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HomeMy WebLinkAbout06-05-20 Public Comment - B. Prgager - Bozeman Growth Policy 2020Public Comment June 5, 2020 To: Chris Saunders [csaunders@bozeman.net] and Tom Rogers [trogers@bozeman.net] From: Barbara Moore Prager Re: Inclusion of urban agriculture in the new Bozeman Community Plan Dear Mr. Saunders and Mr. Rogers: Thank you for the opportunity to share my thoughts on the importance of urban agriculture and affordable, accessible food in the time of Covid-19. My husband and I own a condominium at 424 East Main Street and we are increasingly concerned about preserving and expanding opportunities for healthy living and quality of life in Bozeman. I hold a master’s degree and doctorate in nutrition from Columbia University. I have spent my professional career as both a researcher and educator concerned with explaining the fundamental connection between healthy eating and both mental and physical health. It is of great concern that the least healthy foods (high in fat, salt and sugar) are the most readily available and affordable whereas nutritionally dense fresh fruits and vegetables and lean sources of protein are the least convenient and most costly. This fact is not regarded as the public health crisis that it is. The Bozeman Community Plan can acknowledge this crisis (laid bare by the Covid-19 pandemic) and be crafted to mitigate it. As a Board member of Farm to School of Park County (F2SPC), I am involved in an innovative public- private partnership in which F2SPC and the Livingston school district cooperate to feed children who used to consume breakfast and lunch at school. In mid-March, when schools closed In Livingston, school food service personnel continued procuring foods and preparing meals as they had. But now they have to package the meals and load them onto school buses to be delivered to 18 different drop points for hungry children (who appear on their bikes or with their parents in a vehicle). In mid-March they were feeding 125 students two meals per weekday, but are now feeding 500 students. That is approximately 5000 meals per week! Keeping food service personnel safe and meeting the challenges of Covid-19 has made all of us involved in this feeding effort keenly aware of the shortcomings of our local food system. F2SPC has helped to forge innovative school-restaurant partnerships with more than half a dozen restaurants in Livingston to help with meal preparation and packaging. For these restaurants, it has helped keep them afloat when their businesses were shuttered except for takeout. For the school food service personnel procuring, preparing, packaging and delivering 1000 meals each weekday, it has provided relief and it is easier for them to maintain social distancing and safety in a relatively small kitchen space. The above story describes an innovative public-private partnership. It is successful from many perspectives, but the fact is that the nutritional quality of the food served to these children needs improvement. We need to incorporate more fruits and vegetables and lean sources of protein into all meals and snacks served to children. We need more innovative partnerships between our schools, hospital and those restaurants and local businesses committed to using Montana vendors and producers to strengthen our local food system. We must find a way to incentivize local food producers to make more wholesome foods available at prices we can afford. What is needed is a bold plan designed to ensure healthy eating for all, but especially for growing children. Here are a few ideas for your consideration as Bozeman grows: (1) Plan for every public school in Bozeman to have a garden to be used as a classroom to teach children: where their food comes from; the nutritional quality of foods; the importance of healthy soil, clean air and water to provide valuable nutrients to the plants children eat; how the nutrients in food help kids grow and stay healthy and how wonderful it is to harvest, prepare and taste healthy foods in the classroom and cafeteria. (2) Support the establishment of commercial agricultural operations in the community with the understanding that school food service operations (and the hospital and participating restaurants and businesses) will utilize at least a portion of all crop yields to prepare healthy foods for all children, regardless of family income. (3) Foster innovative public-private partnerships to build steady, reliable year ‘round markets (4) Foster the development of locally-produced nutritious food products that are appropriate and affordable for meals and snacks for growing children and their families. It may be of interest that as recently as 2013 Montana ranked in the top 10 states on the “locavore index” but by 2019, Montana has now slipped to 28th place. From my perspective, Montana’s food system is on a ventilator, struggling to survive. Producers and consumers alike are struggling and low income children, in particular, are paying the price of poor dietary quality. But keep in mind that as these children grow and develop, they will experience higher rates of diet-related diseases such as obesity, fatty liver disease, dental caries and diabetes, so the price paid in higher healthcare costs will be borne by us all. You are in a unique position to make a difference. Bozeman can reclaim its agricultural heritage as it grows. There are remarkable innovations available such as vertical farms, aquaponic and hydroponic systems and geothermal greenhouses built to extend the growing season. These innovations allow greater productivity in limited growing spaces despite adverse or unreliable growing conditions in our state. Careful planning and strategic incentives can make this happen. Please increase access to healthy local food in our community by adding language to our Community Plan that encourages urban agriculture (in all its forms) within the City of Bozeman. I thank you for the opportunity to share my thoughts. Sincerely, Barbara Moore Prager, PhD