy groups for data and their numbers are often limited or old. So she asked officials at the convention to participate in a USDA survey to determine what schools across the nation are doing.

"This thing is growing beyond our ability to track it, and we really need a systemized way to get this data," she said.

The National Farm to School Network estimates there are over 2,500 programs involving more than 10,000 schools around country, up from about 400 programs in 22 states in 2004, but spokeswoman Chelsea Simpson said those numbers aren't certain. The network is hoping the USDA survey gives everyone a better picture of how many students are benefiting, she said.

"It's a tricky thing to figure out because the beautiful thing about farm-to-school is it's such a grassroots initiative," Simpson said.

___

Online:

Array

Array

FOLLOW HUFFPOST FOOD

MINNEAPOLIS -- The popularity of farm-to-school programs that put locally grown food on cafeteria trays has exploded in recent years – so much so that the federal agency in charge of school lunc...
MINNEAPOLIS -- The popularity of farm-to-school programs that put locally grown food on cafeteria trays has exploded in recent years – so much so that the federal agency in charge of school lunc...
Filed by Joe Satran  |  Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 35
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Bloggers
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2  Next ›  Last »  (2 total)
08:48 PM on 07/15/2011
Our kids had Farm to School sliced up parsnips or turnips last year. I don't think they liked them very much because we found an awful lot of them in the trash and all over the building in odd places. They didn't know what to make of fresh raw green beans. Who eats raw green beans anyway? School lunch program has been improving the foods the serve the last couple years. Kids had little bags of kiwi one time and they mostly all said "eeeww" and threw it away. Kids usually throw away their cooked vegetables too.If kids haven't been introduced to food from eariliest childhood they aren't very anxious to eat it at school. Food service doesn't serve cookies and cupcakes any more, but the Trix flavored yogurt looks pretty sweet and unhealthy, and they will eat that. They've tried oriental foods with vegetables like pea pods but kids dump those too. You can lead a childr to nutrition but you can't make him eat.
mothergrace
If they knock you down, bite 'em on the ankle.
11:22 AM on 07/14/2011
See now, that wasn't so hard, was it?
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DemFem
02:20 AM on 07/14/2011
Some good news for a change!
photo
rascal barquecat
250 words? That's not enough to complete a
04:50 PM on 07/13/2011
Excellent. Healthier children, improved eating habits, helping farmers. These are the type programs we need to support and help spread.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
02:55 PM on 07/13/2011
lovin' this article but totally not trusting the USDA to not mess this up somehow. they are totally beholden to the transgenic crop/bio tech industry and consistently throw their weight behind them over organic/sustainable food producers, even when it means they must defy a court order.

they'll ruin this or hijack it. just watch.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tjsmother
wife, mother, and open-minded. Too smart for most
04:53 PM on 07/14/2011
I hope not. You're right, but I'm hoping you're wrong about them wrecking this.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moose Luck 99
GEOENGINEERINGWATCH DOT ORG
02:55 PM on 07/13/2011
Here in New Hampster we have Farm to School programs.

Of course apples and cider are popular.

http://www.nhfarmtoschool.org/initiatives.html
02:31 PM on 07/13/2011
It's about time. Slow to adapt, but so important to do and much cheaper and easier than people realize. A little resourcefulness and creativity is all you need. The effort is worth it in the short and long run.
02:18 PM on 07/13/2011
Everyone complains its impossible to eat both healthy & cheap but I make all my meals for less money than it would cost for them to buy their lunch at school, and the cafeteria at their schools might as well be a less quality taco bell. Lately I've been making hummus wraps for my 2 kids (11 and 15) and they can't get enough of it i recommend to any moms! http://www.fourgreensteps.com/community/recipes/hummus-recipes/hummus-wrap
photo
mikey09
Living off the grid.
01:26 PM on 07/13/2011
My grandkids attend a local private school and most of the food is from local sources, much cheaper too....
01:15 PM on 07/13/2011
this is great news for everyone! children get fresh and healthy food and small farmers can produce and maintain their farm! Screw monsanto and the big producers - let's focus on reclaiming what we've lost with corporate farming. Family farms supplying local eaters. Now all we need is to make sure the funding is secure and the laws allow this relationship.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
grammasher
12:16 PM on 07/13/2011
It's great to read this article. Maybe now, kids will learn what REAL food tastes like. I hope this just keeps expanding.
11:47 AM on 07/13/2011
This is good to know. I live in a fairly progressive state, but the school statutes don't allow for fresh food. Even school parties only allow prepackaged items.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
02:53 PM on 07/13/2011
boy would i be working to change that statute. that's just WRONG.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Brian Novotny
What happened to Democracy?
11:41 AM on 07/13/2011
This is a good thing. To make our society and world more sustainable, we must adopt what some of our frontier ancestors did in order to survive, like growing their own foods and those types of endeavors. Combine some of the old school with new school stuff to make for a more sustainable lifestyle which we have grown away from with new technologies and oil. Old school isn't such a bad thing, in many instances, and we can learn a lot from it, as proven here.
11:38 AM on 07/13/2011
This is wonderful to see! Programs such as this are especially important in urban schools where there is such a disconnect between the source of food and the table. In some areas there are also garden-to-table programs where the students grow their own herbs, vegetables, and fruits to eat during lunch. I hope these programs continue to thrive!
photo
adamben
yes i said yes i will yes
11:28 AM on 07/13/2011
good news! i'm hoping, once my son starts school, i can get a program like this going.