Friday, January 29, 2010

Iowans Confront Big Banks - Bust Up Big Banks

Hundreds
took over the Des Moines offices of Wells Fargo and Bank of America
to demand they give back their bonuses

"Bust up big banks!" and
"Put the people first!"


rein in corporate power and greed (factory farms, payday lenders)

campaign finance reform.
+++

Iowans Confront the Big Banks

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xsUJj28qh9k

Hundreds of members of Iowa Citizens for Community Improvement (CCI)  
took over the Des Moines offices of Wells Fargo and Bank of America
to demand they give back their bonuses to fill gaping state budget
shortfalls hurting everyday Iowans, chanting "Bust up big banks!" and
"Put the people first!"


This protest was part of CCI's Showdown at the Statehouse,
where CCI members called on elected officials to stand on the side of
everyday people, rein in corporate power and greed (factory farms,
payday lenders)
, stop balancing the state budget on the backs of
everyday people and stand up for campaign finance reform.

Watch this fun video of everyday people directly challenging the big banks!

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Oregon Voters Pass Tax Increases On Corporations & Wealthy By Big Margin


Oregon voters ...raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy to prevent further erosion of public schools and other state services.

the $10 minimum tax that most corporations have paid since its inception in 1931
+++

Oregon Voters Pass Tax Increasing Measures by Big Margin

by Harry Esteve
Published on Wednesday, January 27, 2010 by The Oregonian
 
Oregon voters bucked decades of anti-tax and anti-Salem sentiment Tuesday, raising taxes on corporations and the wealthy to prevent further erosion of public schools and other state services.

[Supporters of the Yes on 66/67 tax measures celebrate as early returns project the passage of the tax increases. Rob Melton, (from left) Eileen Wende, (holding sign) and Roger Wende cheer as early returns project the tax measures passing Tuesday night. (photo: Doug Beghtel/The Oregonian)]Supporters of the Yes on 66/67 tax measures celebrate as early returns project the passage of the tax increases. Rob Melton, (from left) Eileen Wende, (holding sign) and Roger Wende cheer as early returns project the tax measures passing Tuesday night. (photo: Doug Beghtel/The Oregonian)
The tax measures passed easily, with late returns showing a 54 percent to 46 percent ratio. Measure 66 raises taxes on households with taxable income above $250,000, and Measure 67 sets higher minimum taxes on corporations and increases the tax rate on upper-level profits.

The results triggered waves of relief from educators and legislative leaders, who were facing an estimated $727 million shortfall in the current two-year budget if the measures failed.

"We're absolutely ecstatic," said Hanna Vandering, a physical education teacher from Beaverton and vice president of the statewide teachers union. "What Oregonians said today is they believe in public education and vital services."

The double-barreled victory is the first voter-approved statewide income tax increase since the 1930s. Other states, facing similar budget woes, are watching the outcome closely because Oregon, after all, is a state that capped property taxes and locked a surplus tax rebate program into the constitution.

The last time voters approved a tax increase was 2002, when they agreed to bump up tobacco taxes to help pay for the Oregon Health Plan. Voters rejected income tax increases twice in recent years.

"You're going to find a lot of people are going to be talking about this," said Kevin Looper, campaign director for Vote Yes for Oregon, the main support group for the measures.

Looper was among more than 300 supporters who packed the Wonder Ballroom in Northeast Portland to watch results. Within 15 minutes of the polls closing, counties around the state released a flood of vote counts and it became clear that both measures had passed.

Multnomah County was key to the victory, with voters approving both measures by more than a 2-1 ratio. There was deep support elsewhere around the state, including Washington, Lane and Benton counties and communities on the coast. Even in more conservative areas, support was stronger than expected.

Overall statewide turnout was expected to be around 60 percent of Oregon's 2 million voters.

Tuesday's strong support also validated a strategy by Democratic lawmakers to single out the rich and corporations for targeted tax increases.

Campaign ads by supporters highlighted banks and credit card companies and showed images of well-dressed people stepping off private jets. They also hammered on the $10 minimum tax that most corporations have paid since its inception in 1931.

Those messages helped counter warnings by opponents that the taxes would lead to job losses, worsening the state's 11 percent unemployment rate, and prompt wealthy residents to move elsewhere.

"They did a great job of pounding, 'It's only $10,'" said Bob Tiernan, chairman of the state Republican Party. "We got swamped by the union money."

Supporters spent at least $6.9 million, most of it coming from teacher and public employee unions. Opponents, led by a coalition of business organizations, spent at least $4.6 million, donated by wealthy entrepreneurs such as Nike's Phil Knight and Columbia Sportswear's Tim Boyle. Opponents who gathered at the Grand Hotel in Salem were optimistic early, but as the results came in, the mood quickly darkened.

"It's disappointing and discouraging," said Pat McCormick, spokesman for Oregonians Against Job-Killing Taxes. "The tone and tenor was often venomous, trying to pit the haves against the have-nots."

He said the business community now must figure out "how to participate in a system that's largely disconnected from us."

Lawmakers, who are scheduled to convene Monday in Salem for a monthlong session, are expected to move onto other issues, such as tackling Oregon's unique "kicker" law that rebates revenue surpluses totaxpayers and reining in rapidly expanding tax credits for green energy companies.

They also may be looking to repair a broadening rift between the state's business leaders and Democrats who control both chambers of the Legislature and the governor's office.

"It means the February session won't be focused on cutting hundreds of millions of dollars from schools, public safety and health care," said House Speaker Dave Hunt, D-Gladstone.

"It's a great sign of hope that Oregonians continue to be ruggedly independent and continue to be focused on a long-term vision for the state."

Gov. Ted Kulongoski thanked voters for approving the measures but tried to set a tone of reconciliation. "The election is over," Kulongoski said in a statement. "Tomorrow is a new day, and we must make a commitment to put our differences aside and work together to make the best choices we can for Oregon's collective future."

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

American Monetary Act

First, incorporate the Federal Reserve System into the U.S. Treasury where all new money would be created by government as money, not interest-bearing debt; and be spent into circulation to promote the general welfare.

Second, halt the bank’s privilege to create money by ending the fractional reserve system in a gentle and elegant way.
nationalizes the money system, not the banking system.

Third, spend new money into circulation on 21st century eco-friendly infrastructure and energy sources, including the education and healthcare needed for a growing and improving society,

+++

Excerpts from:
Presenting the American Monetary Act
(as of July 18, 2009)
American Monetary Institute,
P.O. Box 601, Valatie, NY 12184
ami@taconic.net 518-392-5387


http://www.monetary.org/amacolorpamphlet.pdf

“Over time, whoever controls the money system controls thezzzzz nation.” Stephen Zarlenga, Director

The World economy has been taken down and wrecked by the financial establishment and their economists; and by their supporters in the media they own, and even by some in the executive and legislative branches, in the name of “free markets” and insatiable greed. Shame! Shame on them all!

The American Monetary Act (the “Act”) is a comprehensive reform of the present United States money system, and it resolves the current banking crisis. “Reform” is not in its title, because the AMI considers our monetary system to never have been adequately defined in law, but rather to have been put together piecemeal under pressure from particular interests, mainly banking, in pursuit of their own private advantage, without enough regard to our nation’s needs. That is the harsh judgment of history as made clear in The Lost Science of Money, by Stephen Zarlenga (abbreviated LSM).*

That book presents the research results of The American Monetary Institute to date and this Act puts the reform process described in Chapter 24 into legislative language. Chapters 1 thru 23 present the historical background and case studies on which Chapter 24 is based. We recommend serious students of our money system read the book now, and suggest that those who’ve read it read it again.

This Act has been in preparation since December 2004 and was placed on our web site for public criticism in February 2006, and concurrently released in Philadelphia at the Eastern Economic Association Conference, for general comment. It draws from and improves a previous proposal known as “The Chicago Plan,” which was advanced by Professors Henry Simons, Irving Fisher and other leading economists in the 1930s in response to the wreckage of the Great Depression, which resulted from our poorly conceived banking system. This Act is more comprehensive and includes improvements to infrastructure, including the human infrastructure of health care and education.

While The American Monetary Institute is responsible for its present form, the Act is based on Aristotelian monetary concepts in existence since at least the 4th century BC and employed successfully in a variety of monetary systems since then, ranging from democratic Athens to republican Rome. It is not merely a theory - its main elements have a long history of successful implementation in major societies around the world, including the American Colonies and the United States. These concepts enabled us to first establish the U.S. and then to maintain it as one nation.

The current text of the Act (continuing to be developed) is presented on the right side of each page. On the left appears an explanation of the terminology and why it’s necessary. A background explanation is presented after each Title. Then the next Title is considered. This is still an open process – suggestions and criticisms are welcomed.

This five page form of the Act is a structural summary, which gets more detailed and fleshed out by legislative aides preparing it for introduction into Congress as a Bill. The following brief summary:

The Need for Monetary Reform serves as a preface to the American Monetary Act.

You are invited to join in this citizen’s movement and demand for monetary reform! Attend the AMI Monetary Reform Conference held annually in Chicago at Roosevelt University each September. Sincerely, Stephen Zarlenga

Director, AMI * Please see The Lost Science of Money book for the case histories that demonstrate in detail, the points of this pamphlet.


The Need for Monetary Reform

Monetary reform is the critical missing element needed to move humanity back from the brink of economic destruction and nuclear disaster, away from a future dominated by fraud, ugliness and warfare, toward a world of justice and beauty.

The power to create money is an awesome power – at times stronger than the Executive, Legislative and Judicial powers combined. It’s like having a “magic checkbook,” where checks can’t bounce. When controlled privately it can be used to gain riches, but much more importantly it determines the direction of our society by deciding where the money goes – what gets funded and what does not. Will it be used to build and repair vital infrastructure such as the New Orleans levees and Minneapolis bridges to protect major cities? Or will it go into warfare and real estate loans creating the real estate bubble – leading to a crash and depression.

Thus the money issuing power should never be alienated from democratically elected government and placed ambiguously into private hands as it is in America in the Federal Reserve System today. Indeed, most people would be surprised to learn that the bulk of our money supply is not created by our government, but by private banks when they make loans. Through the Fed’s fractional reserve process the system creates “money” when banks make loans into accounts; so most of our money is issued as interest-bearing debt (see page 14 below).

Under the Constitution, Article I, Sec. 8, our government has the sovereign power to issue money and spend it into circulation to promote the general welfare, for example, through the creation and repair of infrastructure, including human infrastructure - health and education - rather than misusing the money system for speculation as banking has historically done; periodically causing one crisis after another. Our lawmakers must now reclaim that power!

Money has value because of skilled people, resources, and infrastructure, working together in a supportive social and legal framework. Money is the indispensable lubricant that lets them “run.” It is not tangible wealth in itself, but a power to obtain wealth. Money is an abstract social power based in law; and whatever government accepts in payment of taxes will be money. Money’s value is not created by the private corporations that now control it. As Aristotle wrote: “Money exists not by nature but by law.”

Unhappily, mankind’s experience with private money creation has undeniably been a long history of fraud, mismanagement and even villainy, and the present crisis could become the worst yet! Banking abuses are pervasive and self-evident. Major banks and companies focus on abusing the money system instead of production. Billions have been stolen, trillions more are being shamelessly grabbed in so called bailouts! Much of our leadership is acting like patsies, instead of protecting our people as the financiers rape America.

Private money creation through “fractional reserve” banking fosters an unprecedented concentration of wealth which destroys the democratic process and ultimately promotes military imperialism. Less than 1% of the population now claims ownership of almost 50% of the wealth, but vital infrastructure is ignored. The American Society of Civil Engineers gives a D grade to our infrastructure and says it will soon be a D-; and estimates that $2.2 trillion is needed to bring it to safe levels over the next 5 years!

That fact alone shows the world’s dominant money system to be a major failure crying for reform.

Infrastructure repair would provide quality employment throughout the nation. There is a pretense that government must either borrow or tax to get the money for such projects. But it is well enough known that the government can directly create the money needed and spend it into circulation for such projects, without inflationary results. A reformed monetary/banking system can make this happen NOW!

Monetary reform is achieved with three elements which must be enacted together for it to work. Any one or any two of them alone won’t do it, but would further harm the reform process. The reform has its best chance of passage in this severe monetary crisis created by the privatized money system. Considering that the same establishment controls our weapons systems, this may be humanities only chance for reform, to stop the now obvious slide of our middle class into slavery or some form of “Disney Fascism.”

First, incorporate the Federal Reserve System into the U.S. Treasury where all new money would be created by government as money, not interest-bearing debt; and be spent into circulation to promote the general welfare. The monetary system would be monitored to be neither inflationary nor deflationary.

Second, halt the bank’s privilege to create money by ending the fractional reserve system in a gentle and elegant way. All the past monetized private credit would be converted into U.S. government money. Banks would then act as intermediaries accepting savings deposits and loaning them out to borrowers. They would do what people think they do now. This Act nationalizes the money system, not the banking system. Banking is not a proper function of government, but providing the nation’s money supply is a government prerogative!

Third, spend new money into circulation on 21st century eco-friendly infrastructure and energy sources, including the education and healthcare needed for a growing and improving society, starting with the $2.2 trillion that the Civil Engineers estimate is needed for infrastructure repair; creating good jobs across our nation, re-invigorating local economies and re-funding local government at all levels.

The false specter of inflation is usually raised against such suggestions that our government fulfill its responsibility to furnish the nation’s money supply. But that is a knee-jerk reaction - the result of decades, even centuries of propaganda against government.* When one actually examines the monetary record, it becomes clear that government has a far superior record in issuing and controlling money than the private issuers have had.* Inflation is avoided because real material wealth has been created in the process. Research and development of superior pollution-free technologies is facilitated.

What we're proposing builds upon the “Chicago Plan” which came out of University of Chicago economists in the 1930s and was widely supported nationwide by the economics profession back then. It was thought to be the next immediate step in the reforms coming out of the Great Depression. This was before that important university and most other university economics departments went over to the “dark side” with their free market worship. That’s a religion with no supporting evidence that ignores the facts which clearly disprove it.

Lawmakers have often believed they could ignore the big questions on how our money system is structured. Right from the Constitutional Convention delegates ignored society’s monetary power and the excellent record of government issued money in building colonial infrastructure and giving us a nation.* They left the money power up for grabs, when properly estimating it would have meant placing it in a fourth monetary branch of government. “We marvel that they saw so much, but they saw not all things” wrote Civil War General and money reformer Benjamin Franklin Butler 80 years later.

My Friends, our Great Task is to complete that part of government left inadequately defined by the founders; to more precisely define the money power in our society and bring it securely within the proven system of checks and balances they established. History shows that the money power will act like a fourth branch whether we recognize it as such or not. It’s not safe to leave so much power and privilege in private hands! It’s counter to our system of checks and balances. The developing crisis requires us to re-evaluate and focus on it now. We must not shrink from our responsibility to begin implementing the long known solutions to this problem. We start by placing the “money power” within our government where it obviously belongs. Or would you prefer to let “Enron” continue to control it, and us? And yes - Enron was on the Dallas Fed Board!

As the late Congressman Wright Patman, Chairman of the House Committee on Banking and Currency for over 16 years, said, "I have never yet had anyone who could, through the use of logic and reason, justify the Federal Government borrowing the use of its own money....I believe the time will come when people will demand that this be changed. I believe the time will come in this country when they will actually blame you and me and everyone else connected with the Congress for sitting idly by and permitting such an idiotic system to continue.”

Friends, look around you. That time has certainly come! Awaken – get up and fight for your family and nation.

Thanks for your attention,
Stephen Zarlenga Director

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Turning King’s Dream Into a Nightmare

Turning King's Dream Into a Nightmare

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/turning_kings_dream_into_a_nightmare_20100117/

Posted on Jan 17, 2010



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Thursday, January 21, 2010

Paul Craig Roberts: The Rule of Law Has Been Lost

The Rule of Law Has Been Lost

By Paul Craig Roberts
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article24444.htm

January 19, 2010 "
Information Clearing House" -- What is the greatest human achievement? Many would answer in terms of some architectural or engineering feat: The Great Pyramids, skyscrapers, a bridge span, or sending men to the moon. Others might say the subduing of some deadly disease or Einstein’s theory of relativity.

The greatest human achievement is the subordination of government to law. This was an English achievement that required eight centuries of struggle, beginning in the ninth century when King Alfred the Great codified the common law, moving forward with the Magna Carta in the thirteenth century and culminating with the Glorious Revolution in the late seventeenth century.

The success of this long struggle made law a shield of the people. As an English colony, America inherited this unique achievement that made English speaking peoples the most free in the world.

In the first decade of the twenty-first century, this achievement was lost in the United States and, perhaps, in England as well.

As Lawrence Stratton and I show in our book, The Tyranny of Good Intentions (2000), the protective features of law in the U.S. were eroded in the twentieth century by prosecutorial abuse and by setting aside law in order to better pursue criminals. By the time of our second edition (2008), law as a shield of the people no longer existed. Respect for the Constitution and rule of law had given way to executive branch claims that during time of war government is not constrained by law or Constitution.

Government lawyers told President Bush that he did not have to obey the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which prohibits the government from spying on citizens without a warrant, thus destroying the right to privacy. The U.S. Department of Justice ruled that the President did not have to obey U.S. law prohibiting torture or the Geneva Conventions. Habeas corpus protection, a Constitutional right, was stripped from U.S. citizens. Medieval dungeons, torture, and the windowless cells of Stalin’s Lubyanka Prison reappeared under American government auspices.

The American people’s elected representatives in Congress endorsed the executive branch’s overthrow of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Law schools and bar associations were essentially silent in the face of this overthrow of mankind’s greatest achievement. Some parts of the federal judiciary voted with the executive branch; other parts made a feeble resistance. Today in the name of “the war on terror,” the executive branch does whatever it wants. There is no accountability.

The First Amendment has been abridged and may soon be criminalized. Protests against, and criticisms of, the U.S. government’s illegal invasions of Muslim countries and war crimes against civilian populations have been construed by executive branch officials as “giving aid and comfort to the enemy.” As American citizens have been imprisoned for giving aid to Muslim charities that the executive branch has decreed, without proof in a court of law, to be under the control of “terrorists,” any form of opposition to the government’s wars and criminal actions can also be construed as aiding terrorists and be cause for arrest and indefinite detention.

One Obama appointee, Harvard law professor Cass Sunstein, advocates that the U.S. government create a cadre of covert agents to infiltrate anti-war groups and groups opposed to U.S.government policies in order to provoke them into actions or statements for which they can be discredited and even arrested.

Sunstein defines those who criticize the government’s increasingly lawless behavior as “extremists,” which, to the general public, sounds much like “terrorists.” In essence, Sunstein wants to generalize the F.B.I.’s practice of infiltrating dissidents and organizing them around a “terrorist plot” in order to arrest them. That this proposal comes from a Harvard Law School professor demonstrates the collapse of respect for law among American law professors themselves, ranging from John Yoo at Berkeley, the advocate of torture, to Sunstein at Harvard, a totalitarian who advocates war on the First Amendment.

The U.S. Department of State has taken up Sunstein’s idea. Last month Eva Golinger reported in the Swiss newspaper, Zeit-Fragen, that the State Department plans to organize youth in “Twitter Revolutions” to destabilize countries and bring about regime change in order to achieve more American puppet states, such as the ones in Egypt, Jordan, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Canada, Mexico, Columbia, Ukraine, Georgia, the Baltic states, Britain, and Western and Eastern Europe.

The First Amendment is being closed down. Its place is being taken by propaganda in behalf of whatever government does. As Stratton and I wrote in the second edition of our book documenting the destruction of law in the United States:

“Never in its history have the American people faced such danger to their constitutional protections as they face today from those in the government who hold the reins of power and from elements of the legal profession and the federal judiciary that support ‘energy in the executive.’ An assertive executive backed by an aggressive U.S. Department of Justice (sic) and unobstructed by a supine Congress and an intimidated corporate media has demonstrated an ability to ignore statutory law and public opinion. The precedents that have been set during the opening years of the twenty-first century bode ill for the future of American liberty.”

Similar assaults on the rule of law can be observed in England. However, the British have not completely given up on accountable government. The Chilcot Inquiry is looking into how Britain was deceived into participating in the illegal U.S. invasion of Iraq. President Obama, of course, has blocked any inquiry into how the U.S. was deceived into attacking Iraq in violation of law.

Much damning information has come out about Blair’s deception of the British government and people. Sir David Manning, foreign policy advisor to Blair, told the Chilcot Inquiry that Blair had promised Bush support for the invasion almost a year in advance. Blair had told his country that it was a last minute call based on proof of Iraq’s possession of weapons of mass destruction.

Sir William Patey told the inquiry that President Bush began talking about invading Iraq six or seven months prior to September 11, 2001. A devastating official memo has come to light from Lord Goldsmith, Prime Minister Blair’s top law official, advising Blair that an invasion of Iraq would be in breach of international law.

Now a secret and personal letter to Prime Minister Blair from his Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, has surfaced. In the letter, the Foreign Secretary warned the Prime Minister that his case for military invasion of Iraq was of dubious legality and was likely as false as the argument that removing Saddam Hussein would bring Iraqis a better life.

Blair himself must now testify. He has the reputation, whether deserved or not, as one of the slickest liars in the world. But some accountability seems to be heading his way. The Sunday Times (London) reported on January 17 that the latest poll indicates that 52 percent of the British people believe that Blair deliberately misled his country in order to take Britain to war for the Americans. About one quarter of the British people think Blair should be put on trial as a war criminal.

Unlike the U.S., which takes care to keep the government unaccountable to law, Britain is a member of the International Criminal Court, so Blair does stand some risk of being held accountable for the war crimes of President George W. Bush’s regime and the U.S. Congress.

In contrast, insouciant Americans are content for their government to behave illegally. A majority supports torture despite its illegality, and a McClatchy-Ipsos poll found that 51 percent of Americans agree that “it is necessary to give up some civil liberties in order to make the country safe from terrorism.”

As our Founding Fathers warned, fools who give up liberty for security will have neither.


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Thursday, January 14, 2010

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Needleman Interview: Panoraic View Of Undestimating What Human Nature Can Be Connecting To The Greater Than The Ordinary For GoodAnd

The universal human yearning, desire, for great ideas and the higher possibilities of human nature.
The self within the self (not the ego self). The spiritual understandings, practices, listening to what others are saying and to respond from one's heart. Touching the essence of all religions.

Needleman article continued below after this brief announcement.
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---
Needleman continued from above.

The universal human yearning, desire, for great ideas and the higher possibilities of human nature.
The self within the self (not the ego self). The spiritual understandings, practices, listening to what others are saying and to respond from one's heart. Touching the essence of all religions.

Listen to the interview here:
http://www.garynull.org/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/GaryNullShow011210.mp3

It starts a couple minutes in, runs about 30 minutes of the first half of the hour show.

Jacob Needleman's website:
http://www.jacobneedleman.com/

The website includes addition interviews, audio and video:
http://www.jacobneedleman.com/questions.htm

His lectures include:

Click on a topic to learn more:

 

The American Soul: Rediscovering the Wisdom of the Founding Fathers

Based on Jacob Needleman's most recent book, The American Soul, Needleman delves into the question of America. He looks at some of the beliefs and values that have shaped our culture, but separates the political, sociological, and economic aspects of "Americanism" that separates us, and repositions the purely metaphysical and psychological ideas that can bring us together. What, for example, is the spiritual, metaphysical meaning of democracy, or independence, or self-reliance? Although released in February 2002, Needleman spent over a decade researching and writing The American Soul. He has much to offer those of us seeking a deeper understanding of our culture, especially at this crucial time in our history.

 

Money and the Meaning of Life: Spiritual Search in a Material World

What is the the role and meaning of money in our lives? Money is the raw material out of which we build our lives. But because we don't take money more seriously, we have come to know the price of everything and the value of nothing. Jacob Needleman raises a number of questions about how money influences our emotional and spiritual lives. He draws on the experiences of mythic figures, historians, psychologists, economists, and poets to guide us in our search. This lecture topic is based on Needleman's book, Money and the Meaning of Life.

 

Time and the Soul: Searching for Time in a Time Deprived World

One of the most esoteric of all subjects, yet we experience time most intimately. Many of us feel we do not have enough time, or that time is moving too quickly. Needleman explores the agonizing paradox of time; two centuries of inventions designed to save time have actually had the effect of destroying time. We have material things, but little or no humanly meaningful time in our lives. Needleman looks to the great wisdom teachings for guidance in how to recover the fullness of meaningful time in the conditions of the modern world. This lecture topic is based on Needleman's book, Time and the Soul.

 

What Do We Mean by Healing?

Based on Jacob Needleman's book, The Way of the Physician, Needleman explores the science, practice, and spirituality of medicine. What does it mean to be a healer, and what are the responsibilities of healers? At a time when the financial considerations are taking precedence over the welfare of patients, Needleman sheds light on the great importance and responsibilities of healers.

 

Science and the Spiritual

This lecture topic aims to reach a contemporary redefinition of the spiritual search in the light of the latest speculations of science, including the science of chaos, the theories of quantum physicists, and the psychological implications of the computer. Needleman brings the perspectives of philosophy, psychology, and the great wisdom teachings to bear as he considers such questions as these: Is consciousness a fundamental aspect of reality? Does humanity have a special place and destiny in the cosmic scheme? Is the planet Earth a living organism? Are there truths about nature and the human mind that science cannot answer? This lecture topic is based on Needleman's book, a Sense of the Cosmos.

 

Philosophy and the Great Questions of Life: Philosophy's Role in Modern Life

Philosophy is the art of pondering the great questions of life, questions which the mind alone cannot answer, nor the heart can cease asking. Why do we suffer? How should we live? What can we hope for? Why is it essential that we go on pondering these questions of the heart, and how have great philosophers throughout the ages responded to them? This lecture topic explores the role of the great philosophical ideas as necessary allies in the rough-and-tumble of everyday life. Ideas presented in this lecture topic can also be found in Needleman's books, Heart of Philosophy, and Real Philosophy.

The Cultivation of Ethics in America’s Adolescents

Nowhere is the ethical crisis of our culture more poignant than in the minds and hearts of America’s young people. What do boys and girls of high-school age need to hear about morality and the development of character—beyond all the futile moralizing and the commercially driven and often degrading psychological “advice” and “tips” found everywhere in the omnipresent media of our time? What do they need to hear in order to help them think well and truly about the meaning of their lives with each other?



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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Search For Truth And Development Of The Will To The Good

The Intentional Cultivation Of This Inner Experience
Is Essential For Fullness Of Our Existence

to look more closely at the religious ideas

a core of esoteric and philosophical ideas, more mature and challenging than anything he had ever associated with Judaism, Christianity, and the religions of the East.

ideas and words are not enough.
The inner realization that in order to lead the lives we were intended for,
the very nature of human experience must change,
including the very structure of our perception and indeed the very structure of our minds.


the meaning and nature of this needed change
this specific quality of thought and experience.
this inner experience-and how almost all of us, atheists and "believers" alike, actually have been visited by it understanding what it means

the intentional cultivation of this quality of experience is necessary for the fullness of our existence.
---

ideas that nourish the search for Truth and the development of the Will to the Good
nourish the sense of the sacred in nature and, above all, in ourselves.
the awakening of Conscious Attention

+++

Jacob Needleman - “What Is God?”: Conclusion

The growing human being—child or adult—has need for ideas that nourish the search for Truth and the development of the Will to the Good, that nourish the sense of the sacred in nature and, above all, in ourselves. It may not be necessary for everyone to enter the path of inner work, leading to the opening to the true I Am within. But it may very well be necessary for the doors to be open to those who are touched by the great wish that leads to the personal search for God, whether that search takes place in the hidden heart of our own ancient teachings; or in the still living practical mysticism of Eastern teachings; or in the re-discovered path leading to the awakening of Conscious Attention; or in ways still, for all we know, hidden and waiting to be “switched on” in our civilization.


---

What Is God? (Hardcover)

~ Jacob Needleman (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

Description

In his most deeply personal work, religious scholar Needleman cuts a clear path through today's clamorous debates over the existence of God, illuminating an entirely new way of approaching the question of how to understand a higher power.

I n this new book, philosopher Jacob Needleman- whose voice and ideas have done so much to open the West to esoteric and Eastern religious ideas in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries-intimately considers humanity's most vital question: What is God?

Needleman begins by taking us more than a half century into the past, to his own experience as a brilliant, promising, Ivyeducated student of philosophy-atheistic, existential, and unwilling to blindly accept childish religiosity. But an unsettling meeting with the venerated Zen teacher D. T. Suzuki, combined with the sudden need to accept a dreary position teaching the philosophy of religion, forced the young academician to look more closely at the religious ideas he had once thought dead. Within traditional religious texts the scholar discovered a core of esoteric and philosophical ideas, more mature and challenging than anything he had ever associated with Judaism, Christianity, and the religions of the East.

At the same time, Needleman came to realize-as he shares with the reader-that ideas and words are not enough. Ideas and words, no matter how profound, cannot prevent hatred, arrogance, and ultimate despair, and cannot prevent our individual lives from descending into violence and illusion. And with this insight, Needleman begins to open the reader to a new kind of understanding: The inner realization that in order to lead the lives we were intended for, the very nature of human experience must change, including the very structure of our perception and indeed the very structure of our minds.

In What Is God?, Needleman draws us closer to the meaning and nature of this needed change-and shows how our present confusion about the purpose of religion and the concept of God reflects a widespread psychological starvation for this specific quality of thought and experience. In rich and varied detail, the book describes this inner experience-and how almost all of us, atheists and "believers" alike, actually have been visited by it, but without understanding what it means and why the intentional cultivation of this quality of experience is necessary for the fullness of our existence.


About the Author

Jacob Needleman, the acclaimed author of The American Soul and Money and the Meaning of Life, is a professor of philosophy at San Francisco State University, and a former director of the Center for the Study of New Religions at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Tarcher (December 24, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1585427403
  • ISBN-13: 978-1585427406
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.6 x 1 inches


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Thursday, January 7, 2010

Community Food Councils - For Cities, Regions And The World

examine how the food system is operating and to develop recommendations on how to improve it.

predominately a grassroots effort.

Food policy councils have been successful at educating officials and the public, shaping public policy, improving coordination between existing programs, and starting new programs.

Examples include mapping and publicizing local food resources;
creating new transit routes to connect underserved areas with full-service grocery stores;
persuading government agencies to purchase from local farmers; and
organizing community gardens and farmers' markets.

+++


http://www.foodsecurity.org/FPC/




FPC Home
Council List
Government Affiliation
Documents
Policy
Resources & Tools
Meetings & Conference Calls
CFSC Homepage

Welcome to the Community Food Security Coalition's
North American Food Policy Council Webpage

What is a Food Policy Council?

Food Policy Councils (FPCs) bring together stakeholders from diverse food-related sectors to examine how the food system is operating and to develop recommendations on how to improve it. FPCs may take many forms, but are typically either commissioned by state or local government, or predominately a grassroots effort. Food policy councils have been successful at educating officials and the public, shaping public policy, improving coordination between existing programs, and starting new programs. Examples include mapping and publicizing local food resources; creating new transit routes to connect underserved areas with full-service grocery stores; persuading government agencies to purchase from local farmers; and organizing community gardens and farmers' markets.

While FPC's are not a new concept, their structures, practices, and policies are still evolving. Although the first Food Policy Council started 20 years ago in the city of Knoxville, only in the last five years have Food Policy Councils really gained momentum, and today there are almost 50 councils nationwide.

Currently no U.S. government entity has a Department of Food, so food-related issues are addressed by various agencies. This severely limits the potential for coordination, and for government to address broad goals such as improving access to healthy foods. Since they bring together a cross-disciplinary group of stakeholders, Food Policy Councils can help to bridge this gap and identify ways to address interconnected issues and improve the food system.

What can we offer?
The Community Food Security Coalition (CFSC)'s national Food Policy Council (FPC) Program is designed to support, free of charge, the development and operation of current and emerging Food Policy Councils. The Program provides:
  • Information about food policy councils in the U.S., via this website and in response to specific inquiries;
  • Individualized assistance to food policy councils to help them strategize, problem-solve, and plan (mostly via phone and email, but occasionally including site visits);
  • Bimonthly conference calls on topics of interest to food policy council organizers, such as conducting food assessments, organizing policy campaigns, and raising funds;
  • Regional networking meetings to bring together food policy council organizers to network and share information;
This program also facilitates linkages between FPCs and local farmers and ranchers, especially those who are women, people of color, limited resource, and from other traditionally underserved groups. We have developed a report that gives examples of policy approaches that support these producers.

For more information, contact:
Mark Winne
Food Policy Council Program
Phone: 505.983.3047
Email: mark@foodsecurity.org

New to the program? Tell us about your work and what kind of support you could use.

Want to give feedback on the support you’ve received? Please fill out our Food Policy Council Program survey.

Join CFSC's Food Policy Council listserv! It's a new way for Councils across the country to share resources, gain feedback, and discuss challenges and opportunities. Learn more.

Council List
NOTE: The following list includes councils of various types, with different approaches and at various stages of development. Due to the evolving nature of this work, we recommend that you check with the council to ensure accuracy of the information below. Also, if you would like us to add your council to this list or if the information included here for your council is incorrect, please email mark@foodsecurity.org.

Please use the clickable map to find a council near you. An "S" in front of a council name designates a state-level council and an "L" denotes a local-level council, including city, county, etc.



Native American Tribal Councils


Alabama
L: Food Security Coalition of Jefferson County
Birmingham, AL
Contact: Juanita Titrud
Email: mcharvest@bellsouth.net

Alaska

Arizona
S: Arizona Food Policy Coalition
Contact: Cindy Gentry
Coordinator, Arizona Food Policy Coalition
Community Food Connections
Phone: (602) 493.5231
cgentry@foodconnect.org

L: Pima County Food Policy Council
Contact: Varga Garland
Director, Community Food Security Center
Community Food Bank
Phone: (520) 622.0525
vgarland@communityfoodbank.com

Arkansas
S: Arkansas Food Policy Council *
Contact: Donna Uptagrafft
Email: duptagrafft@winrock.org
Phone: (501) 280-3078
* In development

California
L: Contra Costa Food and Nutrition Policy Consortium
Lindsay Johnson
Email: ljohnson@foodbankccs.org

L: Get Fit Fresno County
Central California Regional Obesity Prevention Project (CCROPP)
Contact: Reyna N. Villalobos, MPH
CCROPP Director for Fresno County
Fresno Metro Ministry
Phone: (559) 485-1416
Email: reyna@fresnometmin.org
Web: www.fresnometmin.org
www.ccropp.net

L: LA Food and Justice Network *
LA Food and Justice Network
Contact: Frank Tamborello
Hunger Action Los Angeles
961 S. Mariposa #205
Los Angeles CA 90006
Phone: 213-388-8228
Email: frank@hungeractionla.org
* in development

L: Marin Food Policy Council
Contact: Janet Brown
Email: janet@ecoliteracy.org
or
EECOM – Marin Food Systems Project
Executive Director: Catriona MacGregor
Phone: 415-663-1338

L: Oakland Food Policy Council
Contact: Alethea Marie Harper
Email: aharper.ofpc@foodfirst.or
Phone: 510-654-4400 x233
Web: www.oaklandfood.org

L: Pasadena Food Policy Council
Contact: Mary Urtecho-Garcia
Nutrition and Physical Activity Project
Phone: (626) 744-6163
Email: mugarcia@cityofpasadena.net
Web: www.ci.pasaden.ca.us/publichealth

L: Sacramento Hunger Commission
Contact: Melissa Ortiz-Gray
Phone: 916.447.7063 x 335
Email: Mortiz-Gray@communitycouncil.org

L: San Bernardino City Food Policy Council
Contact: Linda Ceballos
Environmental Projects Manager
City of SB, Public Service Dept
Phone: 909-880-8685
Email: ceballos_li@sbcity.org

L: San Francisco Food Systems Council
Contact: Paula Jones
Phone: (415) 252-3853
Email: Paula.jones@sfdph.org
Web: www.sffoodsystems.org

L: Santa Barbara Food Policy Council
Contact: Megan Carney
TGIF Sustainable Food Coordinator, University of California, Santa Barbara
Phone: (805) 729-2452
Email: megcarney@gmail.com

L: Santa Cruz Food System Network
Contact: Tim Galarneau
(831) 761-8507
Phone: (805) 264-5752
Email: solseeker3@aol.com
foodpolicy@baymoon.com
Web: www.scfoodsystem.org

L: Sonoma County Food Matters
Contacts: Ellen Bauer, James Johnson
Phone: 707-829-6353
Email: e.bauer@earthlink.net, shanjam@igc.org

L: Stanislaus Nutrition and Fitness Council
Contact: Lynsey Lomeli
Health Educator
Stanislaus County Health Services
Phone: 209-558-7150
Email: Llomeli@schsa.org

L: Yolo County Food Policy Council
Contact: Jose Martinez
Yolo County Food Bank
Phone: (530) 668-0690
Email: jose@foodbankyc.org
in development

Colorado
S: Colorado Food & Agriculture Policy Council
Contact: Jennifer Kemp
Director of Government Relations
Rocky Mountain Farmers Union
Phone: (303) 772-8179
Email: kempwick@msn.com
Web: www.oakhavenpc.org/FoodAgPolicy

L: Boulder County Food and Agriculture Policy Committee
Contact: Cindy Torres
Phone: 720-480-9951
ctplant@hotmail.com

L: Boulder/Adams Chapter of Northern
Colorado Food and Agriculture Policy Council*
Contact: Adrian Card
Extension Agent, Coordinator
CSU Cooperative Extension, Boulder County
Phone: (303) 678-6383
Email: acard@co.boulder.co.us
Web: www.coopext.colostate.edu/boulder/AG/marketing.shtml (scroll down to "Policy")

L: Denver Food and Agriculture Policy Council
Contact: Kathryn Colasanti
Denver Urban Gardens
3377 Blake St, Suite 113
Denver, CO 80205
Phone: 303.292.9900
Fax: 303.292.9911
Email: denverfapc@gmail.com
Web: www.coopext.colostate.edu/boulder/AG/FAP.shtml

L: Larimer/Weld Chapter of Northern
Colorado Food and Agriculture Policy Council*
Contact: Dawn Thilmany
Co-Coordinator, CSU Cooperative Extension
Department of Agriculture and Resource Economics
Phone: (970) 491-7220
Email: thilmany@lamar.colostate.edu
Contact: Laura R. Tanaka
Phone: (970) 224-2960
laurartanaka@yahoo.com

L: San Luis Valley Working Group
Contact: Karma Anderson
District Conservationist
NRCS San Luis Field Office
Phone: 719-672-3673 x106
Email: karma.anderson@co.usda.gov

L: Sustainability Alliance of SW Colorado
Contact: Jim Dyer
SW Marketing Network
970-588-2292
Email: jadyer@frontier.net
Web: www.sustainableswcolorado.org

L: West Slope Working Group
Contact: Ed Page
CSU Cooperative Extension Service
Phone: 970-249-3935
Email: epage@coop.ext.colostate.edu, Edward.page@colostate.edu

L: Western Colorado Food and Agriculture Council
Contact: Elaine Brett
Phone: 970-210-9717
Email: embrett@paonia.com

Connecticut
S: Connecticut Food Policy Council
Linda T. Drake, M.S.
University of Connecticut EFNEP
Chair, Connecticut Food Policy Council
Phone: (860) 486-1783
Email: Linda.Drake@uconn.edu
Web: www.foodpc.state.ct.us

L: City of Hartford Food Policy Commission
Jerry Jones
Hartford Food System
Phone: (860) 296-9325
Email: jjones@hartford.org
Web: www.hartford.gov/government/FoodCommission/default.htm

L: New Haven Food Policy Council*
Contact: Jennifer McTiernan
Founder and Executive Director
CitySeed, Inc
Email: NHFPC@cityseed.org
Phone: 203-773-3736
Web: www.cityseed.org

Delaware

District of Columbia
L: DC Mayor’s Commission on Food and Nutrition
Contact: Kimberly Perry
Email: Kp4kids@yahoo.com

Florida
L: Palm Beach County Community Food Security Council
Contact: Tracey Padian Lamport
Director, Impact Area
United Way of Palm Beach County
Phone: (561) 375-6686
Email: Traceypadian@unitedwaypbc.org

L: Sarasota County Agriculture Policy Council (SAPC)
Contact: Robert A. Kluson
Phone: (941) 232-3090
Email: rkluson@scgov.net
Web: sarasota.extension.ufl.edu/AG/agpolicy.shtml

L: Tampa Bay Food Policy Council*
Contact: Rob Alicea
C (727) 460-1709
H (727) 393-8049
Email: ralicea2@tampabay.rr.com
* In development

Georgia
L: Atlanta Regional Food System*
Contact: Peggy Barlett
Researcher and Professor of Anthropology
Emory University
Phone: (404) 727.5766
Email: pbarlett@emory.edu

L: Athens Area Food Policy Council
Contact: Shannon McBride
Phone: (706) 354-8080
Email: hands4sg@bellsouth.net

Hawaii

Idaho
Tables of Hope (previously North-Central Idaho Food Sustainability Collaborative)
Lewiston, ID
Contact: David Knittel, Chairman
Phone: (208) 743-5580
Email: d.knittel@cap4action.org

L: Treasure Valley Food Coalition
Contact: Janie Burns
Email: medowlrk@sitestar.net
Phone: (208) 466-4806

Illinois
S: Illinois Sustainable Food Policy Council*
Contact: Gayle Keiser
Illinois Stewardship Alliance
Phone: (217) 498-9707
Email: gayle@illinoisstewardshipalliance.org
Web: http://www.illinoisstewardshipalliance.org

L: Evanston Food Policy Council
Network for Evanston’s Future
Contact: Debbie Hillman
Phone: (847) 328-7175
Email: DLHIllman@sbcglobal.net
Web: http://evanstonfuture.org

L: Chicago Food Policy Advisory Council*
Contact: Rodger Cooley
Phone: (773) 279-9696
Email: Rodger.cooley@heifer.org
Web: www.chicagofoodpolicy.org
OR
Contact: Erika Allen
Co-Chair, Chicago Food Policy Advisory Council
Growing Power Illinois
Phone: (773) 324-7924
Erika@growingpower.org

Indiana

Iowa
S: Iowa Food Policy Council
Contact: Matt Russell
Phone: 515-271-4956
Email: Matthew.Russell@drake.edu
Web: www.iowafoodpolicy.org

Kansas
S: Kansas State Food Policy Council*
Contact: Dan Nagengast
Coordinator
Phone: (785) 748-0959
Email: nagengast@earthlink.net

L: Salina Food Policy Council
Contact: Kirk Cusick
Coordinator
Phone: (785) 827-6276
Email: whisperingctnwd@sbc.net

Kentucky
L: Knoxville/Knox County Food Policy Council
Contact: Caroline Perry-Burst
Phone: 865-594-1706
Email: Perryburst@k12tn.net, gharris@knxcac.org

Louisiana
L: Grow New Orleans (temp name)
Contact: Marilyn Yank
Phone: 504-864-2009
Email: marilynyank@gmail.com
Web: www.noffn.org

Maine
S: Maine State Food Policy Council
Contact: Jane Aiudi
Phone: 207-287-3702
Email: jane.aiudi@maine.gov
Web: www.maine.gov/agriculture

Maryland

Massachusetts
S: Massachusetts Food Policy Council *
Contact: Betsy Johnson
11 1/2 Greenwich Park, Boston, MA 02118
Phone: 617-536-1711
Email: betsy@bgjohnson.com
* In development

L: Boston FPC *
Contact: Judith Kurland
Mayor's Office, City of Boston, 1 City Hall Plaza, Boston, MA 02201
Phone: 617-635-4500
* In development

L: Holyoke Food Policy Council
Contact: Kristin Getler
Coordinator, Holyoke Food Policy Council
Holyoke City Health Department
Phone: (413) 322.5595
Email: kgetler@ci.holyoke.ma.us

L: Springfield Community Food and Nutrition Coalition*
Contact: Synthia Scott-Mitchell
Director of Community Services
Springfield Partners for Community Action
Phone: (413) 263-6500 x6518
Email: synthiam@springfieldpartnersinc.com
Web: www.springfieldpartnersinc.com

L: Worcester Food Policy Council
Contact: Liz Sheehan
Project Manager, Hunger-Free & Healthy
c/o Worcester Advisory Food Policy Council
484 Main Street, Suite 300 (United Way) Worcester, MA 01608
office: 508-757-5631 x304
mobile: 508-723-4550
hungerfree@worcesterfoodpolicy.org

Michigan
S: Michigan Food Policy Council
Contact: Kirsten G. Simmons
Executive Coordinator
Phone: 517-335-4184
Email:simmonsk@michigan.gov
Web: www.michigan.gov/mfpc

L: Greater Grand Rapids Food Systems Council
Contact: Cynthia Price
Phone: 231-578-0873
Email: skyprice@gmail.com
Web: www.foodshed.net

Minnesota
L: Minneapolis - St. Paul Food Policy Council *
Contact: Brian Noy, Local Foods Organizer
The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy
Phone: 612:701:8346
Email: briannoy@gmail.com
* in development

Mississippi

Missouri
Missouri Farmers Union *
Jefferson City, MO
Contact: Jake Davis
Email: jdavis@missourifarmersunion.org
* in development

Montana
L: Community Food and Agriculture Coalition-Missoula
Contact: Bonnie Buckingham
Missoula Food Bank
Phone: 406-880-0543
Email: cfac@montana.com
Web: www.umt.edu/cfa

Nebraska

Nevada

New Hampshire

New Jersey

New Mexico
S: New Mexico Food and Agriculture Policy Council
Contact: Pam Roy
Phone: 505.473.1004
Email: pamelaroy@aol.com
Web: www.farmtotable.info

New York
S: New York Food Policy Council on Food Policy
Contact: Commissioner Patrick Hooker
NYS Department of Agriculture & Markets
Chairman, NYS CFP
Phone: (518) 485-7728
Email: nyscfp@agmkt.state.ny.us
Web: www.nyscfp.org

L: Onondaga Food System Council*
Phone: (315) 424-9485

L: Food Systems Network NYC
Contact: Fern Gale Estrow
Phone: 212-691-5154
Email: festrow@FGEteam.org

North Dakota
S: North Dakota Food Policy Council
(Info not available)

Ohio
L: Cleveland/Cuyahoga County Food Policy Council - Development Group
Contact: Morgan Taggart
Ohio State University Extension, Cuyahoga County
Phone: 216.429.8238
Email: taggart.32@cfaes.osu.edu
Web: http://cccfoodpolicy.org

S: Ohio Food Policy Advisory Council
Ohio Department of Agriculture
Contact: Amalie Lipstreu
Phone: 614-728-6200

Oklahoma
S: The Oklahoma Food Policy Council
Contact: Anita Poole
The Kerr Center for Sustainable Agriculture
Phone: 918-647-9123
Email: apoole@kerrcenter.com
Web: www.kerrcenter.com

Oregon
S: Oregon State Food Policy Council *
Contact: Patti Whitney-Wise
Executive Director
Oregon Hunger Relief Task Force
Phone: (503) 595-5501
Email: patti@oregonhunger.org
Contact: Sharon Thornberry
Community Foods Programs Advocate
Oregon Food Bank
Phone: (541) 929-7412, (800) 777-7427 x228 (voicemail)
Email: sthornberry@oregonfoodbank.org
* In development

L: Lane County Food Policy Council
Contact: Deb Johnson-Shelton, Chair
Email: debj@ori.org
Web: www.foodforlanecounty.org, www.fpclanecounty.org

L: Portland-Multnomah Food Policy Council
Contact: Steve Cohen
City of Portland, Office of Sustainable Development
Phone: 503-823-4225
Email: scohen@ci.portland.or.us
Web: www.portlandonline.com/osd/index.cfm?c=42290&
Chair: Suzanne Briggs
Phone: 503-288-0824
Email: sbriggs@att.net

L: Ten Rivers Food Web
Corvallis, OR
Contact: Liv Nevin Gifford
Email: lgifford@emoregon.org or info@tenriversfoodweb.org
Phone: 541-929-4167
Web: tenriversfoodweb.org

L: Tillamook Community Food Security Council
Contact: Shelly Bowe
Community Food Program, CARE Regional Food Bank
Phone: (503) 842-5261
Email: sbowe@careinc.org

Pennsylvania

Rhode Island

South Carolina
Contact: Beth Crocker
General Counsel
South Carolina Department of Agriculture
Columbia, SC 29211-1280
Phone: (803) 734-2193
Email: bcrocker@scda.sc.gov

South Dakota

Tennessee
L: Knoxville/Knox County Food Policy Council
Contact: Gail Root
Email: gail@secondharvestknox.org
Web: www.cityofknoxville.org/boards/food.asp

L: Middle Tennessee Food Security Cooperation
Nashville, TN
Contact: Del Ketcham
Email: delk1111@comcast.net
Contact: Darcy Freedman
Email: darcy.a.freedman@vanderbilt.edu
Phone: 615-322-5638

Texas

Utah
S: Utah Food Council
Contact: Jim Ure
Phone: (801) 467-0893
Email: jimure@jimure.com
Contact: Gina Cornia, Director
Utahns Against Hunger
Phone: 801-328-2561 or 800-453-3663
Email: cornia@uah.org

Vermont
L: Burlington Food Council
Contact: Mandy Davis
Agricultural Development Services, Intervale Center
Phone: 802-660-0440 x108
Email: mandy@intervale.org
Web: www.cedo.ci.burlington.vt.us/legacy

Virginia
S: Virginia Food System Council
Contact: Eric Bendfeldt
Phone: 540-463-6029
Email: ebendfel@vt.edu

L: Accomack-Northampton Planning District Commission (A-NPDC) council
Contact: Barbara Schwenk
Phone: 757-787-2936
Web: www.a-npdc.org/projects.html

Washington
L: Seattle/King County Acting Food Policy Council (AFPC)
Contact: Tammy Morales
Acting Food Policy Council Coordinator
WSU King County Extension
Phone: 206-205-3131
Email: Tammy.morales@kingcounty.gov
Web: http://king.wsu.edu/foodandfarms/foodpolicycouncil.htm

L: Clark County Food Policy Council, Vancouver, WA
Contact: Tricia Mortell
Clark County Public Health
Phone: 360-397-8000 x7211
Email: Tricia.mortell@clark.wa.gov

L: Tahoma Food Policy Coalition
Contact: Sarah Garitone, Pierce Conservation District
Email: sarahg@piercecountycd.org
Web: www.tahomafoodpolicy.org


West Virginia

Wisconsin
L: Dane County Food Council*
Contact: Martin Bailkey, Vice-chair
Phone: 608-218-9478
Email: bailkey@sbcglobal.net
Web: www.co.dane.wi.us/foodcouncil

L: Milwaukee Food Council
Contacts: Marcia Caton Campbell, The Center for Resilient Cities, marcia@resilientcities.org
Young Kim, Fondy Food Center, young@fondymarket.org
Paulette Flynn, SHARE, pflynn@sharewi.org
Martha Davis Kipcak, The Kitchen Table Project, mdk@bricofund.org

Wyoming

NATIVE AMERICAN TRIBAL COUNCILS
Oneida Community Integrated Food Systems
Contact: Bill Ver Voort
OCIFS Coordinator
Phone: 920-869-1041
Email: wvervoor@oneidanation.org

Tohono O’odham Community Action
Contact: Tristan Reader
Co-director
Phone: 520-386-4966
Email: wynread@earthlink.net
Phone: 520-383-4966 (from Jill)
www.tocaonline.org

CANADIAN COUNCILS
L: Calgary Food Policy Council
Contact: Paul Hughes
Chair
Phone: 403-383-3420
Email: paul@calgaryfoodpolicycouncil.ca

L: Farm Folk/City Folk Society
Contact: Herb Barbolet
Co-Founder
Phone: 604-730-0450
Email: herb@ffcf.bc.ca

L: Kamloops Food Policy Council
Contact: Laura Kalina
Chair and Founder
Phone: 250-372-0815
Email: Laura.kalina@interiorhealth.ca

L: Ottawa Food Security Council
Contact: Moe Garahan
Coordinator
Phone: 613-236-9300
Email: ofsc@spcottawa.on.ca

L: Peterborough Food Policy Coalitions

L: Toronto Food Policy Council
Contact: Wayne Roberts
Project Coordinator
Phone: 416-338.7937
Email: wrobert@toronto.ca

L: Vancouver Food Policy Council
Contact: Devorah Kahn
Food Policy Coordinator, City of Vancouver
Phone: 604-871-6324
Email: devorah.kahn@vancouver.ca

L: Victoria Food Policy Council
CR-FAIR (Capital Region Food and Agriculture Initiatives Roundtable)
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Contact: Christina Peacock
Phone: 250-383-6166
Email: christina@communitycouncil.ca
Community Council
www.communitycouncil.ca/activities.php#food

L: Northwestern Ontario
Rainy River Valley Food Council
Jarrod Gunn-Mcquillan
Email: Jgunn-mcquillan@nwhu.on.ca


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