| UCSC
Farm-to-College |
New Campus Food Guide for
2008-2009! PDF
|
The Farm-to-College
project at UC Santa Cruz links the Center’s Farm on the UCSC campus
with other local organic farms and with UCSC campus organizations to
bring organic produce to the campus dining halls and restaurants, while
bringing students to the Farm for sustainable food systems education.
UCSC is uniquely positioned to be a national model for the
growing “farm-to-college”
movement which, like the K–12 farm-to-school movement, is bringing
fresh, local produce to student dining halls through direct
relationships between farmers and educational institutions.
Farm-to-school or farm-to-college arrangements help farmers gain more
of the food dollar, benefit local economies, and help students gain
access to locally-produced, fresh food.
Several features distinguish the UCSC Farm-to-College project:
a collaborative group of stakeholders comprised of students, staff,
faculty, and community members make up the campus Food Systems Working
Group (FSWG), which works to bring sustainable food to campus and to
educate the community throughout the year; a consortium of organic
growers (Monterey Bay Organic Farmers Consortium) was formed to supply
produce to the campus dining halls; sustainable food purchasing
guidelines were developed by the FSWG; and education (both academic and
experiential) is incorporated from the campus farm fields to the dining
halls.
There are a number of organizations involved in UCSC
Farm-to-College activities including:
UCSC Food Systems Working Group (FSWG)
Center for Agroecology & Sustainable Food Systems (CASFS)
Monterey Bay Organic Farmers Consortium (MBOFC)
Agriculture Land Based Training Association (ALBA)
UCSC Dining Services
Community Alliance with Family Farmers (CAFF)
Program In Community & Agroecology (PICA)
Community Agroecology Network (CAN)
Students for Organic Solutions (SOS)
Education for Sustainable Living Program (ESLP)
Santa Cruz County Food Systems Network (SCCFSN)
Kresge Cooperative
Life Lab
Funding from the Wallace
Genetic Foundation, the True North Foundation, and the UCSC Campus
Sustainability Council has made this project possible
UCSC Food Systems Working Group
(FSWG)
(click here to get
involved)
UCSC’s FSWG arose out of the 2004 Campus Earth Summit
hosted by the Student Environmental Center (see SEC: http://www.ucscsec.org).
The
FSWG’s goals
are to:
- Bring local organic food produced by socially responsible
operations to campus dining halls, and
- To raise student awareness of and engagement in the campus
food system.
Recent activities of the FSWG include:
- Working with College Program Coordinators on several local
and organic college nights (feeding over 2,000 students)
- Facilitating seasonal reflection dinners between
growers producing for UCSC and campus stakeholders designed to
strengthen relationships
- Participating in the continued development and of the
Monterey Bay Organic Farmers Consortium (MBOFC)
- Hosting farm tours at Agriculture and Land Based training
Association (ALBA), Center for Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems
(CASFS), and Phil Foster Farms
- Coordinating an interactive food systems and sustainability
tent at the OPERS Fall Festival to engage incoming students in the
myriad ways for them to become involved.
- Launching the first annual 2006-2007 Campus Food Guide
(download coming soon)
- Creating undergraduate curricular engagement through
existing courses
For documents of the Food Systems Working Group (e.g.,
Structure, Decision Making Protocol, Minutes, etc.), click
here.
CASFS Farm-to-College Project
(click here to get involved)
Did you know that UCSC has its own organic farm and a world-famous
organic garden? The 25-acre UCSC Farm (near the base of campus) and
3-acre Alan Chadwick Garden (between Merrill and Stevenson Colleges)
serve as outdoor classrooms and research sites for students and faculty
interested in organic farming and gardening, agroecology, and
sustainable agriculture. Both sites are managed by the Center for
Agroecology & Sustainable Food Systems, a research, education, and
public service program at UCSC dedicated to increasing ecological
sustainability and social justice in the food and agriculture system.
Produce grown on the CASFS Farm & Garden is sold at our
Market Cart stand, through our Community Supported Agriculture Program,
and to the campus dining halls and Terra Fresca restaurant in the
University Center.
The year 2007 marks the 40th anniversary of organic gardening
at UCSC. Founded in 1967, the original Student Garden Project (now the
Alan Chadwick Garden) was the catalyst for sustainable agriculture and
food system work at UCSC.
Monterey Bay
Organic Farmer’s Consortium (MBOFC)
(click here to get involved)
The MBOFC emerged from stakeholder discussions
between UCSC and local, organic growers who expressed interest in
supplying the University with fresh produce. In order to qualify for a
contract with UCSC, the local organic farmers formed a consortium to
operate under the umbrella of ALBA, a worker-supportive operation. This
arrangement meets UC insurance, ordering, delivery, and invoicing
requirements. The participating growers also agreed to make their farms
available for organic farming and food system research conducted under
the auspices of the Center for Agroecology & Sustainable Food
Systems. MBOFC farms include: The CASFS Farm & Garden, ALBA, Phil
Foster Ranch, Coke Farm, New Natives, Happy Boy, and Swanton Berry Farm.
Agriculture & Land-Based
Training Association (ALBA)
(click here to get involved)
ALBA is an independent non-profit organization with a
mission to advance economic viability, social equity and ecological
land management among limited-resource and aspiring farmers. ALBA
generates opportunities for farm workers and other low-income people to
create organic farm businesses in its small-farm incubator program.
ALBA also works with both beginning and established farmers to advance
sustainable agriculture and community food systems. The organization
owns and operates two organic farms totaling 305 acres in Monterey
County. Currently 24 small-scale, organic farmers operate at ALBA.
In 2002, ALBA created ALBA Organics as a licensed produce
distributor to generate market access for participating farmers while
also providing sales and marketing education. Sales on behalf of
participating farmers have grown almost 50% annually since its
inception. In 2005, the Monterey Bay Organic Farmers Consortium was
created as a collaborative means for ALBA Organics to secure greater
quantities of local, source-verified organic produce in order to serve
UC Santa Cruz Housing and Dining Services. We focus particularly on
wholesale and food service accounts, including customers such as
Stanford University, Asilomar Conference Center, and regional
hospitals.
UCSC Dining Services
(click here to get involved)
UCSC Dining prides itself on providing the best possible food available
in the Monterey Bay area. Our focus is on healthy dining options that
provide a variety of distinctive cooking styles and flavors. Our
culinary team involves themselves at every level and participates in
trainings to enhance their skills and keep up with the latest trends in
foodservice. Our commitment to sustainability extends full circle, from
farm to fork, to reducing our waste stream, as well as curbing our
water and energy usage to address the environmental challenges of our
time.
In May of 2004, the UCSC Food Systems Working Group drafted
guidelines and goals to bring sustainable food to campus dining halls.
UCSC Dining Services adopted the following guidelines:
- Buy local
- Buy seasonal
- Buy certified organic
- Buy humanely produced animal products
- Buy direct
- Buy certified fair trade
- Buy from worker supportive producers
The Community Alliance with Family Farmers (CAFF)
(click here to get involved)
CAFF is a California statewide non-profit that works to build a
movement of rural and urban people to foster family-scale agriculture
that cares for the land, sustains local economies and promotes social
justice.
CAFF is a community representative on UCSC’s Food Systems Working
Group. On the Central Coast, we have three active programs: On-Farm
Conservation: Farmscaping Program; Farm-to-School Program; and the Buy
Fresh, Buy Local Campaign.
Program in Community
and Agroecology (PICA)
(click here to get involved)
PICA is a living/learning program on the UCSC campus, located at the
Village in the Lower Quarry. PICA strives to promote sustainability on
campus through the broadening of the garden infrastructure and the
establishment and documentation of a functional composting waste
management system based in the Village community. This system will
serve as a model for future compost systems for other campus
communities. This broad based initiative will strengthen holistic
education for the UCSC student body by providing a means for students
from a variety of academic disciplines to work together in applying
their knowledge to a working model of ecological stewardship,
sustainable community, and appropriate technology.
PICA faculty, Steve Gliessman and Sarah Rabkin, lead a
two-unit Seminar (ENVS 91F/191F), introducing students to concepts of
community and agroecology in the context of sustainability. This course
serves as a gateway to or continuing basis for participation in PICA.
191F, as distinct from 91F, which also emphasizes leadership
development. This course takes place in the A quad of the Lower Quarry
(Thursdays, 4 – 5:45 PM, followed by a community meal) and may be
repeated for credit. In addition to the PICA seminar, internship and
community meetings occur regularly in the A quad.
The Community Agroecology Network
(CAN) 
(click here to get involved)
CAN is a U.S. based non-profit organization. Their mission is to
develop a network of rural communities and U.S. consumers to support
self-sufficiency and sustainable farming practices. Farmers and
consumers working together CAN make a difference.
Through their website you CAN: order coffee directly from the
farmers; learn about internships living and working with farm families
in Latin America; become a CAN member and help support community-based
programs in the CAN network.
Students for Organic Solutions (SOS)
(click here to get involved)
SOS is a group of enthusiastic students committed to raising awareness
about the environmental, health, social, and economic implications of
our current food system. Our weekly meetings occur in conjunction with
the Student Environmental Center. From taste tests, speaker nights, to
making your own organic soap, SOS is committed to fun hands-on
activities, engaging presentations, and inter-organizational
collaboration! At present SOS has paid internships available for two
co-coordinator roles and we are always looking for volunteers to
support program events throughout the year!
The Education for Sustainable
Living Program (ESLP)
(click here to get involved)
ESLP is a collaborative interdisciplinary effort to realize sustainable
community throughout the University of California. Students form action
research teams in partnership with guest lecturers, faculty,
administration, and community members to implement tangible change.
Such experiential learning inspires participants to internalize the
concept of sustainability, and carry it in practice beyond academia
into a greater society.
The course consists of weekly guest lectures by world-renowned authors
and progressive thinkers. The class will encourage reflection upon and
analysis of the principles of sustainability. It is designed to
encourage collaboration between students, faculty, staff, the
administration, and the local community.
Santa Cruz County Food Systems
Network (SCCFSN)
(click here to get
involved)
Policies and programs affecting food, nutrition and agriculture are
embedded within virtually every government agency in Santa Cruz County.
The nature of these departments and programs often hinders efforts to
respond to such problems as hunger; communities not having access to
healthy and affordable food; and diet related diseases such as obesity,
diabetes and heart disease.
Comprehensive solutions to these problems would engage food producers,
distributors and
retailers, as well as anti-hunger advocates, public health officials
and others who typically focus on these issues. To address this problem
many North American cities, counties, and states are creating food
policy councils. These councils draw upon the expertise of public and
private stakeholders such as government agency representatives,
supermarket executives, emergency food providers, farmers, public
health experts, and non-governmental organizations, to play a
coordinating role for food policy. We envision a Food Policy Council of
Santa Cruz County that would develop innovative food policy
recommendations in order to help the county’s multiple agencies
coordinate actions to advance food security, promote local agriculture,
increase access to healthy foods and improve public health.
If you are interested in policy, developing community
input and process for changing the built environment, and learning how
city and county government can begin to address food related concerns
you are cordially invited to participate in the County Network's
meetings, actions, and partnership endeavors. In
particular the Network is looking for campus students,
faculty, and staff who would like to assist with developing local
food policy, working with diverse county groups and stakeholders, and
building their skills in the process. At present, the FSWG
supports the County Network in many ways and we encourage campus
members to become active and explore community food system
and security issues, bridging work at the university with activities in
the region.
Kresge Cooperative
(click here to get involved)
We are a group of students whose goal is to run a natural foods store
through consensus decision-making and group responsibility. We embrace
cooperation as our tool for social change. We are not for profit, we
are for collective power. As a cooperative business we seek to educate
all members of the community, including ourselves. We use our buying
power to reflect our ideals regarding ecological, social, and political
issues. For this reason, we carry healthy, locally based, cruelty-free,
organic products. We focus on products that are good for the Earth, the
people who produce them, and the people who consume them. Open to all,
we provide a space where good food and revolutionary action meet at the
checkout line.
To volunteer for The Kresge Coop just come on in. Volunteers receive
10% off weekly purchases with a one hour minimum commitment
Life Lab
(click here to get involved)
Life Lab Science Program has been working in the field of science and
environmental education for over twenty-five years. Located on the UCSC
Center for Agroecology & Sustainable Food System’s Farm, Life Lab
co-manages the Garden Classroom, a model educational garden. The Garden
Classroom is used to train tachers and interns in science and
food systems education and serves thousands of children through various
field trips and events.