From Living New Deal: New York Chapter <[email protected]>
Subject Webinar: Transforming the Nation’s Food System:Lessons from the New Deal and Strategies for Today
Date February 16, 2023 11:34 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Join the Living New Deal’s NYC Chapter on Thursday March 2nd at 7pm EST for a virtual roundtable discussion.

View this email in your browser ([link removed])

invite you to attend

a new public program
presented only on Zoom

Transforming the Nation’s Food System:

Lessons from the New Deal and Strategies for Today
Roundtable discussion on reform of the nation’s food system
and lessons from FDR’s New Deal

Thursday, March 2, 2023, 7:00 p.m. ET/4:00 p.m. PT
RSVP Here ([link removed])

Please click the link below to join via Zoom:

[link removed] ([link removed])

Roosevelt House and Living New Deal’s NYC Chapter are pleased to present an expert roundtable to explore how federal policy initiatives can spur revitalization of regional agriculture, better conditions for farm and food-processing workers, more equitable food distribution, and improved nutrition for all Americans — measures that recall successful New Deal programs.

The trauma of the pandemic alone has not changed the underlying forces that have shaped the nation’s food supply chain over many decades, narrowly concentrating sources of food production, processing, and distribution. The emergency infusion of funding for SNAP benefits, food pantries, and charitable hunger-relief programs is abating, though food insecurity persists widely.

This year's anticipated re-authorization of the federal farm bill is an opportunity to transform the nation’s food system. First enacted during the Great Depression, this omnibus statute encompasses a host of agricultural programs as well as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) — the largest source of federal food assistance for low-income Americans. Recent federal actions address food supply-chain insecurity, support for small farmers, and SNAP program management.

Many of these measures resonate with successful initiatives of the New Deal era. These included hunger relief programs in rural and urban areas, including schools; construction of farm-to-market roads; rural electrification, facilities for farmer education and agricultural research; and housing for farmer resettlement. New Deal programs funded construction of urban farm market structures, some of which survive today in New York State and elsewhere.

The experts gathered for the March 2 roundtable will explore current challenges and opportunities and reflect on the legacies of the New Deal for today’s policymakers.

Moderator:

Jeff Gold is a New York City-based urbanist and editor, chair of the Metro NY Health Care for All Campaign, and director of the Institute for Rational Urban Mobility. Gold serves on the NYC Working Group of the Living New Deal. He has coordinated community needs planning sessions with local residents of distressed smaller cities to find solutions to ‘food deserts’ and other serious food supply problems.

Panelists:

Kate MacKenzie is Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office of Food Policy (MOFP) and advises the Mayor on all issues related to food policy and the City’s food system. She leads the City’s Good Food Purchasing commitments, focused on increasing access to healthy, sustainable foods for the over 238 million meals and snacks served daily by City agencies, from public schools to senior centers. She oversees Food Forward NYC, the City's first ever 10-year food policy plan, which lays out a comprehensive policy framework to reach a more equitable, sustainable, and healthy food system by 2031. She came to the MOFP with over two decades of experience fighting for food security and broader anti-poverty solutions in New York City and nationally in non-profit organizations and academia, including senior executive roles for City Harvest where she worked from 2007 until 2019 when she was appointed by Mayor DeBlasio to lead the MOFP. Mackenzie taught at Columbia University’s Teachers College as an
Adjunct Professor from 2010-2013.
Jan Poppendieck is a Professor Emerita of Sociology at Hunter College, a co-founder of the New York City Food Policy Center at Hunter, and a senior fellow at the CUNY Urban Food Policy Institute at the CUNY School of Public Health and Health Policy. Her primary concerns, both as a scholar and as an activist, are poverty, hunger, and food assistance in the United States. She is the author of Breadlines Knee-Deep in Wheat: Food Assistance in the Great Depression (Rutgers,1986, University of California Press, 2014), Sweet Charity? Emergency Food and the End of Entitlement (Viking, 1998, Penguin, 1999) and Free For All: Fixing School Food in America, (University of California Press, 2010. Jan is a recipient of a 2011 James Beard Foundation Leadership Award and appears in the documentaries A Place at the Table and Lunch Lines. She serves on the Board of Directors of Community Food Advocates, and the Advisory Committees of Wellness in the Schools and the Hunter College Welfare Rights Initiative,
and she is a member of the Global Alliance for Food, Health, and Social Justice.
Myron Thurston is the Food Supply Chain Marketing Specialist for Cornell Cooperative Extension of Oneida County and is a Senior Resource Educator in the Cornell System. His most recent position was in Agriculture Economic Development at Cornell Cooperative Extension of Madison County, and he worked with farmers there to help them prepare for expansion, diversification, and financial protection for their agribusinesses. He also is a grant reviewer for the USDA. Myron has a significant background in grant research and grant writing as he was in nonprofit fundraising and development for over a decade before coming to Cornell. He also served as the head of marketing for two nonprofits in Central New York. Myron grew up on a 100-year-old family dairy farm that milked some 350 cows and farmed on 2,000 acres in Oneida County, NY.
The Living New Deal documents the vast legacy the New Deal (1933-1942) left to America
and the spirit of public service that inspired it. We welcome your support.

DONATE ([link removed])
Your generosity makes our work possible. Please make a donation of any size
to the Living New Deal/NYC, the Living New Deal, or other specific programs.

============================================================
The Living New Deal – New York City Chapter
Email: ** [email protected] (mailto:[email protected])
Web: ** livingnewdeal.org/living-new-deal-nyc ([link removed])


** Forward ([link removed])
this email to a friend
Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can ** update your preferences ([link removed])
or ** unsubscribe from this list ([link removed])
.

Copyright © 2022 The Living New Deal, All rights reserved.
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis