Posts Tagged ‘jones valley urban farm’

Fed up with school lunch?

Monday, August 30th, 2010

We had a great turnout at our Lunch Line screening Saturday, where we hosted the Southeastern premiere of a documentary that shows “how you can impact children’s health and work within the system.”

We were lucky to have one of the filmmakers, Michael Graziano, drive down from Nashville. The film, produced by Graziano and his partner Ernie Park at Uji Films, was alternately hilarious, sobering, and poignant. It follows six kids from Detroit who are just trying to make their school food healthier. In the meantime, it offers a comprehensive look at the history of school lunch; the current state of the program, which feeds over 31 million children daily; and the future of school lunch.

We packed the house with over 60 attendees, who together donated over $500 to help mobilize Alabamians to end poverty in our home state. These donations will be matched dollar-for-dollar by the Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham.  Thank you!

Most importantly, we started a discussion about the school lunch program, the food system, child nutrition, hunger, and childhood obesity – one we hope to continue during our Hunger Workshop tomorrow in Huntsville and the Food Summit on November 12-13 in Birmingham. We’re planning further Lunch Line screenings in Montgomery and at UAB, UA and Auburn; details TBA! If you would like to host a screening with us, contact T.C. McLemore.

Our panel discussion included (above, left to right):

Amanda Storey, coordinator of Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities Jefferson County

Scott Silver, the Farm-to-School Coordinator for Jones Valley Urban Farm

Sharon Boshell, Area director for the Child Nutrition Program in Shelby County

Jennifer Horton, parent and chair of the CPC Education Workgroup

Michael Graziano, co-producer of Lunch Line

Amanda, our moderator extraordinaire, sent us these resources about school lunch reform:

To advocate for the Child Nutrition Act working its way through Congress, see Slow Food’s Info on Child Nutrition Reauthorization.

Big thanks to Amanda, Jenn, Scott, Sharon, and Michael for bringing their knowledge, experience, and viewpoints to an excellent panel discussion!

Thanks also to our audience members, who asked great questions; Merrilee and Brad at the Bottletree Cafe, who generously gave us their space; and Greater Birmingham Community Food Partners, Jones Valley Urban Farm, Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival, and Slow Food Birmingham who promoted this event all over the city.

Posted by Robyn Hyden

Join us for the Southeastern premiere of LUNCH LINE, a school lunch documentary

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

On August 28 at the Bottletree Cafe, Alabama Possible, the Greater Birmingham Community Food Partners, Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities, Jones Valley Urban Farm, and the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival present the Southeastern premiere of Lunch Line, a school lunch documentary. This film reframes the school lunch debate through an examination of the school lunch program’s surprising past, uncertain present, and possible future.

Lunch Line reveals the National School Lunch Program’s surprising history and the unexpected ways it has grown and changed over the years to feed more than 31 million children every day,” said Michael Graziano, who co-directed the film with Ernie Park, his partner at Uji Films.  According to Park, “The film pulls back the curtain to reveal, through school lunch, how large-scale social change can work.

The screening will be followed by a panel discussion about the film and the child nutrition program. The discussion will include Graziano, Scott Silver, farm-to-school coordinator for Jones Valley Urban Farm, and Maureen Alexander, Child Nutrition Program Director for Shelby County. Amanda Storey, coordinator of Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities, will moderate.

Currently, 54 percent of Alabama children receive free or federally reduced school lunches. Kristina Scott, executive director of the Alabama Poverty Project, says now is the time for Alabamians to engage in discussions about childhood nutrition and food security.

“13.3 percent of Alabamians are food insecure and we are the second most overweight state in the country. Food security is not just about having enough to eat; it is also about access to adequate nutrition, which many low-income Alabamians do not have,” said Scott.

Posted by Robyn Hyden

Obesity, poverty, and the food system

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

According to a new report F as in Fat: How Obesity Threatens America’s Future, Alabama is still the second most overweight state in the country. Over two-thirds of Alabama adults are either overweight or obese.

It shouldn’t be a surprise that not only are we the second fattest state, we also have the fourth highest rate of diabetes and the tenth highest rate of poverty. At the same time, we have the 11th highest rate of hunger.  How is poverty related to both obesity and hunger?

Last night, I attended a discussion on food security at the UAB School of Public Health.  Here are some of the speakers’ thoughts about the obstacles to healthier eating:

 

  • Lack of resources

For some working families, nutrition may seem like a luxury. According to Paulette Van Matre of Magic City Harvest, “food is the last thing many families think about.” Rent, utilities, childcare, and transportation are all immediate expenses that come first. And Paulette notes, “100,000 people in the greater Birmingham area don’t know where their next meal is coming from. So if you’re in that situation, nutrition is way down on your list of requirements.”

  • The Food System

Another obstacle to accessing healthy food? Food deserts.  Sam Crawford of Main Street Birmingham tells the story of one woman at a bus stop who vividly illustrated this point. “I asked her where she was going. She said she was taking the bus to the grocery store. I asked her, how long did it take her to get there? She said it took her two hours just to get dropped off within six blocks of the grocery store. Then I asked how long she had been waiting. She said she had been waiting over 45 minutes for the bus. Sometimes, she said, the bus never came.”

Sally Allocca from East Lake’s P.E.E.R., Inc. confirmed that she drives several miles to shop at a decent grocery store while many people in her community lack such transportation. She mentioned going into a local market recently and seeing “brown corn and a rotten, mushy watermelon sitting in the bottom of a produce case.” Main Street Birmingham is working to address this problem by linking grocers with access-poor communities with their Urban Food Deserts survey.

  • Education

According to Ama Shambulia of the West End Community Gardens, many families have lost the art of cooking. “Even if you can buy healthy food, do you know how to prepare and eat it? In many households, the kids don’t, and the moms don’t either.” Through training and classes at WE gardens, Ama is helping kids to grow, prepare, and eat fresh foods. She also offers trainings to support adults in making healthier choices. During their fall collard greens cook off, for example, they work on cooking greens “without adding half a hog.”

Edwin Marty of Jones Valley Urban Farm notes that “children have to be taught what is food and what isn’t. It’s not something you’re born knowing.” As one panelist noted, if children grow up eating chips and soda for breakfast, they’re not going to learn how to make healthy choices. Parents play an important role in this, as do school lunch program, teachers and farm-to-table programs. The Healthy Kids, Healthy Communities grant is working on this issue in Jefferson County.

  • Culture

Many working families are crunched for time, and preparing fresh or healthier foods seems like a hassle. Instead, people from all socioeconomic backgrounds rely on prepared foods, restaurants and fast food. “It’s the new American way,” notes Ama. Changing the food culture, and demonstrating that “a meal doesn’t even have to be cooked,” may be a revolutionary concept. Yet without education about healthy eating habits, trying new foods can be intimidating.

Want to be a part of the solution? Join in the discussion by attending Birmingham’s 3rd annual Food Summit in November.  We’re helping plan the event, featuring Alabama’s top food reformers and national experts.  UPDATE: The Food Summit has been scheduled for November 12-13, 2010. Submit program proposals to bhamfoodsecurity@gmail.com by August 15.

Posted by Robyn Hyden

Montgomery gardens: “from 0 to 60” in a few months

Monday, May 10th, 2010

We are pleased to report back on some changes happening in Montgomery since we hosted our Hunger Workshop there in mid-March. We invited Edwin Marty, executive director of Jones Valley Urban Farm, to speak with church groups in the area about community gardening, the food system, and hunger justice. Now, as a direct result of meetings Edwin had that day with Montgomery city officials, the mayor signed on to promote an extensive urban farm project in West Montgomery. Dubbed “Full of Life Urban Farm,” it kicked off last month with a small pilot garden on Emerson Street costing only $1,200. Eventually, city officials report they would like to expand urban farming to other areas of the city.

“This is amazing. It’s like they went from zero to sixty just like that,” says Edwin of the project.

Montgomery’s community garden initiative shows how important both community members and policymakers are in getting projects off the ground. The seed of the idea for a Montgomery garden began at the grassroots level last summer, when Voncile Gregory and Andrew Cole-Tyson connected at a neighborhood meeting. However, the project really needed public support and funding, which is where Edwin’s meeting with the mayor came in.

This is just one example of how bringing people together to talk allows small seeds of ideas to germinate and bloom into fully realized projects! If you live in South Alabama, be sure not to miss our Mobile area hunger workshop on June 22. Or, for the Birmingham-area folks, plan to come to the 2010 Food Summit, tentatively scheduled for the first week in November. Who knows what will happen?

Volunteers from St. James UMC prepare two formerly vacant lots for a community garden in East Montgomery. Photo via Full of Life Urban Farm.

Posted by Robyn Hyden

When there isn’t enough food on the table

Friday, November 13th, 2009

Sometimes my weeks have a theme, and this week’s theme is definitely hunger.  As we hear up for Thanksgiving and the holiday season, I guess we are all thinking about those families who struggle to put food on the table.

The Greater Birmingham Community Partners 2009 Food Summit is taking place as I write this.  If you are in Birmingham, and want to take part in the Summit you still have a couple of opportunities – tonight there is a movie night at Urban Standard and tomorrow there is a community garden tour, lunch at Jones Valley Urban Farm and the first Growing Together community gardening class.

Auburn is also thinking about hunger during their Hunger Awareness Week.  Alabama Rural Ministries’ Lisa Pierce is living in a box this week to raise money and awareness about hunger in Alabama.  You can learn more about her efforts here.

While preparing for my talk yesterday at the Food Summit, I came across this survey from Ask Alabama.  A shocking 63 percent of adults surveyed said that they think “a lot” or a “fair number” of families are cutting back on meals due to the economic downturn.

If you want to help address hunger in your community, here’s a resource list we produced this summer for our Give Us This Day Hunger Workshop.  If you have other resources you would like to add, please leave them in the comments.

Posted by Kristina Scott