Category Archives: Glynwood Institute

I’m very excited that The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming (which I co-founded) is taking on the issue of food waste.  Read the first intro post about it here on the Institute’s Guide to Good Food blog.

TEDxManhattan “Changing the Way We Eat”

My latest project is putting together TEDxManhattan “Changing the Way We Eat” to be held in New York City on February 12, 2011.

For more information, please visit www.tedxmanhattan.org.

 

The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming launches

This is the press release that went out recently announcing the official launch of The Glynwood Institute.

Contacts:

Geralyn Delaney Graham,  geralyn@resourcescommunications.com,  direct 281. 980. 6643  | mobile 917. 826. 5094

Diane Hatz, The Glynwood Institute, dhatz@glynwood.org, mobile 917.848.1081

For Release: April 14, 2010

The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming  www.GlynwoodInstitute.org

Co-Founder & Director Diane Hatz, former founder/director of Sustainable Table, and Co-Founder and Glynwood President Judith LaBelle envision the Institute as a “creative action tank” that finds realistic solutions to critical problems in food and farming.

Cold Spring, NY – In celebration of the upcoming 40th Anniversary of Earth Day, Glynwood is pleased to announce the launch of its new division, The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming.

“Our vision is to shift the U.S. from an industrial-based system of agriculture to a regional, sustainable food supply,” says Co-Founder & Director of The Glynwood Institute Diane Hatz.  “One where healthy, nutritious food is accessible to all.”

“To do that,” says Co-Founder and Glynwood President Judith LaBelle, “we support leaders in sustainable food and farming and also develop projects that help communicate or raise awareness about today’s food.”

Innovation + Awareness  = Change

At the heart of The Glynwood Institute is the Innovation Program, where selected leaders or emerging leaders within the sustainable food and farming movement are supported as they develop, launch or promote a project that addresses a critical need or issue within the field. In addition, The Institute helps develop marketing and communications strategies to educate, raise awareness about, or expand the Innovators’ work.

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The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming

I’m happy to announce that as of March 1st, I officially became the Co-Founder & Director of The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming.  The Institute is part of Glynwood, based in Cold Spring, NY.  I’ll still be living and working from New York City, but I also have an office at Glynwood, a 225-acre farm on some of the most gorgeous land in the Hudson Valley.  We officially launch toward the end of April – we’re hoping April 20th will be the date – it’ll depend on when the website can launch.

As part of the Institute, we have an Innovation Program, where we’ll be supporting Innovators in the sustainable food and farming field – the first Innovators are Anna Lappe, who’s Diet for a Hot Planet is out now, and myself.

I’ve pasted a one pager below and will make sure to put up the press release for the launch when we get it finalized.  And there might even be a Glynwood blog sooner than later, where I can also keep you up to date with what we’re doing.  Stay tuned!

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The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming

Mission: To address critical issues in food and farming by supporting the work of existing and emerging leaders and leveraging their collective creative power to develop and implement innovative marketing and communications strategies for solution-based projects.

The Glynwood Institute for Sustainable Food and Farming is an incubator for ideas and action, a “creative action tank” that develops and implements realistic solutions to critical issues within the food system. The Institute collaborates and networks with like-minded groups to elevate the sustainable food and farming movement into mainstream awareness as well as to provide tools and resources to help individuals and groups working on projects in food and farming.

The goals of The Glynwood Institute are to:

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What’s the best way to feed Haiti’s starving masses?

This post appeared on the CSRwire.com Talkback blog on January 29, 2010….

The Bible says, “Give a man a fish; you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish; and you have fed him for a lifetime.” Sustainable food expert Diane Hatz takes that dictum to heart in her prescription for food security for Haiti after the earthquake.

Rebuilding Haiti’s Food System
by Diane Hatz

The earthquake that devastated Haiti on January 12th shocked the world. Immediate relief efforts must continue for as long as necessary and need to focus on providing food, shelter and medical care for the millions of Haitians affected. But, at the same time, experts must start looking at ways to rebuild the country, and a strong focus needs to be put on agriculture and the country’s food system.

The United Nation’s Food & Agriculture Organization (FAO) has called for $23 million for agriculture to support farms, backyard gardens, urban agriculture and rural development. And to be most effective, a sustainable system of agriculture needs to be introduced, where many farmers work small plots of land to yield many types of crops, and minimal to no pesticides or fertilizers are used.

In addition, the government needs to rebuild infrastructure such as roads and canals, provide subsidies for Haitian farmers, reforest destroyed land and increase tariffs on imported foods. Efforts must be made to help Haitians become self-sufficient so food riots like in April 2008 do not happen again.

This is vital to the rebuilding of Haiti. According to the United Nation’s World Food Programme, 76% of Haitians live on less than $2 day and 56% on less than $1 a day. The FAO reports that around 80% of Haitians are involved with agriculture, but they do not have the necessary expertise or equipment. Haitians need to be given the tools – training, seeds, hand tools, livestock such as pigs and chickens – in order to rebuild their food system.

In a developing country such as Haiti, expensive inputs such as chemical fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides need to be replaced with natural ways to grow food – compost, beneficial insects, crop rotation, diversified crops. These types of inputs are low to no cost and are more practical for the type of farming that needs to be done in the country. Because of the rugged mountainsides, large machinery is not feasible which saves on costs for parts and oil.

Haiti should look to its neighbor Cuba for inspiration. Before the fall of the Soviet Union, Cuba imported over 50% of its food and had an industrial-based agriculture system. After the Soviet Union disbanded in 1991, Cuba had nowhere to export and nowhere to get their pesticides, chemicals and industrial inputs from, so they were forced to create a sustainable food system.

Large farms were broken up into smaller plots and urban agriculture was introduced on a large scale. According to Food First, by 1999 sustainable urban agriculture produced 65% of Cuba’s rice, 46% of fresh vegetables, 38% of non-citrus fruits, 13% of roots, tubers and plantains, and 6% of eggs. Farmers and researchers from around the world now visit Cuba to learn more about their sustainable food system.

The planting season in Haiti is March, and the hurricane season begins in June. With so much effort now needed to provide emergency food relief and secure shelter for the upcoming storm season, there isn’t much focus on providing Haitians ways to produce their own food in the long term. But it is necessary. They need to plant as many crops as possible come March and also to look at how they can become a food secure country.

Diane Hatz is the Co-Founder & Director of The Glynwood Institute for Food and Farming, which focuses on solving critical problems with food and agriculture and will launch April 2010.