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FOOD 2002 GRASSROOTS ACTIONS TO HELP BUILD GREATER FOOD SECURITYFood and Income Food and Income 2. Canadians should explore community-based strategies (such as wholesale bulk buying clubs, cooperatives and Good Food Box programs) to extend people's food buying power. 3. Because gardening allowsfor partial income-substitution through the growing of some of one's own food, Canadians should engage in more community and backyard gardening. 5. Community groups should develop and support local food security initiatives-- such as farm stands in low-income neighborhoods, community gardens and kitchens, wholesale food outlets, buying clubs, urban farmers' markets, cooking groups, and healthy-food cafes for street youth-- to increase access to healthy food. 6. Educational campaigns, stressing the importance of healthy eating in relationship to overall health, should be launched in schools, community centres, and workplaces. 7. Physicians should promote healthy eating by 'prescribing' increased vegetable, fruit, grain and bean consumption to their patients. Doctors' offices could model this by offering fresh foods (such as carrot sticks or apples) in waiting rooms. 9. Community-run food discount stores (similar to Goodwill used clothing stores) could provide better assurance that excess or dented foods will be managed to meet the industry's need for quality control, while also providing a non-stigmatizing alternative to food banks. 10. Communities should pressure the food industry to rethink it's response to hunger and its participation in charitable food programs. 12. Coalitions of farmers, environmentalists, food security activists and consumers should work together to pressure governments to support farm interests and restrict unchecked development of rural lands. 13. Whenever possible Canadians should buy local, seasonal and organic agricultural products to help sustain regional farming communities. 14. There are many lessons to be learned from those striving to create a sustainable agriculture system - Canadians should look to organic food growers for models to grow food both rurally and in the city. 16. Canadians should work with consumer, health, farm and environmental groups in urging the federal government to establish national organic standards. 17. Community groups and professional organizations should join with the Alliance for Food Label Reform in lobbying the federal government for labeling rules and active government regulation. 18. Canadians should engage in campaigns protesting the lack of labeling of genetically modified foods, and their increased presence in the marketplace. 20. Agencies should strive to be more integrative of diverse and holistic food security strategies and practices. 21. Each community should create its own information clearinghouse for community-based food programs. 23. Boys along with girls should receive cooking training both in the home and at school. 24. Community-based programs (such as cooking classes, community kitchens and ovens, cooking groups, and baby food making classes) should be established in order to facilitate greater commensality, nutritious eating and communal cooking, especially for the elderly, low-income, street youth, and specific ethnocultural groups. 25. Communities and neighborhoods should regularly host communal cooking events (such as barbecues, bread-baking, soup-making, etc.) to encourage greater cooking and eating together. 27. Universities, nutritionists and researchers should conduct thorough research projects aimed at rendering visible the connections between school nutrition programs and better student health and academic performance. 28. Schools should work to transform their own environments and student eating practices by establishing schoolyard gardens, in which students can grow some food in order to supplement their diet during the school day.
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