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Organic Consumers Petition Obama

by: Jill Richardson

Mon Nov 17, 2008 at 07:00:00 AM PST


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Organic Consumers Association, a group I strongly support (Ok, full disclosure... I'm on their policy advisory board) is collecting signatures on a petition they plan to give President Obama. I've included the petition below, and you can read it there if you'd like. You can sign the petition here - but why don't you also (not instead) send the text of the petition with your own ideas in your own words to Obama's transition team at the Change.gov site?
Jill Richardson :: Organic Consumers Petition Obama
Dear President-Elect Obama,

Congratulations on being elected as the next President of the United States. We as organic consumers, gardeners, farmers and activists are especially hopeful about the prospects of creating a sustainable and healthy food and farming system that can improve public health, conserve energy and the environment, revitalize the economy, and help reduce dangerous greenhouse
gas pollution.

We respectfully request that you take the following steps to create a healthy, sustainable, just, and organic future:

1. Plant a working "Organic Victory Garden" on the South Lawn of the White House, to symbolize your commitment to locally-based, solar-based organic agriculture, with surplus food going to local food shelves.

2. Hire a well-known organic chef, such as Nora Pouillon or Alice Waters, to prepare healthy organic meals for the White House and staff, including vegetables and herbs from the White House Organic Victory Garden.

3. Increase food stamp benefits so low-income Americans can afford high quality organic foods. One way to do this would be to double the value of
food stamp debit cards for fresh food purchased from farmers markets.

4. Restore consumers' right to know by publicly supporting mandatory labeling of Genetically Engineered foods, with regulations similar to those now in place in Europe, Japan, and other nations.

5. Expand incentives for small and mid-sized organic farms and for farmers and ranchers who wish to make the transition to organic. The organic sector currently represents at least three percent of our current food purchases,
therefore it deserves at least three percent of USDA program funds and incentives.

6. Appoint Michael Pollan, or another well-known advocate for organic agriculture and the relocalization of our food and farming system, as the new Secretary of Agriculture.

7. Provide funds and incentives for urban food access programs that connect organic farms with urban retail stores, providing fresh produce and
vegetables for America¹s inner-cities.

8. Redirect the existing multi-billion dollar crop subsidy system away from commodities and biofuels and instead towards energy-efficient, greenhouse gas sequestering organic crops, especially fruits and vegetables.

9. Strictly regulate factory farms, Confined Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO), to sharply reduce or eliminate their damage to the environment and public health.

10. Fast-track the Employee Free Choice Act to assure that farm labor and other workers are guaranteed the right to form a union at their place of employment.

Sincerely,

<Your Name>

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white house food (4.00 / 1)
Having had lunch there (the Navy's / V.P.'s dining room), granted, a loooong time ago, I can say the food was just so-so.  Thus, they could really use a good herb garden in that place.  I remember that there was no menu.  You could ask for whatever you desired.  I got a burger & fries.  My little brother got a grilled cheese sandwich.  Mmmmmm, government cheese!

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