The Charlottesville Glocal Food System: Challenges and Opportunities for our Community’s Local and Global Food Sources

What are the true costs of buying food from around the globe? How much food can we grow close to home? Is it enough to support us and can we afford it?

These and other questions inspired a UVA class to conduct assessments of Charlottesville’s glocal (global + local) food system.

The class, consisting of both graduate and undergraduate students, is titled “Healthy Communities, Healthy Food Systems (Part III): Global-Local Connections” and is taught by Timothy Beatley, Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, Department of Urban and Environmental Planning, and Tanya Denckla Cobb, Senior Associate, Institute for Environmental Negotiation. Sponsored by UVa’s Center for Global Health, and designed for planning students, the class has drawn students from numerous disciplines.

The UVA class assessments are the next step in a longer-term community project to foster better links between local farms and community schools and organizations, food stores, restaurants and residents. Nine class teams have analyzed food-related entities in Charlottesville: farms, families, grocery stores, restaurants and community organizations. Each group examined local and global inputs, searched for potential local sources and identified methods to improve connectivity within local or global food systems. At this presentation, they look forward to sharing their findings.

(write up and timeline provided by Regine Kennedy)

Timeline

  • 0:00 Podcast Introduction
  • 0:46 Project Introduction by Professor Tim Beatley and Tanya Denckla Cobb
    Describing the local and global context of food systems and the scope of the course project presentations.
  • 6:44 Project: Wild Oats Farm presented by Nick Feucht and Nicolette Leung
    Understanding the challenges of managing land organically, observing conservation practices, while raising natural meat products for niche markets.
  • 16:37 Project: Roundabout Farm presented by Jenny Jackson and Elaine Quick
    Profiling a small, sustainably managed, independent farm’s primary inputs from a geographic and sourcing perspective.
  • 21:10 Project: Feast! presented by Fania Gordon and Meg Johnstone
    Creating a Best Practices Guide based on the successful example of a gourmet food store that supports the local system.
  • 27:48 Project: Blue Moon Diner presented by Esther Diehl and Sara Teaster
    Assessing the viability of using locally sourced foods at a local, moderately priced restaurant.
  • 36:11 Project: Chipotle presented by Jonathan Coble, Alexandra Rosas and Clarice Newton Zusky
    Analyzing local food options for a national food chain and its impact on our community food system.
  • 43:24 Project: University of Virginia Dining Services presented by Linda Bartusiak and Laura Sparks
    Looking at what we feed ourselves and how far we have come: Reviewing Newcomb Dining Hall food offerings.
  • 49:56 Project: Jefferson Area Board for Aging presented by Megan Bucknum and Regine Kennedy
    Understanding the challenges of providing locally grown food to a specialized population.
  • 58:35 Project: Blue Ridge Area Food Bank presented by Ben Chrisinger and Lauren Short
    Assessing the potential for including local food in a food bank’s distribution system.
  • 1:08:10 Project: Harold Folley and the Folley Family presented by Jennifer Feigert and Thomas Roberts
    Working to understand factors that influence food-purchasing decisions for a family living in Charlottesville’s public housing projects.
  • 1:14:25 Q & A / Community discussion
    2:00:35 End of program



Growth update from Brian Wheeler (5-27-08)

On the May 27 edition of WINA’s “Charlottesville–Right Now!” Coy Barefoot speaks with Brian Wheeler, the Executive Director of Charlottesville Tomorrow. The topics include:



Wake-Up Call: Living With Alzheimer’s

This week’s edition of the Sunday Morning Wake-Up Call with Rick Moore is a discussion about Alzheimer’s – what it is, how to catch it, and what to expect in those that have it. Sue Friedman is the President of the Central and Western Virginia Chapter of the Alzheimer’s Association, and joins Rick in the studio to answer questions about the disease. Why does it occur? How can you distinguish normal age-related memory loss from more serioius concerns such as Alzheimer’s? A mother also relates her experiences dealing with dementia, which both her parents suffered from.

For more information about the disease, you can visit the National Alzheimer’s Association’s website, or the website for the local chapter for Central Virginia. You can also call 1-800-272-3900 to be connected to the National hotline for the Alzheimer’s Association.