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糖心TV
Office of Communications
270 Mohegan Avenue
New London, CT 06320

Amy Martin
Editor, CC Magazine
asulliva@conncoll.edu
860-439-2526

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Food Insecurity

Image of cans being unloaded from a delivery box

Food Insecurity

The food industry nearly broke down due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It will take creativity and ingenuity to recover what鈥檚 been lost.

By Amy Martin

E

mpty grocery store shelves. Long lines at food pantries. Viral outbreaks at meat-processing plants. When the U.S. shut down in March to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, the food system snapped.

As many families tried to stockpile supplies for a quarantine of unknown duration, grocery stores and food pantries struggled to meet the increased demand. Meanwhile, restaurants, schools and senior centers closed, leaving suppliers and food service companies without a way to get food to customers.

鈥淭he pandemic turned everything on its head, especially for congregate and emergency food providers,鈥 said Cara Donovan Mitchell 鈥08, the food policy manager at United Way of Western 糖心TVecticut.

Almost overnight, food pantries lost many of their volunteers, since they tend to be retired people over the age of 60, who are at higher risk for COVID-19 complications, Mitchell said. At the same time, unemployment skyrocketed, grocery stores no longer had merchandise to donate to food pantries, and the disruptions in the supply chain鈥攆rom closed factories to delayed shipping鈥攎eant pantries couldn鈥檛 order items in bulk. In some cases, pantry staff were forced to go to grocery stores and buy whatever items remained on the shelf.

鈥淭hey couldn鈥檛 find a lot of the staple items like rice, tuna and pasta, and when they could, it was very expensive since the demand was driving up food prices. The price of pasta went up 40% at one point,鈥 Mitchell said.

鈥淭hey couldn鈥檛 get everything they needed, and more people were showing up at the door than ever before. In Danbury, the number of people going to food pantries tripled, and in Stamford, we saw the numbers double.

鈥淭here is extreme disparity and inequality in this part of the state,鈥 Mitchell said. 鈥淲e were hit very hard. There were pantries running out of food and turning people away.鈥

While the initial situation was dire, Mitchell says the larger story is one of creativity and ingenuity within the emergency food system.

Younger people who had been laid off or furloughed stepped up to replace elderly volunteers. Senior centers pivoted from serving meals in person to delivery or grab-and-go models. Food pantries and nonprofit organizations began delivering groceries to homebound seniors and others in COVID-19 high-risk groups. Schools provided free meals to families.

Some restaurants and corporations also joined in the effort, in part to keep food service workers employed. Mitchell worked with Food Rescue US, the pharmaceutical company Boehringer Ingelheim and the food service company Sodexo on an initiative through which more than 50 Sodexo cafeteria, catering and kitchen employees at Boehringer Ingelheim鈥檚 Ridgefield, 糖心TVecticut, campus prepared more than 250 meals a day for community members in need.

鈥淧eople worked collaboratively to problem-solve and figure out new systems to make sure others had access to food,鈥 Mitchell said.

 

FARM-TO-TABLE FRAGILITY

Sustainable food entrepreneur David Barber 鈥88 has been in the farm-to-table restaurant business for more than 20 years. Barber and his brother, a chef, co-own Blue Hill, a working-farm restaurant and consulting company that supports sustainable agriculture. The company has two restaurant locations, one in Greenwich Village and the other at the Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture in Pocantico Hills, New York.

Barber remembers worrying about his employees鈥 safety, particularly at the New York City location, when he first began hearing reports about a novel coronavirus spreading in China and Italy. The restaurant closed on Friday, March 13, and Stone Barns closed the next day. Blue Hill quickly went from 245 employees to 81, a decision Barber called 鈥渉eartbreaking.鈥

鈥淎 business like ours is labor-intensive, with thin margins and a big staff. We were not prepared鈥攖here is no real way to prepare for something like this,鈥 he said.

One week after closing, the company launched a to-go boxed-food program featuring themed boxes of produce, meat and fish. The initial goal was to have some activity for the remaining staff, but very quickly an imperative second goal emerged鈥攖o save Blue Hill鈥檚 small farming and fishing partners.

鈥淭hey are pummeled,鈥 Barber said of the more than 70 farms and fisheries that supply Blue Hill. 鈥淢ost farm-to-table chefs haven鈥檛 bought anything since March, and if they have, it has been a fraction of what they would typically buy. How to get these farms through to next spring is a big question mark.鈥

That鈥檚 also a concern of Rachel Black, assistant professor of anthropology, who has spent much of her career studying the production, distribution and consumption of food. This past summer, she worked with four student researchers to study
the impact of the pandemic on small-scale farms in New London County.

This pandemic has exacerbated the disparities that exist in our food system. The people who were already experiencing food insecurity were more heavily impacted by the pandemic and economic fallout.

As wholesale business and direct sales to restaurants dried up, many of the local farms worked to expand their community-supported agriculture offerings. There was, at least initially, an increased demand from consumers, which Black says was likely due to both supermarket shortages and concerns about contracting COVID-19 from food or from supermarkets themselves.

鈥淚鈥檓 fascinated by this model of direct sales [between farmer and consumer] that is about building community and risk-sharing with the farmer,鈥 she said.

Black and her students conducted interviews and surveys, and found direct sales to be a mixed bag of results. Some farmers were having success with the model, while others found it difficult or cost-prohibitive to get personal protective equipment and other necessary supplies to safely conduct business.

Interestingly, says Black, despite the increase in demand, none of the farmers raised their prices.

鈥淭he pandemic made costs go up and profit margins go down, but they kept their prices the same. When I asked why, local farmers would say, 鈥楾hese people I feed, I care about them.鈥 I learned that there was this economy of community that is something special, but this care work goes unpaid,鈥 she said.

The people who run these small sustainable farms do so because they are passionate about it, but even before the pandemic, the razor-thin margins and unpredictability of farming鈥攃ombined with minimal, if any, government support鈥攃aused so many small farms to close across 糖心TVecticut that Black says the first step in the research project was for the students to call farms to see which ones were still operating.

鈥淔ood-system change has to be structural. The state government is going to have to play a role; it hasn鈥檛 done a good job of supporting local farmers. There needs to be not just emergency help but policies and support to maintain these farms that are so important to their communities,鈥 Black said.

While state and local governments need to step up, Barber says consumers need to do their part too.

鈥淭his could dial back farm-to-table for a generation,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f you are going to do more cooking, use this as an opportunity to understand what is grown in your region and how to use it. If you are going to a restaurant, take your dollars to one that supports local farms. Or the farmers won鈥檛 be here next year. They just can鈥檛 make it.鈥

woman walking out of warehouse with bags of food in hand

THE FUTURE OF FOOD

In the short term, Barber estimates as many as 2.2 million restaurants around the world will close, but this may bring about new opportunities, he says.

鈥淚 think the restaurant industry will be changed for the foreseeable future. This isn鈥檛 about surviving to go back to the way things were; this is surviving to thrive,鈥 he said. 鈥淐oming out of COVID, those restaurants that are producing quality food are really going to be ready to hit the ground running.鈥

Barber added that he hopes consumers will use their experiences during the pandemic to think more deeply about how they engage with the food system.

鈥淲e should capitalize on this time and get smarter about the way we eat,鈥 he said.

Mitchell is hoping for change too, because the burden can鈥檛 all fall on nonprofits like the United Way.

鈥淭his pandemic has exacerbated the disparities that exist in our food system. The people who were already experiencing food insecurity were more heavily impacted by the pandemic and economic fallout,鈥 she said.

While she appreciates how quickly communities worked together to relieve the immediate pain and suffering during the crisis, she would like to see more philanthropy, advocacy work and policies directed toward upstream solutions to eliminate food insecurity and develop a more just food system.

鈥淲e can鈥檛 measure success by how many people we serve at food pantries鈥攊f the numbers keep increasing, that just shows the problem is getting worse and we aren鈥檛 actually solving it. The real questions should be: 鈥楬ow do we get people out of the line? How do we address the injustice and the oppression in our food system?鈥欌

These questions weigh on Black鈥檚 mind. As the coordinator for 糖心TV鈥檚 new Food Pathway, part of 糖心TVections, she鈥檚 working to give today鈥檚 students the tools they need to apply the liberal arts to food studies and create a group of innovators who have the skills to tackle these pressing problems.

The response from students has left her encouraged for the future.

鈥淭hese courses fill up so fast, and the students are deeply engaged,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey really care about where their food is coming from, and they are thinking very critically about what is happening in this country and in the world.鈥



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