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Rural California Report

CIRS Blog about Rural California

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Edith Jessup

The Central Valley: Rising Like a Phoenix?

Monday, 30 April 2012 Posted by Edith Jessup Category Rural Health 0 comment

The poverty of the Central Valley of California and the abundance of the region’s agriculture is a conundrum. Even though there has been a decrease in community-based access to healthy food, and a rise in chronic disease in the heartland of the state of California, and the nation, we are beginning to see people and agriculture coming together for the good of both.

The exciting change arising in the Central Valley, honoring our agricultural roots and reinventing our regional economy, has been led by the smart growth investments of Smart Valley Places, with support from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Transportation. These buds of change are blossoming into a new triple-bottom-line Central Valley economy that honors the environment, equity and economics. Environmentalists, supporters of the organic movement, and advocates for social justice, are not the only ones talking the regional food system talk anymore. The Fresno Business Council, the California Partnership for the San Joaquin Valley and regional cities are choosing smart growth and healthy communities and realizing that the Central Valley, a place with the capacity to feed the nation, can also feed our region. Institutions (such as schools, hospitals and city and county governments) are looking at their ability to access healthier, affordable local food, and the ability for local purchasing to drive their economies home.

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Tags: Food Systems, Community Assessment Tools, Poverty, Hunger, Food Deserts, USDA, Agriculture, Central Valley, Rural Development, Rural California, Rural Policy, San Joaquin Valley, Small Scale Producers
Vallerye Mosquera

Double Invisibility: Forgotten in the Fields and at Home

Saturday, 24 March 2012 Posted by Vallerye Mosquera Category Farm Labor 0 comment

 

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There are many heat stress prevention strategies for farmworkers that focus on correcting either individual behaviors (e.g., avoiding caffeinated beverages and bulky sweatshirts) or workplace conditions (e.g., providing shade and regular break periods). Yet, few heat stress-specific health plans take into consideration the conditions of the built and natural environment that farmworkers are returning to at the end of a long day in the fields.

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Tags: Rural Housing Policy, Community Assessment Tools, Heat Illness Prevention, Rural Policy, Heat Exposure, Farmworker Housing, Social Justice, Farmworker Health, Rural Development, Rural California, Community Development, Central Valley, Agricultural Labor
CIRS

A Workforce Action Plan for Farm Labor in California

Sunday, 12 February 2012 Posted by CIRS Category Farm Labor 0 comment

In order to develop a vision and strategic plan for improved farm labor conditions in California, Roots of Change and The California Endowment funded a collaborative effort to obtain direct feedback from agricultural workers and growers to develop a vision for more sustainable farmlabor conditions in California and to identify short- and long-term strategies for achieving that vision. Published in 2007, the results of that study still resonate.

Five grassroots organizations with diverse and longstanding ties to the agricultural community –California Rural Legal Assistance Foundation, California Institute for Rural Studies, CommunityAlliance with Family Farmers, the Farmworker Institute for Education and LeadershipDevelopment and Ag Innovations Network – convened a series of meetings including growers and agricultural workers in five of California’s principal agricultural regions: Monterey, Yolo, Merced,Tulare and Ventura Counties.

The resulting report presents a synthesis of the vision and strategies for promoting a more sustainable farm labor system in California, as put forth by the participants.

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Tags: Immigration, Rural California, Rural Studies, Rural Policy, Social Justice, Rural Development
Jonathan London

San Joaquin Valley Residents Face High Environmental and Social Hazards

Friday, 16 December 2011 Posted by Jonathan London Category Rural California 0 comment


California’s San Joaquin Valley is a place of contradictions. It has some of the most productive and wealth-generating agricultural lands on the planet, but many of the people who live in this region live in poverty, confront environmental contamination, and face serious health risks. Despite efforts to alleviate these problems, the region’s poor air and water quality, concentrated poverty, and uneven access to educational and other opportunities continue to afflict the Valley. Additionally, sustainability of the Valley’s economy is increasingly dependent on the health and well-being of the all of the region’s residents across its diverse rural and urban communities.

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Tags: Rural California, Rural, Rural Sociology, Rural Development, Rural Studies, Community Development, Central Valley, Rural Policy, San Joaquin Valley, UC Davis, UC Davis Center For Regional Change
Alannah Kull

Context Matters: Visioning a Food Hub in Yolo and Solano Counties

Friday, 25 November 2011 Posted by Alannah Kull Category Rural California 0 comment

Danielle Boule, George Hubert, Anna Jensen, Alannah Kull, Julia Van Soelen Kim, Courtney Marshall, Kelsey Meagher and Thea Rittenhouse


This report was prepared by a team of graduate students at UC Davis in the spring of 2011 for the Yolo Ag and Food Alliance (AFA). The objective was to examine the plausibility of creating a food hub in Yolo and Solano Counties. To achieve this, the UC Davis research team explored recent trends in food hubs across the country and conducted a food system assessment of the two counties to provide a context for how and whether a food hub might be situated.

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Tags: Rural California, Rural Development, Community Development, Obesity, Food Insecurity, Farm Labor, Agriculture, Produce, Agricultural Labor, Agritourism, Food Security, Health, Hunger, Direct Marketing, Agriculture Education, Social Justice, Food Hubs, Agricultural Sustainability Institute, UC Davis
Alannah Kull

Agritourism Holds Opportunities for Rural Areas and Regulatory Environment Poses Challenges for Farmers

Friday, 04 November 2011 Posted by Alannah Kull Category Agritourism 0 comment

Although most of us have probably participated in agritourism at some point in our lives, not everyone may be familiar with the meaning of term agritourism.  One source defines agritourism as “a commercial enterprise at a working farm, ranch or agricultural plant conducted for the enjoyment or education of visitors, and that generates supplemental income for the owner.”  Agritourism encompasses a diverse range of activities such as farm tours, festivals that celebrate regional crops, farm stands, school group field trips, on-farm weddings, farm stay bed and breakfasts, vineyard wine tastings, picking fruit at a u-pick operation, culinary events, and farm classes etc. In addition, agritourism can include attractions that have little or nothing to do with food production but that offer entertainment such as hay rides, petting zoos, pumpkin patches, Christmas tree farms, and concerts.

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Tags: Direct Marketing, Agriculture Education, Tourism, Agritourism, Agriculture, Produce, Rural, Rural Development, Community Development, Rural California
Glenda Humiston

A Definition of Rural is Needed That Fits Western States’ Realities

Friday, 21 October 2011 Posted by Glenda Humiston Category Rural California 0 comment

Definitions of “rural” are not standardized – some programs use definitions such as "communities under 50,000 that are rural in nature," "areas of less than 2,500 not in census places," or "Nonmetro County." In addition to the confusing nature of the definitions, they generally do not relate well with realities of western states and mountainous topography – greatly impacting the eligibility of communities and individuals to access programs. The negative impact of these definitions is especially true for rural communities that have been experiencing inordinately high in-migration from other areas; growth not necessarily due to increased economic opportunity within the region, but rather from lack of affordable housing for low- and middle-income people in nearby areas.

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Tags: Defining The Rural, Rural Development, Rural California, California Census, Rural Studies, Rural Health, USDA
Jonathan London

Towards a New Vision for Rural Community Development

Friday, 30 September 2011 Posted by Jonathan London Category Rural California 0 comment

Jonathan London and Ted Bradshaw

 

This essay is based on research being conducted for a book by Jonathan London, Ted Bradshaw and Ed Blakely. Ted Bradshaw passed away before this article was written but the concepts and structure were developed in conversation with Jonathan London. In honor of these intellectual influences, this article is credited as a co-authored piece.

 

 

For those who care about rural places, whether scholars or practitioners (or, in the case of these authors, both) the inadequacy of analytical frameworks for understanding and therefore intervening in rural change is troubling. Alternately framed as an immaterial anachronism in an increasingly dominant metroscape; a victim of over-determined and extractive structures of modernity, capitalism, and globalization; a romanticized lost agrarian world, or an uncritical site of local progress, the dominant rural discourses provide little basis for satisfying intellectual or political projects.


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Tags: Community Development, Rural Studies, Rural, Rural Sociology, Defining The Rural, Rural Development

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