Food Patents
September 19, 2013Think Local First
October 11, 2013Urban Farming Agriculture
Food Chain Radio Host Michael Olson
#9378• September 28, 2013 • Sat 9AM Pacific
Guests: Nick Saul and Andrea Curtis, Co-Authors, The Stop
FEEDING THE POOR
Can Food Banks nourish the poor out of poverty?
Food banks are based on the principal that surplus food should be deposited in a facility where it may be withdrawn by those who hunger.
Today there are nearly a thousand food banks in North America distributing billions of pounds of surplus food through thousands of non-governmental agencies to millions of people in poverty.
Given the number of food banks, the amount of food they distribute, and the numbers of people being fed, it might seem that food banks have always been part of the social landscape. In fact, they are a relatively recent phenomenon, beginning with the great recession of the 1980s at the St. Vincent de Paul community dining hall in Phoenix, Arizona.
Today food banks are becoming a very big part of many communities, as evidenced by Toronto’s The Stop, which grew from a $250,000 a-year agency in a rat-infested warehouse to a $4,500,000 a-year agency offering farmers markets, catering, gourmet food, and community food events.
These non-governmental food banks, and the people who run them, lead us to ask…
Can the poor be nourished out of poverty?