Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance

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CALL TO ACTION – Secure the future of free-range farming!

October 12, 2017 by Tammi Jonas

Why should small-scale pastured pork and poultry farms be treated like intensive sheds while cattle feedlots of 1000 cattle do not require a permit? The Victorian Government's proposed reforms to planning controls for animal industries  could mean the collapse of pastured pigs and poultry farms in Victoria.

We have until 14 November 2017 to be heard!

1. SIGN THE PETITION now to secure the future of free-range farming in Victoria!

2. PRINT the petition to collect signatures from your local community

3. SHARE / TAG / COMMENT

Join us in demanding change by sharing a photo of your pastured poultry or pork operation and calling on ministers to support scale-appropriate planning controls that encourage rather than hinder regenerative and ethical farming in Victoria.

We demand that small-scale pastured pig and poultry farms be treated under the Farming Zone like other low-risk grazing systems that rely on supplemental feed such as the majority of Victorian beef and dairy cattle.

Use the following hashtags

#thisisnotintensive #thisisfarming #regenerativeag #pasturedpoultry #pasturedpigs #ethicalchicken #ethicalpork and don't forget to tag Jaala Pulford MP, Richard Wynne MP, Barnaby Joyce, and Mick Gentleman MLA.

4. BECOME A MEMBER OF AFSA

Your membership will add your voice to the many others standing up for small-scale farming. Our collective voice matters - show the Government that we are not just vocal, but numerous!

5. ATTEND THE INFORMATION SESSIONS & OFFER FEEDBACK

6. MAKE A SUBMISSION by 14 November 2017.

7. EMAIL YOUR LOCAL MEMBER AND THE MINISTERS

 

 

Name

ElectorateEmailPhone
Hon Martin Peter FoleyAlbert Parkmartin.foley@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9646 7173
Hon Jill HennessyAltonaminister.health@health.vic.gov.au(03) 9395 0221
Mr Brian Francis PaynterBassbrian.paynter@Parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5672 4755
Hon Heidi VictoriaBayswaterheidi.victoria@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9729 1622
Hon Lisa NevilleBellarinelisa.neville@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5250 1987
Mr William John TilleyBenambrabill.tilley@parliament.vic.gov.au(02) 6024 4488
Hon Jacinta Marie AllanBendigo Eastjacinta.allan@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5443 2144
Ms Janice Maree EdwardsBendigo Westmaree.edwards@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5444 4125
Mr Nick StaikosBentleighnick.staikos@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9579 7222
Hon Robert William ClarkBox Hillrobert.clark@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9898 6606
Hon Louise AsherBrightonlouise.asher@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9592 1900
Frank McGuireBroadmeadowsfrank.mcguire@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9300 3851
Hon Jane Furneaux GarrettBrunswickjane.garrett@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9384 1241
Hon Matthew Jason GuyBulleenmatthew.guy@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9850 7983
Hon Colin William BrooksBundooracolin.brooks@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9467 5657
Mr Geoffrey Kemp HowardBuninyonggeoff.howard@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5331 7722
Mr Graham Travis WattBurwoodgraham.watt@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9809 1857
Ms Sonya KilkennyCarrumsonya.kilkenny@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9773 2727
Mr David James SouthwickCaulfielddavid.southwick@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9527 3866
Mr Hong LimClarindahong.lim@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9543 6081
Mr Jude PereraCranbournejude.perera@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5996 2901
Hon David HodgettCroydondavid.hodgett@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9725 3570
Ms Gabrielle WilliamsDandenonggabrielle.williams@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9793 2000
Hon Bruce Norman AtkinsonEastern Metropolitanbruce.atkinson@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9877 7188
Hon Richard Alex Gordon Dalla-RivaEastern Metropolitanrichard.dalla-riva@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9803 0592
Ms Samantha DunnEastern Metropolitansamantha.dunn@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9850 8600
Mr Shaun Leo LeaneEastern Metropolitanshaun.leane@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9887 0255
Hon Mary Louise Newling WooldridgeEastern Metropolitanmary.wooldridge@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9878 4113
Ms Melina Gaye BathEastern Victoriamelina.bath@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5174 7066
Mr Jeffrey Matthew BourmanEastern Victoriajeff.bourman@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5623 2999
Mr Daniel MulinoEastern Victoriadaniel.mulino@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5940 5010
Hon Edward John O'DonohueEastern Victoriaedward.o'donohue@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5941 1112
Ms Harriet ShingEastern Victoriaharriet.shing@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5134 8000
Ms Lucinda Gaye McLeishEildoncindy.mcleish@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9730 1066
Ms Vicki WardElthamvicki.ward@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9439 1500
Mr Daniel James PearsonEssendondanny.pearson@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9370 7777
Ms Stephanie Maureen RyanEuroasteph.ryan@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5762 1600
Ms Christine FyffeEvelynchristine.fyffe@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9735 3208
Hon Nicholas WakelingFerntree Gullynick.wakeling@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9758 6011
Hon Marsha Rose ThomsonFootscraymarsha.thomson@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9689 4283
Mr Neil Andrew Warwick AngusForest Hillneil.angus@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9877 5628
Mr Paul Andrew EdbrookeFrankstonpaul.edbrooke@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9783 9822
Ms Christine Anne CouzensGeelongchristine.couzens@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5221 3131
Mr Bradley William BattinGembrookbrad.battin@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9796 1987
Hon Timothy Owen BullGippsland Easttim.bull@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5152 3491
Mr Daniel David O'BrienGippsland Southdanny.obrien@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5144 1987
Mr Neale Ronald BurgessHastingsneale.burgess@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5977 5600
Mr John PesuttoHawthornjohn.pesutto@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9882 4088
Mr Anthony Richard CarbinesIvanhoeanthony.carbines@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9457 5328
Mr Timothy Colin SmithKewtim.smith@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9853 2999
Hon Martin Philip PakulaKeysboroughmartin.pakula@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9547 6262
Hon Marlene KairouzKororoitmarlene.kairouz@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 8361 7133
Hon John Hamdi ErenLarajohn.eren@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5275 3898
Ms Emma KealyLowanemma.kealy@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5382 0097
Ms Mary-Anne ThomasMacedonmary-anne.thomas@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5428 2138
Hon Michael Anthony O'BrienMalvernmichael.obrien@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9576 1850
Ms Ellen SandellMelbourneellen.sandell@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9328 4637
Mr Donato Antonio NardellaMeltondon.nardella@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9743 9825
Mr Peter Laurence CrispMildurapeter.crisp@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5021 2828
Hon Liliana D'AmbrosioMill Parklily.d'ambrosio@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9422 5171
Hon James Anthony MerlinoMonbulkjames.merlino@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9754 5401
Mr Timothy Noel RichardsonMordialloctim.richardson@Parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9772 4544
Mr David Charles MorrisMorningtondavid.morris@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5975 4799
Hon Russell John NortheMorwellrussell.northe@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5133 9088
Mr Michael Xavier Charles GidleyMount Waverleymichael.gidley@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9561 0511
Hon Daniel Michael AndrewsMulgravedaniel.andrews@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9548 5644
Hon Peter Lindsay WalshMurray Plainspeter.walsh@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5482 2039
Mr Gary John BlackwoodNarracangary.blackwood@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5623 1960
Hon Luke Anthony DonnellanNarre Warren Northluke.donnellan@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9706 0566
Ms Judith Ann GraleyNarre Warren Southjudith.graley@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9704 6055
Hon Martin Francis DixonNepeanmartin.dixon@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5986 6661
Mr Benjamin Alan CarrollNiddrieben.carroll@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9379 5879
Mr Greg BarberNorthern Metropolitangreg.barber@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9348 2622
Mr Nazih ElasmarNorthern Metropolitannazih.elasmar@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9456 9244
Hon Jenny MikakosNorthern Metropolitanjenny.mikakos@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9462 3966
Mr Craig Philip OndarchieNorthern Metropolitancraig.ondarchie@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9422 0099
Ms Fiona Heather PattenNorthern Metropolitanfiona.patten@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9386 4400
Mr Mark GeppNorthern Victoriamark.gepp@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5427 2444
Hon Wendy Ann LovellNorthern Victoriawendy.lovell@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5821 0055
Mr. Luke O'SullivanNorthern VictoriaLuke.O'Sullivan@parliament.vic.gov.au5443 6277
Ms Jaclyn SymesNorthern Victoriajaclyn.symes@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5783 2000
Mr Daniel James YoungNorthern Victoriadaniel.young@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5799 1331
Mr Stephen DimopoulosOakleighsteve.dimopoulos@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9568 2456
Mr Timothy Logan McCurdyOvens Valleytim.mccurdy@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5721 6155
Ms Elizabeth Anne BlandthornPascoe Valelizzie.blandthorn@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9354 9935
Mr Richard Vincent RiordanPolwarthrichard.riordan@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5231 5046
Mr Samuel Peter HibbinsPrahransam.hibbins@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9981 9501
Hon Robin David ScottPrestonrobin.scott@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9478 5611
Hon Richard William WynneRichmondrichard.wynne@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9415 8901
Ms Deanne Sharon RyallRingwooddee.ryall@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9870 7396
Ms Louise Eileen StaleyRiponlouise.staley@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5461 1255
Hon Kimberley Arthur WellsRowvillekim.wells@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9764 8988
Mr Murray Hamilton ThompsonSandringhammurray.thompson@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9598 2688
Ms Suzanna SheedSheppartonsuzanna.sheed@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5831 6944
Mr Andrew KatosSouth Barwonandrew.katos@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5243 5222
Hon Gavin Wayne JenningsSouth-Eastern Metropolitangavin.jennings@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9548 5644
Mrs Inga PeulichSouth-Eastern Metropolitaninga.peulich@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9772 1366
Hon Gordon Kenneth Rich-PhillipsSouth-Eastern Metropolitangordon.rich-phillips@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9794 7667
Hon Adem SomyurekSouth-Eastern Metropolitanadem.somyurek@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9794 0699
Ms Nina Meredith SpringleSouth-Eastern Metropolitannina.springle@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9584 4013
Mrs Roma BritnellSouth-West Coastroma.britnell@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5562 8230
Ms Georgina Mary CrozierSouthern Metropolitangeorgie.crozier@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9555 4101
Hon Philip DalidakisSouthern Metropolitanphilip.dalidakis@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9557 1500
Hon David McLean DavisSouthern Metropolitandavid.davis@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9888 6244
Ms Margaret FitzherbertSouthern Metropolitanmargaret.fitzherbert@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9681 9555
Ms Susan Margaret PennicuikSouthern Metropolitansue.pennicuik@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9530 8399
Ms Natalie SuleymanSt Albansnatalie.suleyman@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9367 9925
Mr Joshua Michael BullSunburyjosh.bull@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9740 4091
Hon Natalie Maree Sykes HutchinsSydenhamnatalie.hutchins@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9449 1511
Hon Telmo Ramon LanguillerTarneittelmo.languiller@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9916 1778
Ms Bronwyn HalfpennyThomastownbronwyn.halfpenny@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9401 2711
Hon Ryan James SmithWarrandyteryan.smith@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9841 5166
Ms Sharon Patricia KnightWendoureesharon.knight@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5331 1003
Mr Timothy Hugh PallasWerribeetim.pallas@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9741 1133
Dr Rachel Carling-JenkinsWestern Metropolitanrachel.carling-jenkins@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 8742 3226
Mr Khalil EidehWestern Metropolitankhalil.eideh@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9363 1644
Mr Bernard Thomas Christopher FinnWestern Metropolitanbernie.finn@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9317 5900
Ms Colleen HartlandWestern Metropolitancolleen.hartland@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9689 6373
Mr Cesar MelhemWestern Metropolitancesar.melhem@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9689 6536
Mr Joshua William MorrisWestern Victoriajoshua.morris@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5332 9443
Hon Jaala PulfordWestern Victoriajaala.pulford@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5332 2405
Mr James Desmond PurcellWestern Victoriajames.purcell@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5568 2929
Mr Simon RamsayWestern Victoriasimon.ramsay@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5222 1941
Ms Gayle TierneyWestern Victoriagayle.tierney@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 5224 2088
Hon Wade NoonanWilliamstownwade.noonan@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9399 9022
Ms Danielle GreenYan Yeandanielle.green@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9432 9782
Ms Rosalind Louise SpenceYurokeros.spence@parliament.vic.gov.au(03) 9305 7177

See AFSA's media release for more information. 

Filed Under: Advocacy, Fair Food Farmers United, Legal Defence Fund Tagged With: free range, planning, Victoria

Victorian Government Welcomes Feedlots and Rejects Free Range Pigs & Poultry

October 2, 2017 by Tammi Jonas

The Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance (AFSA) is deeply disappointed at substance of the proposed new planning provisions from the Victorian Government’s work on Planning for Sustainable Animal Industries. Despite our efforts to assist Agriculture Victoria and the relevant ministers in understanding the practical realities of small-scale livestock farmers, the draft graduated controls don’t appear to reduce red tape for small-scale commercial farmers, nor homesteaders or hobbyists, and yet they make it easier than ever before to set up a 1000-cattle feedlot.

“It’s completely bizarre,” said AFSA President Tammi Jonas, a small-scale pastured pig and cattle farmer from Victoria. “The proposed new controls would mean that farms like mine with 12 sows and 2 boars, so about 100 pigs on 10 hectares of our 28-hectare farm at any time, would have to apply for a permit just like those with 1,000 pigs in a shed, and yet the farmer next door could put up to 1,000 cattle in a feedlot right up to our fence line without a permit nor a buffer. Whose interest does this really serve?”

Under the proposed new provisions, a hobbyist poultry grower could have up to 200 birds without a permit, but a 50m setback from dwellings on another property would apply. The next level, allegedly designed to better enable low-risk small-scale pastured livestock production in the Farming Zone, only allows up to 450 birds and requires a 100m setback – a prohibitive requirement on smallholdings that may be only 100m wide in some cases. For pigs, the ‘streamlined application process’ would only apply to farms with up to 8 sows and 1 boar plus ‘only’ their progeny, ruling out buying in new breeding stock to maintain genetic diversity, a real concern for the heritage breeds movement.

“This is a system designed to encourage huge intensive poultry farms and make it much harder for small scale, sustainable farms. It means that small farmers will yet again have to wade through huge amounts of red-tape - just the same as large-scale intensive farms. It’s just not viable,” exclaimed award-winning pastured poultry farmer Bruce Burton of Milking Yard Farm.

Small-scale farms would now become classified as Broiler Farms and be subject to the Victorian Code for Broiler Farms 2009. This means small growers with 500 broiler chickens spread across 20 hectares will be treated the same as farms with 500,000 birds in sheds.

The scheme fails to take account of the stocking density.

The scheme allows large intensive shed farms to add free range outdoor areas without any restrictions at all. It allows these farms to add 150,000 chickens to a range area without any of the restrictions placed on a small farmer with 500 chickens.

AFSA met with Agriculture Victoria prior to the public release and conducted a survey of small-scale livestock growers, sharing the 80 responses with the Department that showed how out of touch the stocking rates for streamlined applications were. We highlighted the regenerative practices many of these farms pride themselves on, such as frequent moves of animals, mobile housing and feed infrastructure, and a focus on maintaining pasture year round.

We are mystified at how poorly the draft planning provisions acknowledge the actual risks to environment and amenity presented by our members’ farms. The proposal to allow cattle feedlots of up to 1,000 cattle in the Farming Zone without a permit nor a setback from neighbours, while 100 pigs or 450 poultry in highly mobile systems trigger the notice and review process, suggests that there may not merely be ignorance of small-scale farming systems, but something more sinister at play.

We call on Minister for Agriculture Jaala Pulford and Minister for Planning Richard Wynne to explain why small-scale pastured pig and poultry farms are to be subjected to greater scrutiny and compliance costs than cattle feedlots, instead of being treated under the law like other grazing systems that rely on supplemental feed such as the majority of Victorian beef and dairy cattle.

Contact:

Tammi Jonas, President

president@afsa.org.au

0422 429 362

 

Filed Under: Fair Food Farmers United, Legal Defence Fund, Media Releases Tagged With: free range, intensive, permit, planning, PSAI

Civil Society Calls for Agroecology not GMOs at FAO Meeting in KL

September 15, 2017 by Tammi Jonas

Following is the final statement made by civil society organisations at the recent FAO meeting in Kuala Lumpur:

FAO Regional Conference on Agricultural Biotechnologies in Sustainable Food Systems and Nutrition in Asia-Pacific

13 September 2017

Civil Society Statement

 If we see biotech as part of a small farmer's 'toolbox', then we must ask what it is we are 'fixing':

  • Ensuring resilience in the face of climate change
  • Ensuring smallholders’ livelihoods are maintained & promoted
  • Ensuring everyone has access to nutritious and culturally-appropriate food produced in ethical and ecologically sound ways, and their right to democratically determine their own food and agriculture systems.

The focus of our discussion here was proposed to be on “sustainable” “food systems” for “small farmers” not “high yield” to generate “more money” from “small pieces of land.” And yet the meeting has presented many solutions that are still in the lab, and products with very initial results. The current supply of food already exceeds demand but there are serious issues around good governance and equitable distribution of food. Merely securing a high yield of a few select crops does not solve the problem of hunger nor secure livelihoods for smallholders, and leads to high levels of post-harvest spoilage and food waste.

There has been a lot of discussion about what we mean by biotechnology, and yet the majority of the focus of the conference has been on GMO products. It is malicious and deceptive to refer to GM crops as "biotech crops".

Those technologies that manipulate DNA artificially increase corporate control over seeds, diminish rich, diverse diets of local communities, promote monoculture, increase biosafety risks to health and environment, and need high investment and complicated regulatory frameworks which many countries lack. We ask those from the private sector who are calling for international acceptance of their products once approved in one country whether they are prepared to accept global liability for their products once disseminated?

We’d like to remind the group that 80% of the world’s food is produced by small farmers and farmer autonomy is critical to maintaining current and future food security and food sovereignty for everyone. We reject solutions that increase the cost of production for farmers due to the high cost of inputs from transnational corporations. We respect farmers as true in-situ innovators and not as passive consumers of the ‘biotech toolbox’.

All present should keep in mind the FAO Policy on Indigenous and Tribal Peoples which includes Indigenous rights to:

  • Self-determination;
  • Free, Prior and Informed Consent;
  • Participation and collaboration;
  • Rights over land and other resources; and
  • Gender equality.

Governments and scientists must take a holistic view of addressing the negative consequences of industrialised agriculture and avoid a ‘bandaids on cancer’ approach when it is imperative to address the causes.

Rather than being distracted by the shiny technocratic solutions of the GMO industry, FAO should continue its important work on promoting farmers’ access to native and locally adapted seeds and breeds, markets and value chains, and on promoting agroecology as the best way to feed the world and face the challenges of climate change.

 

Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance

La Via Campesina

FIMARC

Mouvement International de la Jeunesse Agricola et Rural Catholique (MIJARC)

Pesticide Action Network Asia Pacific (PANAP)

Action Group on Erosion, Technology and Concentration (ETC Group)

Assembly of the Poor, Thailand

Thai Poor Act (TPA)

Alliance for Sustainable and Holistic Agriculture (ASHA)

SEACON

 

 

 

Filed Under: Advocacy, GMO, International, Media Releases Tagged With: biotech, FAO, GMO, IPC, sustainable agriculture

Baw Baw Food Security Coalition

September 15, 2017 by Tammi Jonas

"Food security is an individual or community’s ability to access healthy, affordable and appropriate food.  Food insecurity can therefore be defined as having limited or irregular access to safe and secure nutritional food from a non-emergency source.

Food insecurity has been prioritised in the Central West Gippsland region in 2007. Subsequently, research and food system mapping was undertaken, which showed that the individuals found to be most affected by food insecurity in Central West Gippsland include the people on low incomes, older people, young people and people living in isolated areas.  The result of this research was a Food Security Recommendation Report which was published in 2012 and provided guidance on the types of interventions that the CWGPCP and its partners could implement in order to tackle food insecurity.  The Baw Baw Food Security Coalition was then developed to lead this work in the Baw Baw Shire."

Read more about the history and impact of the Baw Baw Food Security Coalition.

Filed Under: Right to Food Tagged With: food justice, food security, policy

MEDIA RELEASE: Farmers, Butchers, Chefs Call for People to Eat Less Meat

September 11, 2017 by Tammi Jonas

In an Australian first, livestock farmers, butchers, chefs and supporters gathered to work out how to get people to eat less meat. Their focus was on shifting demand away from unsustainable industrially and intensively-produced meat with all its ecological and social costs, to meat from high welfare pastured production systems that nourish land, animals, and people.

Australia’s first Slow Meat Symposium, held in the central highlands of Victoria, came to an optimistic and encouraging close on Tuesday 5 September with the creation of a decisive action plan. The Symposium was a collaboration between Slow Food Central Highlands and the Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance (AFSA) and held in Daylesford on 3-5 September 2017.

An action plan was created through contributions from the more than 80 farmers, chefs, butchers, and supporters who attended from across Australia. It includes:

  • the creation of a platform to enable the diversion of thousands of tonnes of food waste from landfill to farmers seeking alternative feed streams for livestock, and
  • collaborations with others in the meat industry and animal welfare organisations to strengthen the movement to put slow meat ahead of industrial meat in butcher’s shops, menus, and households across Australia.

AFSA President and small-scale pastured pig and cattle farmer Tammi Jonas said, “Slow meat is not just better for our environment and the welfare of our animals, it offers a far more delicious future. Health and ethics are increasingly important to people and this is driving a shift away from industrially-produced meat. The Slow Meat Symposium saw some of our best producers, chefs, butchers, and allies gather to identify ways we can keep growing the slow meat movement so that more Australians can enjoy the benefits of eating better meat, and eating meat less often for the benefit of everyone and everything on the planet.” 

Day One included a farm tour, butchery and cooking demos, and a slow feast at Jonai Farms & Meatsmiths before the group of 50 were bussed over to Milking Yard Farm. At Milking Yard, owners Bruce and Roz Burton grow heritage-based ‘Sommerlad’ chickens. Through a striking comparison with an industrially-produced and processed chicken found in a typical supermarket Bruce easily demonstrated the superior meat quality obtained.

Day One concluded at Belvedere Social in Daylesford, featuring a producer-driven menu built around ethical meats, and family farms. Guests dined firstly on a Spent Hen Soup, which consisted of a rolled pastured chicken medallion served in a spent hen consommé, prepared using a zero-waste approach.

On Day Two, an industry-focussed group of more than 80 butchers, chefs, producers and supporters of the Slow Meat philosophy from around Australia gathered in the Daylesford Town Hall to address the key issues around increasing production and consumption of slow meat, while decreasing consumption of meat overall. In his role as MC, Paul West, presenter of River Cottage Australia, guided the audience around the ethics and impact of the production, processing and cooking of meat, asking participants to consider what a ‘slow meat future’ might look like and how to practically implement it.

Stimulating plenary speakers included butcher Grant Hilliard from Sydney’s Feather & Bone and chef Matt Wilkinson of Pope Joan in Melbourne. Wilkinson raised the "crucial need to bridge the divide between chefs and consumers, and farmers and chefs."

A range of delicious dishes were created for an educational slow meat lunch through the innovative pairing of local chefs and producers.

Concluding Day Two, Matthew Evans, host of SBS’s Gourmet Farmer and For the Love of Meat, presented his vision for a slow meat future, stressing the value of ecological resilience over consistency. Speaking to this he said, "We expect something that nature cannot give us. Every day the meat is seasonal. Yes, we have ethics and support, but inconsistency gives the possibility for greatness."

Day Three was offered for the many farmers across Australia keen to see a revival of regional abattoirs in the face of steadily declining access to processing for small-scale, pastured livestock farms. Led by international guest Amanda Carter, owner of Cool Hand Meats, and operator of North Carolina leading small-scale poultry abattoir Foothills Pilot Plant the group of nearly 30 canvassed the viability of small-scale abattoirs, alternatives to large abattoirs (especially in response to sudden instability such as abattoir closure), better networks between producers and abattoirs, price stability, and access and transport to and from abattoirs.

Tammi Jonas, who is working with others in her region on the idea of establishing a long-term, all species abattoir in Daylesford (with the support of the Federal Government’s Farming Together program), visited the US in July this year on an abattoir tour visiting eight American small-scale abattoirs.

Jonas found that there are three key factors to prove a viable small-scale abattoir model: 1) red meats are more viable than poultry and so including them in an all-species facility increases the likelihood of success; and 2) slaughter is a break-even business at best and the inclusion of further processing facilities is critical to support both the business model and the needs of the small-scale farmers seeking holistic processing solutions. Further she found that "Australia is in a unique position to better the working conditions and diverse opportunities across the agricultural supply chain for workers."

Contact:        Tammi Jonas - President, Australian Food Sovereignty Alliance        0422 429 362

Gary Thomas – Leader, Slow Food Central Highlands           0448 483 616

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: ethical farming, livestock, meat consumption, slow meat

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