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The Ugly Truth Behind Organic Food: Is your organic food a humanitarian nightmare?

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Better Believe It Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-18-09 08:42 AM
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The Ugly Truth Behind Organic Food: Is your organic food a humanitarian nightmare?

The Ugly Truth Behind Organic Food
The organic labeling standards do nothing to denote how farms treat their workers. Is your organic food a humanitarian nightmare?
By Sarah Newman, AlterNet
May 14, 2009

I'm standing on a farm south of San Francisco that is unremarkable in that it, like all of the other farms in the area, is a golden canvas of brilliant yellow flowers with the occasional patchwork of verdant greens, early signs of this year's season sprouting up.

It's a slice of California's multibillion-dollar agricultural region that spreads east through the state's Central Valley, down the coast toward Salinas -- America's salad bowl -- all the way to the Mexican border and north toward Oregon. While still a small minority, a growing number of these farms are now organic.

Plenty of people, including me, prefer organic produce because it is healthier and safer. But this certification does nothing to ensure that it was produced with sustainable agricultural practices.

The little strawberry I'm munching is part of a bigger story that begins in the fields and ends on your plate. It's the story of a lucrative industry that offers consumers a commodity at a low-cost but with high consequences.

Forming the backbone of this industry are the oft-forgotten armies of farmworkers who travel California's freeway arteries to plant and harvest crops in every corner of this region. The policies that oppress the 2 million people who grow our food betray its true costs.

Food writer and activist Eric Schlosser, speaking at the Slow Food Nation conference in San Francisco last fall, said that he would rather eat a conventional tomato picked by well-treated workers than a local heirloom variety harvested by oppressed workers.

The strawberry I've just plucked from a neatly lined row of plants was grown at Swanton Berry Farm, the first organic berry farm in California and the first organic unionized farm in the nation.

The Golden State has nearly 1,800 organic growers, according to 2005 agricultural records -- 30 percent of all of the state's farms. And Swanton Berry is in a class by itself, a renegade operation that is bucking the corporate trends of many of its counterparts.

It's a small farm operating on 200 leased acres with 50 staff during peak season. Its products are sold on farm stands, at regional farmers markets stands and some Whole Foods Markets. At first glance, it looks like all of the other picturesque farms in the area, with weathered handmade signs that invite passers-by to pick their own or buy fresh produce, pies and jams from the farm stand.

But inside the farm's store and visitor lounge, the scene is markedly different from neighboring operations. Delicate glass shelves, lined with fresh berry pies, strawberry chocolate truffles, homemade jams and T-shirts (all for sale through an honor-system cash register), also include photos of United Farm Workers Founder Cesar Chavez. Memorialized near the door is the story of the farm's unionization process in 1998. Farm Manager Forrest Cook sits at his computer in a corner below an enormous photograph of Chavez.

Please read the complete article at:

http://www.alternet.org/story/140001/the_ugly_truth_behind_organic_food/

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MadHound Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-18-09 09:27 AM
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1. This is simply another hit piece on organic farmers
Are there problems with the official "organic" standards, certainly, far too many to go into here. But the fact of the matter is that most organic farmers aren't corporate farmers, but rather they are small farmers, who either do all the work themselves, or if they are hiring help, pay them a fair and decent wage.

Trying to tar all of us with this article is simply another salvo in the ongoing battle to drive small and organic farmers out of business. Eric Schlosser's quip about preferring a conventional tomato, raised by farmers who were well treated, over an heirloom grown locally by oppressed workers is just sheer ignorance. First off, if the tomato is grown conventionally, it is a sure thing that the workers who picked it were indeed oppressed. Secondly, as I stated before, most organic farmers are small farmers who are doing the work themselves.

Another thing, I would suggest that the author get out of California and start checking out what's going on in the rest of the country. Basing one's opinions on what goes on in one single state is simply not good journalistic practice, and leads to skewed, misleading and biased articles like this one.
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TreasonousBastard Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-18-09 10:00 AM
Response to Reply #1
2. Not really-- you gotta read page 2 where she...
laments that the big farmers aren't unionized, leaving the little guys at even more of a disadvantage when they try to pay better.
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Better Believe It Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-18-09 10:56 AM
Response to Reply #1
4. If you don't employ and exploit "cheap labor" farm workers what are you complaining about?

And if you employ undocumented or other workers do you pay them a living wage with benefits or do you exploit the crap out of them?

A guilty conscience perhaps?
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TreasonousBastard Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-18-09 10:01 AM
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3. Did she pay for that berry she munched?
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