Scoop a bargain: the rise of student food coops

Student cooperatives are taking food sourcing into their own hands. Victoria Walvis and Dora Clouttick members of York People & Planet explain how they did it.

A consumer society prides itself on choice but when it comes to your food many so-called ‘choices’ have already been made for you. As you peruse the daunting array of products at the supermarket, all flaunting their unique desirability, you may not realise that the selection which makes it to the shelves is the result of a hold load of decision you had no say. Right down the line from the chosen suppliers, to how much of the farmers produce makes the cut (and how much is wasted), to the preferred transport companies, even as far back as the seed stock and species cultivated. You may consider yourself spoilt for choice but in many ways, you just get what your given.

If you care about the world, you probably want to buy Fairtrade and organic produce so that no-one suffers for your gain. But on a student budget it’s way too expensive. And reducing waste is impossible when supermarkets wrap everything in pointless sheets of plastic. As the pressure on oil increases, what about the amount of energy used in food transportation and fertilisers is another thing to worry about. But for some inexplicable reason you can only find apples from New Zealand and wine from California in your local supermarket. And who knows how much oil has been used in the production of fertilisers to feed a field of huge (and often tasteless) vegetables? Basically, supermarkets are a nightmare for people who care about where their food comes from.

So what’s the alternative?

Scoop veg box

Scoop veg box

Whats the answer? Cut out the middle-man. All over people are taking matters into their own hands. Grouping together and ordering food collectively at wholesale prices and feeding themselves cheaply on ethical produce.

At York University, we have founded our own food cooperative called ‘Scoop’ with an emphasis on sustainable, ethical, local and cheap food. Cooperatives are not just a duty driven enterprise, they’re also a way to get together to share ideals and knowledge, bond with others on a level that supermarkets could never offer.

As a society, we have become seriously detached from our food. Everyone laments that fact that city kids think milk comes from a bottle and bread from a packet. But before you raise an eyebrow, ask yourself: have you any idea what ingredients you need to make pizza? Would you recognise those ingredients when they were growing and know how to harvest and process them in order to create the desired delicious result? Or even just to make them edible?

Lots of veg boxes

Lots of veg boxes

You might say that in our fast-food world these are things that we don’t need to know any more. But at York we reckon it benefit everyone to get a bit closer to our food.

Food cooperatives exist all over the globe in all shapes and sizes, from large companies to local community groups. You might have heard of Suma, a wholesaler of vegetarian, organic and Fairtrade foods but there are loads of little operations too. They can be found in churches, school halls, or even in your neighbour’s living room. In short, they can be anywhere there is a group of enthusiastic, like-minded individuals and a space to store food.

Ditching your local supermarket in favour of a food cooperative is a great step in helping to tackling climate change, introducing an aspect of community into our consumption and having a greater appreciation for what you eat.

While it might take a while to adjust to a new routine (wholesale orders can take a little more planning that just nipping to the shops!) but we found that we actually have more freedom than when shopping consisted of sprinting round the aisles and enduing supermarket queues.

A positive future for food must be based on an acceptance of greater responsibility for what we eat, and establishing food cooperatives are a brilliant way to take back control of the food chain!

To find out more about the York student cooperative contact: yorkstudentcoop@googlemail.com

Start your own coop: http://sustainweb.org/foodcoopstoolkit/

Green travel: Wwoofing in France

World-Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms is a fantastic way of eco-travelling. Nothing to do with dog-walking, in case you were wondering! My cousin and I were fresh out of our first year of university and needed a cheap way to travel. After hearing about wwoofing, we checked out the website, and subscribed to the list of farms in France.

horse-in-france1

The farm we chose was in the Cevennes Mountains, and ours was a relatively short stay of just 2 weeks. The family was incredibly friendly, and welcomed us into their home. We worked with them picking onions, usually in the morning when it was cooler. We also took the goats out along the river and over the mountains where they would graze on beautiful-smelling wild mint and other herbs to flavour their milk. We even got involved in milking the goats, and helping to make the “fromage de chevre”. How often do you get such a unique opportunity on holiday?!

The work was sometimes hard, but afternoons and weekends were our own to explore the gorgeous countryside and visit nearby towns and markets. And best of all, it cost us nothing! We ate incredible French cuisine with the freshest ingredients (loads better than any of the restaurants I’ve eaten at), slept in comfy beds, improved our French, swam in the river, and learnt plenty about French culture and countryside lifestyle.

I would definitely recommend it as a way of eco-travelling. Countries from UK to Hawaii have organic farm registers, and you will be helping support a low-impact lifestyle, and learning about a culture whilst having a good base to explore the region you are in.

Check out http://www.wwoof.org/index.asp and do something Awesome!

Bottled out campaign diary

Maddy at The Wave

Maddy at The Wave

2009

September: Back from a wonderful summer spent frolicking al fresco amongst plants and such, the group meets just before term. With all the third years gone, there’s only a handful of us left. Problemo. To start some action, an army is required. So we hit the Freshers’ Fair with full enthusiastic energy and big grins to get as many new students on board as possible. We have no plans for the year yet, no idea where our campaigning adventures will take us, because these decisions are up to all of the members, including new ones.

October: At our first meeting we have tea and cake and talk about why everyone wants to get involved, a lot of people had never campaigned before, and don’t know about issues in depth, but that’s really not important. It’s the enthusiasm, the passion to make things better that keeps a campaign alive. We talk about things going on in and around Sheffield: the fact that RBS, with notoriously dirty investments, are on campus recruiting students, the lack of ethical food at uni, with so little being vegan or locally sourced, about the need for more ethical clothing ranges in the uni shop…..and plant some seeds of plans.

Some genius also has the idea of making recruitment leaflets to give out at every demo, so that everyone knows who we are and how to get involved.

November: We spend the next two months as busy little bees demo-ing nasty companies who dare to show their face on our campus, selling vegan cakes, holding talks about sweatshops, meeting with the catering staff and so on.

While our activities are all fun and good, we soon become exhausted, and we don’t have much to show for our efforts. Sure, every demo raises awareness, and is reported back to the heads of companies, and we have raised some very-much-needed funds for People & Planet, all the while having a whole lot of fun, but we wanted some visible results!!

2010

January: We organise a meeting to talk about ideas for a new campaign. We want to make a difference to the environmental impact of students. We want results that we can see. And so, inspired by Leeds students, we decide to launch a campaign to ban bottled water on campus, and to install free water fountains for everyone. It makes so much sense: bottled water is a crazy waste of everything. For 1 litre of water, 7 litres are wasted in production, 250ml of oil is consumed and 100g of carbon is released into the atmosphere. Add to that the fact that only blah in 100 bottles are recycled and you have a green disaster right there. And that’s not even mentioning all the money wasted!

March: We set to work on our ‘Bottle Out’ campaign.

Step one of our campaign is research: finding out all the niggly details about passing a motion, our university’s water policy and so on. As well as talking to people at the Union and Uni, the P&P office is a gold mine for advice and information on running a campaign…it’s what they do full time! We need to get 1000 signatures to bypass council and for our proposal to go to popular vote at the next election.

Step two is making it happen: we write the motion, design and print posters

Step three is spreading the word. Our recruitment leaflets combined with our high campus presence has been working a dream in getting new people on board and our team is strong. We start a poster campaign to raise awareness of the hidden evil behind bottled water and stick them up all around including in halls, using the same poster on all of our stalls. And, of course, we create a Facebook group to spread the word even further. 1000 signatures are gathered easy peasy.

And step four, getting the bottles out, well, we’re still working on that. Because of the way our union works it won’t be going to vote until September, but we have a great base of support so we reckon it’ll get through, and the plastic will disappear, replaced with fountains popping up everywhere. Added to that is the awesome strong group that we have built, with the skills and stuff to run a campaign.

Get Off Your Arse and Change the World

pigs

WATCH THE TRAILER HERE!

In 2009, environmental activists hit the headlines possibly more than in any other year. From the seminal G20 protests to the street mobilisations at the Copenhagen climate conference, the press were fascinated with the dynamism of a growing movement which was able to articulate its ideas in new and exciting ways.

Yet, inevitably, the mainstream media barely told half the story; sadly, violence sells. The rioting protester has always been a key image for the press, a narrative supported by both the police and corporations targeted by protest groups, like e.on and BAA. Emily James‘ incredible film released after the G20, went quite some way toward redressing the balance, giving hard evidence the extent of police violence during the Climate Camp in the City and arguably forcing journalists to tell a different story.

However, the G20 was only the beginning for Emily, who followed activists from Climate Rush, Climate Camp and Plane Stupid through a year jam-packed with inspiring events; recording their plotting and planning, capturing actions as diverse as the Climate Rush bike rush and aeroplane lock-ons, secreting film tapes in safe houses and releasing short films left, right and centre. Just Do It, now in production and set for release in early 2011, is the culmination of these 250 hours of raw footage and is now being concocted into a feature-length documentary by a diverse and committed team.

Just Do It seeks to tell the human story of activism in 2009 – a story frequently ignored by the mass media; one in which the protesters are not faceless and incomprehensible vandals, but ordinary men and women who feel that to do nothing in the face of injustice and destruction is no longer tenable; in which that decision is not an impulsive reaction, but a gradual thought process; in which activism involves both inspiration and disillusionment, joy and sacrifice. Most importantly, it seeks to show that anyone can ‘just do it’ and moreover, inspire and even incite people into taking action.

In many ways, making Just Do It is in itself activism, although of a less obviously racy kind (as is so much of the behind the scenes work that goes into movements). In the Just Do It HQ in east London, Emily James and her team have been pursuing an innovative method of film-making, challenging corporate profit-driven models and suggesting a grass-roots vision of both fundraising and distribution.

The crowd-funding model, successfully used by films like the Age of Stupid, whereby many people donate a little bit each to raise the money to make the film rather than being tied to a corporate sponsor, is essential in enabling the Just Do It team to put forward an alternative narrative to the Murdoch-dominated press. Arguably, Just Do It also takes this model one step further than the Age of Stupid, which still relied on a commercial distribution system to pay back investors. Emily aims to eliminate the profit motive all together by making the film free at the point of distribution and encouraging guerrilla screenings, free downloads and ‘pirate’ DVDs of the documentary.

As Emily says; “It’s precisely the kind of film that wouldn’t get made within the existing profit and ratings-driven funding structures. Crowd-funding through donation enables us, as creative artists, to be supported by our audience in a more direct way, without the involvement of cultural gatekeepers. This is another nail in the coffin for traditional media.”

In this way, Just Do It promises to push boundaries and inspire, both in the story it tells and the way in which the film is made.

***

Please donate to make this film happen: http://just-do-it.org.uk/fund-this-film

Without big billboards, Just Do It are depending on word of mouth, so join the facebook group here: www.facebook.com/jdi.thefilm and invite your friends.

You can also find Just Do It online in these places:

www.just-do-it.org.uk

www.twitter.com/justdoitfilm

www.youtube.com/justdoitfilm

Isabel’s Granny has a lesson for International Politics

Granny @ 90

Every time I come home for the holidays, or for a special occasion, or just because I need to, mortality and the fragility of life seem to become more and more apparent. In the last year there have been family and friends deaths that have shocked, the bloodiest month of the war in Afghanistan, the sale of our family business, my God Mother turning 70, the culling of analogue TV (joke) and the death of legends such as Michael Jackson and John Dankworth.

I’m lucky to live in the same town as most of my close family, my Granny lives just next door. For as long as I’ve noticed she has been hailed as ‘remarkable’ for her age-still driving, still bright eyed and quick witted, still going on holiday, and still making jewellery at 93. I.e. she is still passing comment on what I wear with a designer’s eye, winking at…everyone, snorting into her whiskey etc.

We also have a pretty cool dog, a beautiful striped greyhound that always seemed to me to be able to run faster than a cheetah. We have had her since she was 2 years old, I was 11 when she joined the family. Now that I’ve reached 20, I can see her legs failing, her laps of the beach getting slower and fewer, and eyes going murky.

Just like the dog, every time I return home, Granny seems to take a step closer to death.

She no longer has ‘interesting conversation’ because all she wants to tell me about is this bruise and this ache and this pill and this life that she no longer wants for herself. Her tenacity to not wear beige like the rest of the retired population of this town has been transferred to threatening me with her walking off the harbour wall and beating the demons that haunt in her in her old age rather than feeding the aspects of her life that warded them off in the first place.

Would frivolity lessen the pain of facing death?

Would a trip to the other side of the world shroud her aches and pains in cultural diversity and distraction?

Would drinking herself to oblivion make her remember better times so as to override and smother the current ones?

Well apparently not.

I have suggested all of these things, and apart from the latter, which she has always done anyway (she doesn’t like water) the cons of her life always win over.

What is the psychology behind this? What are her motivations?

From the outside it is hard to see past how annoying it has become, your sympathy is marred by her selfishness in focusing on it, it should be easy to be frivolous, but if I put myself in her place I cannot think I would be much different. I’m sure, being a do-er, that I would feel like enjoying myself and throwing caution to the wind all the more if I could walk properly, if I could do it all without wincing in pain and having to drag a scarily purple leg around with me to see the sites of the world. To do it anyway requires a lot of money and a lot of organisation to make up for your lack of capacity; thus my efforts day in and day out to reduce that pain, to solve the problem, to replace my teeth, are all the efforts of a compos mentis human who still has pride in themselves, and still has the sense of self to be embarrassed by the slow unravelling of what you know about yourself, with the ultimate knowledge that death is the only outcome.

To desire to put it off, to remedy your ills so that you can enjoy life more, has got to be an indication that the capacity to enjoy life, and to hang onto it, remains within.

Recently I have noticed that countries of the world can suffer from this too. I hate to mention it so close to Granny (the other day she said to me “it’s all very well saving the planet but if you can’t save your Grandmother….”) but in the UNFCCC process, i.e. the UN Climate Change Negotiations, those countries who sit in plenary at the negotiations brazenly telling the world they are going under water or being starved to death by the climatic changes their country is facing betrays the same thinking as Granny.

Obviously every human knows that death is their final destination, and that it’s what comes in between now and death that counts. But, if you see death every day, in the colour of your leg, your teeth falling out, in the tides lapping on your doorstep, or the face of your child who you can’t feed because the crops have failed and it’s your only source of income, it is no longer an issue of deciding how to best use your in-between time, it is survival.

As the youth emphasised in Poznan in 2008, survival is not negotiable.

That fear of death, that reflex for survival is surely what drives the brazen please in plenary to commit to 350 parts per million, and agree on 1.5 degrees maximum temperature rise without compromise-it is not a matter of choice but necessity.

Similarly it is my lack of proximity to death that makes me unable to empathise with my Granny when she just doesn’t shut up (I am sympathetic though), and equally the Saudi Arabians who follow Tuvalu’s pleas for survival with excuses of loss of crops and profits from oil as a reason to commit comes down to a lack of empathy and concern because it is not happening to them. If they were fighting for survival, oil profits would be the least of their worries, but they are not.

Countries with the money to get themselves out of any fixes they come across, are the fully endowed frivolous people, they are the ones who no matter what nature throws at them, they believe they can throw money back at it in equal weight and see a solution without compromising anything of what they do.

The SIDS (Small Island Developing Nations) and African countries are those with immense national pride and culture but who are already seeing the worst effects of nature’s aging and unravelling, thus they are ones who need to reduce the pain, plug the gaps, and get help. They are the 93 year olds in this process, the ones who cannot consider frivolity until they have solved the ills that they already have, a lot of which happen to be caused by a changing climate.

The developed countries, who have the funds, and already feel the impacts of climate change, such as Australia and New Zealand are the 93 year olds who are the same as my Granny, but they have the money to throw at the situation, so that instead of changing their reality, they simply become frivolous to cover it up.

The developed countries who aren’t yet in that position, like the UK and most of Europe, are something like my God Mother who has just reached 70 and is, as of yet, vehemently without aches and ailments that need servicing, so she can be frivolous with her time and focus in any which way pleases her-after all, the pain isn’t imminent, it is merely something we all accept as a future possibility, and one which we could take vitamins for today, but really, are we convinced it will make the difference in the long term?

I draw two lessons from this; firstly that life is precious, in all its forms, in all its pains and in all its beauty. Secondly, it is this inspiration and pride in one’s life and lands that will keep international negotiations and agreements alive in the coming years.  As long as we have headstrong countries like Grenada and Tuvalu, Kenya and Bolivia clinging onto survival because they love their country and their life, we have a reason to negotiate.

To apply the question I ask of Granny, would frivolity lessen the pain of facing death?

I would answer no.

Frivolity in the face of death makes everything more acute.

When you know what the frivolity is masking, what it is really trying to achieve, rather than add pleasure to a dying life it creates an excuse for inaction, it is disturbing to witness and sickening to face because you know that death came unhindered and without fear of a challenge.

The day we give up on life and the future, the day we stop campaigning and lobbying our MP’s and Governments to solve the pains and ailments of our earth, is the day we become frivolous with ourselves and our children’s futures, and thanks to globalisation, this is not acceptable on more than a merely personal level because we are not only carving out a future for ourselves but a reality for the SIDS and African countries today.

[for other stories and posts about the UN Climate Negotiations see www.izzykb.wordpress.com]