Timothy Beatley in the News
Friday, November 20, 2009
"With Good Reason invites you to a traditional Thanksgiving meal, but nearly everything on the table is grown, made, or brewed, within 100 miles of Charlottesville, Virginia. The dinner host, Tim Beatley (University of Virginia), introduced the 100-mile Thanksgiving idea to his students after reading 'The 100-mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating'...."
Thursday, November 19, 2009
Meet the Farmer TV, a locally produced show that profiles food related projects, has recently completed an episode on the UVa Community Garden.
You can view the episode at the link in the headline or watch it on Charlottesville local tv station 10 at 7pm each night this week (week of November 16, 2009).
The film features three Urban and Environmental Planning program members: Ben Chrisinger, a fourth year student; Dana Smith, a second year graduate student; and Professor Tim Beatley.
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
TIMELESS DESIGN IN A SUSTAINABLE WORLD – at the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden, Richmond
Wed and Thurs, October 28-29.
This two-day symposium will feature our own Thomas Woltz, ASLA, of Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architecture Firm, Charlottesville, VA as well as Douglas Reed, FASLA, of Reed Hilderbrand Associates, Watertown, MA.
AND will showcase the Richmond premiere of Prof. Timothy Beatley’s documentary, The Nature of Cities.
The cost for the event is $70 for Wednesday only ($35 for students); $95 for Thursday only ($48 for students); and $130 for both days ($65 for students). The fee includes dinner Wednesday and/or lunch Thursday.
Event description: If one legacy of the 20th century is its architectural prowess, might the 21st century be devoted to developing exquisite green spaces between the buildings where we live, work, and play? All around the world, growing urban populations are seeking communal spaces—parks, squares, plazas, piazzas, greenways and gardens—as essential components of daily life, places of respite and reflection, recreation, and celebration. This symposium will examine timeless principles of design—whether applied to the creation of a residential garden or a public space—that connect us to the natural world and in so doing, fulfill man’s innate desire for association with other living things. The symposium honors the legacy of Charles F. Gillette, a leader in the field of landscape architecture, by engaging the public in a conversation about the importance of landscape design and the value of Gillette’s ideals of elegance, superb craftsmanship, and seamless blending of architecture and garden.
For the itinerary and online registration visit the symposium's website.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
The fourth-annual gathering of some dedicated UVA foodies.
By Andrew Jenner [Edible Blue Ridge Magazine]
To Dana Smith, the meal had all the appearances of a traditional Thanksgiving dinner, and in most ways, it was just that—turkey, pies, sweet potatoes, and eggnog, spread across several tables. But this Thanksgiving meal satisfied on a deeper level: Nearly everything had been grown, made, brewed, or otherwise concocted within 100 miles of Charlottesville.
Filling a church fellowship hall were dozens of happily chatting students, faculty, friends, and family of the UVA department of urban and environmental planning. As the crowd worked its way down the buffet line, guests read and discussed the recipe cards that sat beside each dish, explaining where the ingredients had come from. Then, while seated to eat in smaller groups, they continued to parse the most adventuresome and tastiest of the 100-mile dishes, each of which was prepared by someone in attendance.
Tim Beatley, a renowned professor of sustainable communities, introduced the 100-mile Thanksgiving idea to his department in 2006, after meeting Alisa Smith and J.B. MacKinnon, writers from Vancouver who popularized the concept in their book The 100-mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating.
[for complete article, follow link in headline]
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
[Cville Weekly, by CHIARA CANZI]
For quite some time now, Charlottesville has been the fulcrum of all things local: food, farms, local and sustainable businesses. Recently, the University of Virginia has taken up the local food discourse and integrated it into its curricula with practical instruction.
Last March, a group of students began thinking about creating a sustainable, community garden on campus.
“At the beginning of last year, we had just a couple of students who were really interested in having a garden of some kind going here,” says Ben Chrisinger, a senior Urban and Environmental Planning major. “They were kind of working independently, but realized that it would be better if we unified our efforts.”
The students presented their idea to the Student Council Environmental Sustainability Committee and soon after, a task force was formed. For academic support, the students went to the Urban and Environmental Planning Department in the School of Architecture.
[for complete article, follow link in headline]
Thursday, June 25, 2009
{News from the Office of University and Community Partnerships}The Office of the Executive Vice President and Provost announced today the School of Architecture faculty who are recipients of the 2009 Academic Community Engagement (ACE) grants. These grants are awarded to U.Va. faculty members who create a new course or revise an existing course to incorporate a community service or community-based research project.
Tanya Denckla Cobb, Senior Associate at the Institute for Environmental Negotiation, and Timothy Beatley, the Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, designed the course “Community Food System Planning: PART II.” Students in their class will continue to explore the challenges of acquiring local food in Charlottesville and its surrounding communities, while working with the Jefferson Board for Aging and Thomas Jefferson Planning District Commission to develop a comprehensive plan to improve access.
Betsy Roettger, lecturer and Director of Undergraduate Advising in the Department of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, designed the course "Designing Higher-Density Affordable Housing.” Students in this class will choose different affordable housing projects in Charlottesville each year and work with Virginia Supportive Housing (VSH) to assure that the building plans and processes are environmentally responsible.
John Quale, an assistant professor and the director of the ecoMOD project, designed the course "Evaluating ecoMOD, ecoMOD Design Studio and ecoMOD engineering class.” This class is a continuation of the previously established ecoMOD project, which focuses on working with community partners to create affordable housing that is also environmentally friendly.
Thursday, April 9, 2009
[From the Darden School of Business News]
A Darden and UVA Architecture School team last Monday presented the findings of their research project titled, Jefferson Area Board for Aging Community Food System Project, at the UVA Institute on Aging’s Forum on aging research. The research was funded by the UVA Institute on Aging and the Jefferson Area Board for Aging (JABA).
The Darden team included second year student Hope Temple, Professor Andrea Larson, and Manager of Sustainability Programs, Erika Herz. Researchers from the School of Architecture Department of Urban and Environmental Planning were graduate student Regine Kennedy and the Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, Timothy Beatley.
JABA operates residential facilities and meal provision services for senior members of the Charlottesville community, serving 3500 meals a week to its senior clients and, due to the aging of the U.S. population, may see that number triple by 2010. Consistent with its goal to provide fresh, nutritious meals that improve the health and quality of life not only for its clients but also for the larger community, JABA sought information and innovative ideas it could use to meet its goals. The student researchers analyzed JABA’s local food procurement patterns and processes, providing recommendations on how it could expand local food purchasing by targeting specific strategies in purchasing and working more closely with local farmers.
The students examined local supply and demand dynamics for vegetables and fruit and studied best practices from other U.S. communities active in local food access for seniors. The researchers also mapped out the existing local “foodshed” in the Charlottesville area, including retailers, farmers’ markets and restaurants. They interviewed farmers to determine what pricing, scheduling, and resources are necessary for them to increase supply to local institutions such as hospitals, senior care centers, schools and restaurants. The research has contributed to JABA’s efforts on behalf of its clientele. It also has stimulated greater attention to local food benefits for community members of all ages, and has encouraged activity locally that is designed to build a strong local food production and distribution network for the Charlottesville area.
Key findings of the report were that reducing price variability through better management of demand, creating additional distribution infrastructure to get foods from the farm to the table, and advance contracting with farmers, are all necessary to build a more robust local food system for JABA and other area institutions. Finally, payment structures must be addressed as most institutions pay in 30 days, whereas farmers need to be paid within approximately two weeks.
[for complete article, follow link to Darden News]
Tuesday, February 24, 2009
[By MAGGIE GALEHOUSE Copyright 2009 Houston Chronicle]
"Tim Beatley wants to bring nature back to city streets. He?s trekked through Copenhagen, Melbourne and other far-flung locales to see why people have left their cars in favor of walking, or planted gardens on their roofs. In Houston last week to speak at Rice University, the author and University of Virginia professor took a few minutes to talk with Chronicle reporter Maggie Galehouse...."
[for complete article, follow link to Houston Chronicle]
Thursday, February 19, 2009
Can the United States lead the way to a bright green future for the planet?
Here at Worldchanging, we believe that the answer is yes. As Alex Steffen wrote in our December feature Worldchanging and the American Future:
"If the world is going to figure out one-planet prosperity, a bright green way of life that can lift everyone out of poverty while averting catastrophe, to some very serious extent, we Americans will need to invent our own version of it first."
Sustainability experts Peter Newman and Timothy Beatley share a similar view about both the opportunity and responsibility facing the United States. And they believe that the change must take place first in our urban communities.
[for complete article, follow link to WorldChanging website)
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
Students Todd Geraden and Amara Lewis created a short documentary on a new sustainability initiative they started with Charlottesville Community Bikes under the auspices of Heinz Sustainable Communities Professor Timothy Beatley's class on Sustainable Communities. The film is one of 18 produced by members of the class, and was voted by the students as the best among them.
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
From the Island Press blog:
January 8th, 2009 by Tim Beatley
"Much of my research and writing over the years has focused on telling stories-innovative efforts at moving cities and urban neighborhoods in the direction of sustainability, at finding ways to build economy, reconnect to place and environment, and at once to enhance quality of life and reduce ecological footprints.
"Recent books, such as Green Urbanism Down Under, with Peter Newman, involve this collecting and telling of compelling and inspiration stories. I am more likely these days to describe myself as a storyteller than a Planning scholar...."
[for complete essay, follow link to Island Press]
Monday, December 1, 2008
A new book, "Green Urbanism Down Under: Learning from Sustainable Communities in Australia", by Timothy Beatley (Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities) with Peter Newman, was released last month from Island Press. Beatley and Newman discuss the successful strategies employed by Australian citizens and governments to "think globally, act locally."
More information: "'Green Urbanism Down Under' reports on the current state of 'sustainability practice' in Australia and the many lessons that U.S. residents can learn from the best Australian programs and initiatives. Australia is similar to the United States in many ways, especially in its 'energy footprint.' For example, Australia?s per capita greenhouse gas emissions are second only to those of the United States. A similar percentage of its residents live in cities (85 percent in Australia vs. 80 percent in the United States). And it suffers from parallel problems of air and water pollution, a national dependence on automobiles, and high fossil fuel consumption. Still, after traveling throughout Australia, Beatley finds that there are myriad creative responses to these problems?and that they offer instructive examples for the United States. Green Urbanism Down Under is a very readable collection of solutions.
"Although many of these innovative solutions are little-known outside Australia, they all present practical possibilities for U.S. cities. Beatley describes 'green transport' projects, 'city farms,' renewable energy plans, green living programs, and much more. He considers a host of public policy initiatives and scrutinizes regional and state planning efforts for answers. In closing, he shares his impressions about how Australian results might be applied to U.S. problems."
Friday, September 5, 2008
ESSAY- Bummer crop: the food you get for $50 a week
by Tanya Denckla Cobb
published 9/4/2008 in The Hook (Charlottesville, VA)
As the cost of food continues to rise dramatically, Americans face serious choices. For the vast majority of us, the question is rapidly becoming, "How much more of my income can I actually afford to spend on food?" And, equally importantly, what am I going to get for my money-- Calories or nutrition?
The average American family spends 10 percent of its annual household income on food. But this statistic belies the harsh reality for many.
One local family, for example, spends 15 percent of its income on food, which may sound manageable, until you realize this translates into a meager $75 per week to feed seven mouths. For some, food may gobble as much as 80 percent of income. Clearly, these families face impossible choices between rent, gas, clothes, even medication.
Thinking about these choices, I devised an experiment. Based on the median 2006 household income of $48,601, and assuming two people per household, the average person spends about $50 each week on food. With two colleagues from the University of Virginia, and several graduate students, I wanted to test what could be bought with this average sum....
____
Tanya Cobb is Senior Associate at the University of Virginia Institute for Environmental Negotiation, teaches graduate-level food system planning courses for the Department of Urban and Environmental Planning, and is author of "The Gardener's A-Z Guide to Growing Organic Food."
__
For the complete article, follow the link to The Hook's website.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
[from UVa News Services, by Jane Ford]: Since mid-April, when the World Food Program declared a global food price crisis, the ripples of the so-called "silent tsunami" have been felt across the globe.
There have been riots over the cost of food in Somalia and Egypt. Haiti's prime minister was forced to resign by legislators seeking to quell violent protests over rising food costs. And here in the United States, rising global grain prices helped spark the largest increase in monthly food costs in nearly 20 years. The Bureau of Labor Statistics described the 0.9 percent rise between March and April as the biggest since January 1990.
Tanya Denckla Cobb, senior associate at U.Va.'s Institute for Environmental Negotiation, views the world's food crisis as less of a shortage and more of a problem of food distribution. "People on plant Earth produce more than enough food to feed all of our planetary tenants, but we have not yet learned how to distribute our harvest in an equitable way that gives affordable and meaningful access to all."
The Center for Global Health recently funded Denckla Cobb's spring course, "Healthy Communities, Healthy Food Systems: Global-Local Connections." She and Tim Beatley, the Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, led students in a novel endeavor to figure out where Charlottesville's food comes from, be it local or from thousands of miles away. Students conducted nine different case studies to discern how to better balance global and local supplies. At the end of the semester, the students presented their findings at Charlottesville's City Hall. [for complete article, follow link embedded in headline]
Monday, June 9, 2008
[from Darden School of Business Communications]:The Darden School and the University of Virginia?s Architecture School, Department of Urban and Environmental Planning, have received a grant fromSaunders Hall at the Darden School the Jefferson Area Board for Aging (JABA) and the UVA Institute on Aging to fund student research this summer.
The grant will support one Darden student and one Architecture School student in research for the Community Food System Program (CFSP) in Charlottesville. One of the benefits of this program is that it will ultimately help Darden achieve its own sustainability goals by sourcing food locally.
The students and faculty advisors will work with the CFSP advisory board, local farmers and other participants to evaluate the feasibility of an integrated and expanded food system ? a hub for food delivery, preparation, preservation, marketing and agriculture/food education in the community. The goal is to provide increased offerings of fresher, more nutritious, and better tasting food that is locally sourced.
[for complete article, follow link in headline]
Monday, June 9, 2008
Follow the link in the headline to the podcast of the final class presentations for the Charlottesville Glocal Food System course taught by Prof. Timothy Beatley and IEN Senior Associate Tanya Denckla Cobb in Spring 2008.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
[From WVIR-TV, Charlottesville, VA] UVA Students Conduct "Glocal" Study
"Do you ever think about where your food comes from? Some of it's from thousands of miles away. Other items may only be from a few miles down the road.
"University of Virginia students have been working to figure out where our area's food system stands. Tuesday, they're revealing their results and want to hear from you. The students have been studying Charlottesville's 'glocal' food system. That's a combination of global and local. Their goal was to assess different situations and find out how we can work to create a better balance between the two areas depending on what people need.
"Tim Beatley is a professor of Sustainable Communities at the University of Virginia. His class is studying Charlottesville's food system. Each student is focusing on a different aspect of 'glocal' foods or combining global and local supplies. Families in affordable housing, restaurants, and community services are all topics. Each has its own story...."
[for complete article, follow link to WVIR-TV's website]
Tuesday, November 27, 2007
"UVa students celebrate with foods from region"
by Brian McNeil, Daily Progress
"As part of a Thanksgiving experiment, 100 University of Virginia students and professors gobbled down a potluck feast of turkey from a farm in Staunton, applesauce made from handpicked Carter Mountain apples, mashed potatoes made with Staunton-grown Yukon Gold potatoes, raspberry ice cream with Charlottesville-grown fruit, and a casserole filled with Central Virginia potatoes and cheeses.
?'Many of us believe that we need to support local farmers,'? said Tim Beatley, a UVa professor who teaches a class about sustainable communities. ?'Here?s an opportunity for us to walk the walk.'?
"The UVa students and faculty members took part in a 'glocal' Thanksgiving, in which participants sought to cook with only local ingredients and food from elsewhere that was obtained through ethical means, such as fair trade." [for complete article, see the Daily Progress website]
Monday, November 12, 2007
Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainability Timothy Beatley's op-ed on the "glocal" food movement in Virginia was published in Sunday's Richmond Times Dispatch. To read the article, see the newspaper's website.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
[From UVa News Services]:
The creation of a statewide policy group to coordinate efforts at ensuring that Virginia's food supply remains secure well into the 21st century is the major recommendation in a new report generated by a group of concerned citizens and professionals, among them faculty from the University of Virginia.
The report outlines a vision for food security in Virginia and addresses issues of farming, health and childhood obesity, as well as the state's economy. As a first step toward implementing the report's findings and recommendations, it has been shared with Virginia Gov. Timothy Kaine and his cabinet.
The report grew out of a Food Security Summit, which attracted 146 participants from all regions of Virginia who came together in May to discuss various issues surrounding food security. The event was a partnership initiative of the Department of Urban and Environmental Planning and Institute for Environmental Negotiation, both in the University of Virginia's School of Architecture, and the Virginia Tech Department of Food Science and Technology, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. [for complete article, see UVa News Services]
Monday, October 1, 2007
Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, Timothy Beatley, contributed his expertise to the international effort to identify ten principles for sustainable city governance. This effort, known as the Copenhagen Agenda for Sustainable Cities, was organized by Mandag Morgen ("Monday Morning"), the largest Scandanavian independent think-tank. The ten principles were well-recieved at the IFHP-World Congress last week in Copenhagen with the participation of more than 600 city planners, mayors, scientists and public officials from around the world. The next step for the contributors will be to develop best practices guidelines and provide examples for city administrators.
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
The Department of Urban Environmental Planning will offer its third sustainable cities study tour in the early summer of 2008 to be led by Timothy Beatley, Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities. The focus of the field study will be southern Europe, and in particular the emerging sustainable cities and sustainable urban practice of Spain.
Early plans for the trip include beginning in the City of Vitoria-Gasteiz, in the Basque country. Vitoria has emerged on the international green cities scene as a leader in promoting compact and green urban form, and notably the creation of an innovative greenbelt that encircles the city. The field study will visit several other cities and regions, including leading-edge wind and solar energy projects (including the solar tower at Sanlúcar la Mayor, wind turbines in Navarre) and will end in Barcelona exploring a variety of urban sustainability initiatives there (transit, bicycles, Barcelona?s innovative solar ordinance).
Previous field studies have taken students to cities in the Netherlands and Germany, and most recently to Denmark and Sweden.
It is anticipated that 15 students will participate in the field study. Participants will enroll in a preparatory seminar held during spring 2008 and will develop individualized research programs to pursue while in Spain.
Wednesday, September 12, 2007
News Source: Explorations
Sept. 12, 2007 -- At U.Va., you have only to walk as far as the Lawn to see an example of a sustainable community ? Thomas Jefferson?s Academical Village. As in all sustainable design, the relationship of structures to the environment was an important consideration for Jefferson. He placed his suite of buildings at the end of a long ridge with an uninterrupted view from the Rotunda to the Ragged Mountains in the south. The classrooms and living quarters are in close proximity ? and the Rotunda serves as a natural gathering place. This built environment encourages the exchange of ideas between faculty members and students ? a process that is essential to its long-term viability. The Lawn also incorporates the cultural ideas of the time as well as enduring values of balance and proportion. Almost 200 years after its creation, it still excites our imagination.
As School of Architecture dean Karen Van Lengen points out, ?Sustainability, broadly defined, is not only based in the ecology of an area, but supports equity and embodies important cultural ideas.? As part of U.Va.?s Sustainable Communities Group, Van Lengen and her colleagues seek to create and support communities that extend the characteristics of the Academical Village for our time.
[For the complete article, please visit Explorations online - Fall 2007 issue]
Thursday, July 12, 2007
Excerpt from ?Food Fights?, Cville Weekly July 10, 2007 by Meg McEvoy
>> Two professors in the department of urban and environmental planning have twice taught a course in ?community food systems.?
?Food system planning has become a very new, cutting edge part of the planning field,? says Tanya Denckla Cobb, a professor with UVA?s Institute for Environmental Negotiation who teaches the course with sustainable communities professor Tim Beatley. A few graduate students have even enrolled in the department specifically to study food issues.
And EAT Local brings groups of activists, retailers, farmers and academics together regularly for potlucks and discussions at venues like Feast! market in the city.
That the educated liberal elite take an interest in food issues isn?t surprising. But, when the liberals meet the libertarians, an ?everyone at the table? philosophy means sometimes there isn?t enough elbow room.
For starters, there?s the question of whether government will help or hurt the local food movement.
The academics, no surprise, are more inclined to speak the language of the establishment. In fact, one of the bullet points of the class-produced Charlottesville Region Food System preliminary assessment reads: ?Provide governmental incentives to transition to sustainable methods.?
Beatley brings up the example of Woodbury County, Iowa, which, in 2006, became the first county in the U.S. to mandate that all food purchased for government departments and schools be local and organic, shifting an estimated $281,000 of annual food purchases to the local economy.
Earlier, in 2005, Woodbury County became the first in the country to provide incentives to farmers who switched to organic growing methods. The action gives tax breaks of $50,000 a year for five years.
But, the website for the rural economic development department of Woodbury County reveals where all the support is coming from: USDA Rural Development, which provides grants, Iowa Department of Economic Development, the Iowa Farm Bureau and the U.S. Department of Commerce, which gives export assistance to Woodbury County.
It?s hard to imagine our local farmers accepting such handouts while resisting regulations handed down by the same agencies.
Even smaller, localized solutions can be met with opposition.
A popular idea among members of the EAT Local group is that of a community kitchen, where farmers could bring bruised or extra tomatoes, for example, to make into tomato sauce to up profit margins on sales. Local users would split the costs of kitchen inspections and regulation compliance.
But Russell says she?s not interested in hauling her produce into town to use a kitchen that?s not her own. She?d rather spend her time chipping away at the rules that say she can?t make and sell tomato sauce in the first place.
Russell also points out that a recently held Food Security Summit at UVA, sponsored by the department of urban and environmental planning, cost $45 and took place on a workday during harvest season, which suggests to her that academics are out of touch with the basic requirements of a farmer?s life.
Even the Buy Fresh, Buy Local guide distributed by Piedmont Environmental Council is, in the eyes of some, too selective and focused on pricey restaurants and markets. VICFA has long published a plainer-looking producers? guide that lists member farms in Albemarle and surrounding counties.
Beatley thinks these differences aren?t prohibitive: ?I?m a teacher, and an important part of this is an educational mission. So we want our students to understand all sides, all points of view, and we do have to be a bit more balanced. ?But this local foods movement, sustainable foods movement, is a large tent, and it can accommodate lots of different positions.?
Wednesday, April 25, 2007
Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainability Timothy Beatley was a featured guest on the April 25th edition of the program, "On Point with Tom Ashbrook," distributed by National Public Radio. The discussion, "Big Apple Going Green?" concerned New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg's plan to make significant environmental improvements to the city in the next 25 years. A podcast of the program is available for listening at the link below.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Two $5,000 development grants were awarded to School of Architecture faculty through UVa?s NIH Fogarty International Center Framework Program in Global Health
IEN Senior Associate Tanya Denckla-Cobb and Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities Timothy Beatley were awarded a grant to establish their joint course, ?Healthy Communities, Healthy Food Systems: Global-Local Connections.? Denckla-Cobb will work on the project during summer 2007.
Associate Professor and Director of the Program in Landscape Architecture Kristina Hill was awarded a grant to develop a course on the topic of assisting cities to become more adaptable to climate change through their use of water. The course will address methods by which to provide emergency potable water for situations like the New Orleans hurricane, or slums in Kenya that don't have enough water on a daily basis -- and connect that "treatment train" of water to improvements in nearshore aquatic habitats, which often suffer the greatest impact from polluted urban stormwater runoff.
Monday, July 3, 2006
Heinz Professor Timothy Beatley of the Dept. of Urban + Environmental Planning teamed up with Tanya Denckla Cobb, senior associate at the Institute for Environmental Negotiation (IEN) to lead a course during the spring 2006 semester entitled, "Planning for a Sustainable and Secure Community Food System." Students in the course presented their findings to a meeting of Charlottesville-area government, community leaders, growers and retailers at the conclusion of the semester. Over the summer students are continuing to work with local citizens and leaders to assess community food source origins. In Spring 2007, a new class will convene to prepare a community food plan for Central Viriginia. The class report is available at
www.tjpdc.org.
Tuesday, May 9, 2006
Students in PLAC 569: Community Food Systems presented their findings to Charlottesville City Council last night before an audience that included representatives of many local groups. The resulting discussion lead to plans for another community meeting in June to further discuss the implications of food origins.