Decentralize the Food System - For Good
Decentralize the Food System - For Good
The coronavirus pandemic has revealed systemic weaknesses in Big Food like no other event in recent memory. Not because the virus is foodborne (it isn't), but because of the highly centralized nature of the American food supply and the distribution channels that get the food from farmers and producers to a store near you. Funneling such a vital commodity through a few major companies may be more efficient than spreading it out through a larger network of widely dispersed hands, but that also means that disruptions to the flow affect more people. It's time to decentralize the food system and increase the resilience of our communities instead.Have you shopped for beef lately? The rampant spread of COVID-19 through unprotected workers in close quarters at the country's major meatpacking plants has resulted in slowed production and a shortage of commercially available meat, even as farmers and ranchers have had to euthanize livestock and leave the carcasses to rot in landfills. Rationing what's available means higher prices and purchase limits for grocery customers, while some Wendy's fast food restaurants have had to remove hamburgers from the menu entirely.It doesn't have to be this way. People have started finding ways around the meatpacking bottleneck. A Kansas man set up a Facebook page to bring farmers and consumers together, inspiring thousands of people to join and help each other out. Some distributors have started offering sides of beef and wholesale cuts for sale to the public, an option for families with freezer space and the know-how to do some processing at home.
Photo by Jez Timms on Unsplash.
Sources:
Unsanitized: J.D. Scholten on How to Revitalize Our Broken Food Systems
Coronavirus’s next victim: Big Meat
The meat supply chain is broken. Here’s why shortages are likely to last during the coronavirus pandemic
Wendy's Locations Taking Burgers Off Menu
Kansas man creates Facebook group to connect farmers with consumers
America’s meat shortage is more serious than your missing hamburgers
Meatpacking safety recommendations are largely unenforceable
How to stop the coming meat shortage
PRIME Act Would Help Put the 'Local' Back in Local Meat Production
The Hidden Resilience of ‘Food Desert’ Neighborhoods
Most Farmers in the Great Plains Don’t Grow Fruits and Vegetables. The Pandemic is Changing That.
How Permaculture Can Build Resilience and Meet Basic Needs During a Pandemic
Monastery garden yields fresh produce, soil health
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.