The College Cafeteria Revolution
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The College Cafeteria Revolution
By Kelsey Meagher, UC Davis
I find it hard to believe it’s only taken one or two generations for
most Americans to lose touch with the source of their food.
Members of my parents’ generation grew up thinking the meat in their
burger came from a small ranch instead of a Concentrated Animal Feedlot
Operation and likely hadn’t even heard of a CAFO. Fifty years ago, it’s
likely that one of their parents or grandparents
farmed or raised livestock. But over the years, the number of farmers
has steadily decreased and the ones that are left are getting older,
with the median age now around 55.
A lot can change in a generation and many college students like me who
are coming of age today have several reasons for concern. Food
production has become invisible, but the health consequences of sugary,
salty pre-packaged food have not. Obesity is now affecting
one in four children and diabetes is a way of life for one in 10
Americans.
It’s time for a change and young people are leading the charge. In
Sacramento and San Francisco, they’re flocking to plant potatoes and
kale in urban patches of dirt. Kids from Elk Grove and Roseville are
training to be farmers at places like the Center for
Land Based Learning in Winters. In Oakland, teens are part of a
movement to provide fresh produce in neighborhoods where liquor stores
have traditionally ruled. And then there’s the thousands of college
students like me devoting their time to cafeterias across
the country,
Cafeterias, you ask? The home of cinematic food fights, uncomfortable silences, and the “freshman 10” – pound weight gain?
You heard right. Cafeterias don’t evoke outrageous images of injustice,
but they have serious power to prompt change. In the U.S., more than
4,000 institutions of higher education spend close to $5 billion
annually on food. Behind the millions of college food
trays of lasagna, burgers and broccoli lies a whole network of ranches
and farms. But the way they raise their livestock and crops – whether
by using a host of pesticides and chemical fertilizers, or by using the
most sustainable farm practices possible –
sure isn’t visible when you’re looking at your lunch.
That’s why I got involved in the Real Food Challenge (realfoodchallenge.org), a national student movement asking
administrators to purchase “real food,” which we define as ecologically
sound, community-based, humane to animals and fair to laborers. This
way, we can know the types of farm practices
that our college dollars are supporting.
We’re already making progress. At the University of California at Irvine
where I was an undergraduate, we introduced the Real Food Calculator in our dining halls. When we discovered that UCI purchased less than
10 percent "real" food, we helped pass a policy requiring them to
purchase 20 percent sustainable food by 2015.
Then, by joining with RFC activists around the state, we did the
impossible and encouraged the entire University of California system to
agree to shift 20 percent of its food purchases at all 10 ten campuses
to “real food” by 2020.
On Nov. 9 -10, we’ll be part of “Making the Invisible Visible,” a
conference organized by the Agricultural Sustainability Institute at UC
Davis. It’s bringing young college activists together with leading
academics who have formed a new network for food, agriculture
and sustainability with a major gift from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
Together, we’ll look at the many steps that are needed to change
current farming practices, food distribution and access.
We’ll embark on several food system tours, and interact with students at
Grant Union High School who have created a student garden and kitchen
program to tackle neighborhood food access challenges. We’ll meet with
young farmers in Capay Valley to learn how
they balance their love of growing organic vegetables and greens with
slim profit margins and 10-hour days.
We hope the conference will further cement ties between our youth food
movement and the established agricultural research world, so we can
shake up the conventional wisdom around agricultural research and
education in the US. By bringing young and old together,
the conference will empower us to keep fighting for food justice.
The Real Food Challenge has ambitious plans to bring sustainable food to
cafeterias at college campuses nationwide. Our goal? To direct at least
$1 billion in annual college food budgets to “real food” within 10
years.
It won’t happen overnight, but we’re encouraged by the surge of youthful
energy flowing to the food justice movement. Starting with our own
college cafeterias, we can create a more just and humane food system.
This way, the next generation will know that the
bread and broccoli that nourish them are also nourishing our planet and
people.
Kelsey Meagher is a graduate student in the Sociology Department at
UC Davis, where she is studying agriculture and the environment.



