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marmar

(77,078 posts)
Mon May 2, 2016, 10:28 AM May 2016

What Small Farms Need to Compete With Corporate Food

from YES! Magazine:



What Small Farms Need to Compete With Corporate Food
Most small farms have to follow the same rules as big corporate ones. In Maine, flexible food ordinances have increased the number of small farmers.

Kate Stringer posted Apr 27, 2016




When Heather Retberg started selling raw milk a few years ago, she ran up against an obstacle that she felt sure would ruin her family’s farm.

Retberg, of Penobscot, Maine, remembers the state quality assurance and regulations inspector walking up her driveway to deliver the news: Her farm of two goats and six cows didn’t have the proper facilities to bottle and sell raw milk. Nor could it continue to use the neighbor’s facility to slaughter its chickens.

The family had few options: Construct their own facilities, costing thousands of dollars they didn’t have; drive hours to an approved facility and risk exposing the food to pathogens; or stop farming.

“I had this feeling in my gut, ‘oh no we’re done,’” Retberg said. “This is how small farms disappear.”

But they didn’t disappear. In March 2011, the Retbergs attended a town meeting to discuss a proposed local law: the Local Food and Community Self-Governance Ordinance. It protected small farmers’ rights to produce their own food without licensure and inspection. The ordinance passed, prompting the Retbergs the very next day to affix a sign at the end of their driveway advertising raw milk, along with poultry and eggs.

.....(snip).....

Achieving food sovereignty while ensuring food safety is a question that regulators, farmers, and lawmakers grapple with. Safety issues around raw milk produce a steady stream of headlines. According to data collected from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, raw milk is roughly 150 times more likely than pasteurized to cause disease.

But small farmers say the size of their operations gives them greater control over safety. They also say they feel a financial pressure to keep their food safe: One mistake could put a small farmer out of business, while large-scale farms rebound more easily, as California-based Foster Farms did from its 2013 Salmonella outbreak that caused 634 illnesses in 29 states and Puerto Rico. ...............(more)

http://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power/what-small-farms-need-to-compete-with-corporate-food-20160427




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What Small Farms Need to Compete With Corporate Food (Original Post) marmar May 2016 OP
The trade agreements are going to weaken, if not just get rid of, these regulations anyway. djean111 May 2016 #1
This has nothing to do with "corporate" vs "small farms." Archae May 2016 #2
They just need for people to think for once.... (nt) So Far From Heaven May 2016 #3
We had a nice farm to customer operation put out of business by WalMart HereSince1628 May 2016 #4
 

djean111

(14,255 posts)
1. The trade agreements are going to weaken, if not just get rid of, these regulations anyway.
Mon May 2, 2016, 11:09 AM
May 2016

And I would, I have to say, trust a small farmer more than a cost-cutting corporation. Or, at least, have no more reason to distrust them than I would distrust a large, cost-cutting corporation.

Archae

(46,327 posts)
2. This has nothing to do with "corporate" vs "small farms."
Mon May 2, 2016, 11:23 AM
May 2016

This "small farmer" is courting disaster in this sentence:

"When Heather Retberg started selling raw milk"

"Raw milk" is a fiction, sold supposedly to be "more nutritious" and in a few cases, is sold as a cure-all.

But it's a disaster in the making, unpasteurized milk causes dozens of cases of disease every year. Including e. coli and listeria.

HereSince1628

(36,063 posts)
4. We had a nice farm to customer operation put out of business by WalMart
Mon May 2, 2016, 06:57 PM
May 2016

At the same time WalMart killed a small grocer.

The farmlet is gone and now a huge lawn pretending to be a park. Bought with money donated by guess who?

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